Abstract

In this paper we argue that mature political democracies require an agonistic form of populism in order to function. Agonistic populism counters technocratic apathy and instrumental reductionism and provides democracies with discursive legitimacy for the expression of antagonisms. We draw on the exemplary case of Brexit to show how the long-term suppression of English populism by an all-conquering British imperial discourse, and the hegemony of technocratic solutions in Europe, transformed populism’s potentially virtuous agonistic effects into an often anachronistic, toxic and ill-directed ressentiment against the European Union. We call upon management scholars to focus on how popular ressentiment can be used as a force for good in two ways: (1) by contributing agonistically to an alternative, emotionally founded discourse about England, the European Union and a new popular civilizational project that could bind them; and (2) by inducing the creation of collective moral categories embraced across the elite/non-elite divide in the image of the post-World War II National Health Service.

Highlights

  • When the European Union (EU) Council President Herman Van Rompuy was asked in 2010 about the biggest risk facing Europe, he replied: ‘The great danger is populism’(Stabenow, 2010)

  • Politicians and intellectuals typically defame populism as mere demagogy based on a venomous mix of anti-intellectualism, nationalism and xenophobia (De Cleen et al, 2018), in this article we use the exemplary case of Brexit to argue that this criticism is ill conceived analytically

  • We argue that the Brexit vote is an example of the historical building of ressentiment, based on the long-term suppression of English populism by an all-conquering British imperial discourse – reinvented by Thatcher in a neoliberal guise (Hensmans, 2010: 332) – which transformed populism’s potentially virtuous agonistic effects into an often anachronistic and misdirected ressentiment towards the EU

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Summary

Introduction

When the European Union (EU) Council President Herman Van Rompuy was asked in 2010 about the biggest risk facing Europe, he replied: ‘The great danger is populism’(Stabenow, 2010).

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