Who do populist radical right parties stand for? Representative claims, claim acceptance and descriptive representation in the Austrian FPÖ and German AfD
Who do populist radical right parties stand for? Representative claims, claim acceptance and descriptive representation in the Austrian FPÖ and German AfD
Populist radical right parties are known for focussing on a vague idea of ‘the people’ and rejecting social groups like immigrants. The representative relationship between parties and voters, however, is a positive one. Thus, this article investigates (a) who populist radical right parties claim to represent, (b) whether these groups accept the claim, and (c) whether the parties indeed represent these groups descriptively. Our analysis of the manifestos, voters and parliamentary groups of the Austrian Freedom Party and the Alternative for Germany shows, first, that these parties have markedly different conceptualisations of ‘the people’. Further, we find that both parties claim to represent native families, pensioners, members of the police and armed forces as well as inhabitants of rural areas. While most of these groups reject this representative claim in both countries, the AfD and, to a lesser extent, the FPÖ indeed represent these population segments in the parliaments. Thus, this article contributes to our understanding of populist radical right parties’ roles in representative democracies by identifying a gap between these parties’ representative claims towards social groups and those groups’ voting behaviour.
475-492
Heinisch, Reinhard
d0c3357b-5aad-4c75-9f6a-14f006843267
Werner, Annika
dcafc9c0-9649-427b-b550-04d03e3c0b24
2 October 2019
Heinisch, Reinhard
d0c3357b-5aad-4c75-9f6a-14f006843267
Werner, Annika
dcafc9c0-9649-427b-b550-04d03e3c0b24
Heinisch, Reinhard and Werner, Annika
(2019)
Who do populist radical right parties stand for? Representative claims, claim acceptance and descriptive representation in the Austrian FPÖ and German AfD.
Representation, 55, .
(doi:10.1080/00344893.2019.1635196).
Abstract
Populist radical right parties are known for focussing on a vague idea of ‘the people’ and rejecting social groups like immigrants. The representative relationship between parties and voters, however, is a positive one. Thus, this article investigates (a) who populist radical right parties claim to represent, (b) whether these groups accept the claim, and (c) whether the parties indeed represent these groups descriptively. Our analysis of the manifestos, voters and parliamentary groups of the Austrian Freedom Party and the Alternative for Germany shows, first, that these parties have markedly different conceptualisations of ‘the people’. Further, we find that both parties claim to represent native families, pensioners, members of the police and armed forces as well as inhabitants of rural areas. While most of these groups reject this representative claim in both countries, the AfD and, to a lesser extent, the FPÖ indeed represent these population segments in the parliaments. Thus, this article contributes to our understanding of populist radical right parties’ roles in representative democracies by identifying a gap between these parties’ representative claims towards social groups and those groups’ voting behaviour.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 July 2019
Published date: 2 October 2019
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 498096
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498096
ISSN: 0034-4893
PURE UUID: 5fbeaac8-e976-4563-a61a-63d1661a77c3
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 07 Feb 2025 18:07
Last modified: 08 Feb 2025 03:21
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Reinhard Heinisch
Author:
Annika Werner
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics