Abstract

The crisis of the liberal order opened up space for ideas that only some years ago had appeared out of time. During globalization’s heyday, parties that called for a rollback of liberal globalism were either stuck in a marginal position or unable to implement fundamental reforms. This has changed as the main political approaches toward liberal globalism are now being publicly and electorally contested. We argue that this has triggered the rise of a phenomenon we refer to as retrogradism. This article applies the concept of retrogradism to the case of the German right-wing party Alternative für Deutschland (AfD). It argues that we may be witnessing the rise of a new type of political party that pursues a retrograde agenda. We suggest that the current debate on the AfD fails to take into account that its defining features may be its politics of time and its retrograde opposition to liberal globalism.

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