Abstract

This paper seeks to examine some theoretical limitations potentially undermining civil resistance campaigns countering rightwing populism, and suggests how we might rethink the politics of nonviolent struggle. It argues that protests against rightwing populism have generally tackled the ‘supply side’ of populism or populist leaders. However, little attention has been paid to the ‘demand side’, which explains why constituents vote for populists. Increasing support for populist leaders reflects a collective perception that established political institutions are not living up to the expectations of ordinary people. In response to rightwing populism, civil resistance movements will need to engage two fronts of the struggle. The first is economic inequality perpetuated by a neoliberal order against which rightwing populists claim to defend the ‘people’. The second front entails a cultural reconstruction of the notion of the ‘people’ in response to cultural anxiety that has given ground to populist nativist discourses. This article proposes that both of these tasks require a conceptual reconfiguration of nonviolent resistance regarding power and culture.

Highlights

  • From Donald Trump to Marine Le Pen, from Nigel Farage to Rodrigo Duterte, and from Recep Teyyip Erdogan to Viktor Orban, ‘populists’ have increasingly attracted global attention with a variety of explanations for the rise of rightwing populism

  • While populist politics supports popular defiance of broadly defined ‘elites’, populist leaders potentially mutate into autocrats

  • If neoliberal order and the consequent inequality contribute to increased frustration among the electorates who have turned to rightwing populists, civil resistance scholarship has far failed to address this ‘demand side’

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Summary

Introduction

From Donald Trump to Marine Le Pen, from Nigel Farage to Rodrigo Duterte, and from Recep Teyyip Erdogan to Viktor Orban, ‘populists’ have increasingly attracted global attention with a variety of explanations for the rise of rightwing populism. Civil resistance scholarship embraces these efforts to defend liberal democracy from rightwing populism. Effective civil resistance against rightwing populism necessitates a nuanced approach to populist politics, which addresses both its ‘demand’ and ‘supply’ sides.

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