International populism: the radical right in the European Parliament
International populism: the radical right in the European Parliament
The 2014 European Parliament elections were hailed as a populist earthquake with parties like the French Front National, UKIP and the Danish People's Party topping the polls in their countries and commentators warning about the consequences of a large radical right populist bloc in the Parliament. But what happened after the elections? Based on policy positions, voting data, and interviews conducted over more than four years with senior figures from fourteen radical right populist parties and their main partners, this is the first major study to explain these parties' actions and alliances in the European Parliament. International Populism answers three key questions: Why have radical right populists, unlike other ideological party types, long been divided in the European Parliament? Why, although divisions persist, are many of them now more united than ever? And how does all of this inform our understanding of the European populist radical right today? Arguing that these parties have entered a new international and transnational phase, with some attempting to be respectable radicals while others have instead embraced their shared populism, McDonnell and Werner shed new light on the past, present and future of one of the most important political phenomena of twenty-first-century Europe.
McDonnell, Duncan
e1c7e6ca-12c6-49a7-b2aa-a03e518c4910
Werner, Annika
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McDonnell, Duncan
e1c7e6ca-12c6-49a7-b2aa-a03e518c4910
Werner, Annika
dcafc9c0-9649-427b-b550-04d03e3c0b24
McDonnell, Duncan and Werner, Annika
(2020)
International populism: the radical right in the European Parliament
,
Oxford University Press, 298pp.
Abstract
The 2014 European Parliament elections were hailed as a populist earthquake with parties like the French Front National, UKIP and the Danish People's Party topping the polls in their countries and commentators warning about the consequences of a large radical right populist bloc in the Parliament. But what happened after the elections? Based on policy positions, voting data, and interviews conducted over more than four years with senior figures from fourteen radical right populist parties and their main partners, this is the first major study to explain these parties' actions and alliances in the European Parliament. International Populism answers three key questions: Why have radical right populists, unlike other ideological party types, long been divided in the European Parliament? Why, although divisions persist, are many of them now more united than ever? And how does all of this inform our understanding of the European populist radical right today? Arguing that these parties have entered a new international and transnational phase, with some attempting to be respectable radicals while others have instead embraced their shared populism, McDonnell and Werner shed new light on the past, present and future of one of the most important political phenomena of twenty-first-century Europe.
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Accepted/In Press date: 1 January 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 September 2020
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Local EPrints ID: 498131
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498131
PURE UUID: 74eafd19-9cdc-48ca-9066-e45b44bfe50f
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Date deposited: 10 Feb 2025 18:02
Last modified: 11 Feb 2025 03:17
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Author:
Duncan McDonnell
Author:
Annika Werner
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