POPULISM: A Simple Explanation

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[Music] hey what's up today we're talking about populism populism has made a pretty big comeback in the 21st century it's constantly used to describe contemporary movements and contemporary people it's actually used to describe so many different movements in people that some think that it's no longer possible to give any one definition of populism because they think the term has just been spread out too far but i'm not one of those people so i think one coherent explanation is possible so i'm going to try to nail that down today okay so what is populism i think a good place to start is to think about diversity if you're in a country that allows for free speech you're probably aware of how many different types of people and opinions exist in the public and in turn how many different types of demands are levied at the government so that's the normal state of affairs in any type of society that allows for free speech you get lots of different types of people and lots of different types of opinions and demands and they can't be neatly reconciled with each other so the recognition of that type of diversity and even the support for that type of diversity is called pluralism so you're a pluralist if you try to maintain a recognition and even an appreciation for how diverse society is and that includes ideological diversity the first thing to understand about populism is that it rejects pluralism so populists simplify the political landscape they say politics actually aren't that complicated and you can actually boil politics down to a simple conflict between two sides and within that populists pick a side so populism tells a simplified story of us versus them i'm going to start by talking about the us the us in populism is described as the people that might sound like they're talking about the entire public but they never are and the reason why is because to be a populist you have to make generalizations about who the people are so they say things like the people want less immigration or the people want socialism and within that they say that they represent the interests of the people so to be a populist you have to make generalizations about who the people are which necessarily includes some while excluding others and then within that populists say that they represent the interests of the people so that's the us in populism the people which is actually just a portion of the public which is a portion that's carved out through the descriptions by the populist movement or the populist leader moving on to them there can be multiple themes in populism but one of them and you could say the main one has to be elites so the main narrative of populism is the people vs elites where populists are on the side of the people so whatever the issue is that populists are concerned with elites are a major source of opposition for the people and it could be political elites it could be cultural elites media elites any type of people in a position of power and whatever they're doing they're not helping the people they're either actively hurting them or they're just stopping the people from getting what they want so take an issue like immigration if the populist movement was against immigration then immigrants would be considered another them here because they're not included in the people so they would be like a tertiary them but populists would frame elites as being at the heart of the problem because they'd probably say that their policy decisions were allowing the immigration to happen so in order to fix the problem the populist movement would have to battle elites and not the immigrants that's just one example but that dynamic should work for any populist movement so say for example if it's a socialist movement there might be other themes like say if there's a rival conservative movement that conservative movement would probably be another them but the main opposition would be elites which would probably include financial elites they would say that elites are stopping socialism from happening a common term that populists like to use for elites is the establishment i think because the term alone does a lot of work it gives the impression that elites are entrenched in power and that they've been there for a long time and that thought process naturally transitions into the notion that the establishment's grip on power ought to be challenged and possibly even broken i don't know if this needs saying but obviously not everyone that uses the term the establishment is a populist it's just a common term among populists i think because saying it conveys a lot of your ideas for you so consider this us versus them the people versus elites as ingredient one of populism where the political landscape isn't diverse and described as featuring a broad range of public opinion but instead flattened into a binary where on one side you have us who are the people and on the other side you have them who are elites and within that populists say that they represent the interests of the people so this is the first of three ingredients the second ingredient of populism concerns morality and more specifically moral division in populism the two sides are divided along moral lines which breaks down to the morally good versus the morally bad the elites and populism are always described as morally bad so they're described as wicked corrupt they're abusing their power they're negligent they're constantly described through morally negative terms the people on the other hand are described as morally good so some populists go kind of heavy on that terminology calling the people virtuous and stuff like that but i think most populists just described the people as good and deserving better and they really don't want to contradict that so populists don't want to morally criticize their chosen section of the public so getting populists to morally criticize their chosen us is sort of like trying to push two like positively charged magnets together they just don't want to do it populists also like to build up the wisdom of the people typically by saying that the people have common sense that elites don't have so in populist framing the people are wise and elites are ignorant and also because the people are good their wisdom and their goodness means that their ideas will improve society and elites on the other hand are morally corrupt and they're ignorant so to the extent that elites can influence society they degrade it because populist narratives are framed through morality having a democratic majority behind their cause is optional so it's not a deal-breaker to populists if they're actually a minority within their society they think that they can still call themselves the people because their claim is based in morality and not actual numbers so ingredient number two was moral division society is divided by populists along moral lines the morally good people versus the morally bad elites the third major ingredient is that the views of the people are supreme populism places the people on the moral high ground and elites on the moral low ground the people are morally good and wise and elites are morally corrupt and ignorant from that perspective it's probably not appealing to grant legitimacy to what elites have to say and it's also not appealing to work cooperatively with elites so this places populists in an inherently combative political position where the views of the people which means the views of the populist movement and the populist leader are supreme which means that once the views of the people are established populists really don't want those views to be contradicted especially if that contradiction comes from outside of the people so the views of the people are granted especially strong legitimacy as you may have gathered from what i've said so far populism itself isn't very deep and is often called by academics a thin ideology so populism tends to be accompanied by other isms in order to flesh things out more to make some generalizations populist movements on the right are often accompanied by nationalism and populist movements on the left are often accompanied by socialism if a movement has an especially strong ism to it an ism with an especially strong doctrine like marxism-leninism then we don't need to bring in the label of populism because calling that movement marxist-leninist does a good enough job of accounting for the whole thing but isms like nationalism or socialism are more ambiguous so if calling it populist on top of that is accurate then it brings helpful context to the movement i've been holding off on doing this but i think it's time to bring in some examples of populism here is a partial list of major contemporary political figures that are widely considered populist and i'll add occupy wall street too as an example of a contemporary movement that's widely considered populist and was notably leaderless so you don't necessarily need a strong charismatic leader for your movement to be considered populist there's one name on this list that's especially contested where about half the academic work i read considered him a populist and the other half didn't the other half pushed back on that and that's bernie sanders which i think comes down to different perceptions of what his movement was about and also messy conceptions of populism so i'm going to put an asterisk next to his name i personally consider him a populist but he's not as on the nose as the rest of the people on this list so he doesn't have a lot of the tendencies of other populists speaking of which let's get into the tendencies of populism so these aren't requirements but instead just notable tendencies of populism the first is that the leader wants a direct connection with the people they don't want for example political parties screening and filtering their messages or publishers or tv networks shaping their messages they tend to want to wipe away these intermediaries to create as directive a connection as possible with the people they also tend to externalize blame because the ideas of the people are supreme in populism the leaders who represent the people are especially reluctant to portray themselves as being wrong so if something goes wrong blame tends to be externalized so for example they could blame their problems on other countries or they could blame their problems on elites which brings me to the next tendency populists are especially prone to engaging in conspiracy theories i was hesitant to say this one because conspiracy theories are already stigmatized and i don't want to add to that so it's worth saying that elites sometimes do engage in conspiracies and that's just demonstrably true so this is just saying that populists are especially prone to engaging in conspiracy theories especially if something is going wrong for that populist it's natural for them to suggest that it's happening because elites are conspiring against them the fourth tendency is just for populist politicians and that's stress testing institutions populist politicians tend to test the institutional strength of the countries that they come into power in they tend to see political institutions like constitutions and court systems as things that should further their power and not check it so populists often test the strength of institutions that are designed to check their power countries with weaker institutions are sometimes taken over by populists who rewrite their constitutions or reshape their courts in a way that helps them consolidate power stay in office and check the power of political opposition okay so we have our three necessary ingredients for populism and four additional tendencies of populism if i wanted for some reason to give a concise definition of populism i'd do it by somehow summarizing these three necessary ingredients but instead of trying to do that i'd rather close this video out by posing a question that kind of looms over populism as a subject and that question is is populism dangerous it's a polarizing question i put some thought into how i might answer it and the best answer i came up with was to compare populism to fire so if i asked you is fire dangerous after you probably would take a moment to recover from how weird of a question it is you might respond saying something like what kind of fire are we talking about and by that you mean how much fire and what context is this fire in is it a small amount of fire in a lighter or is it a large amount of fire out in the wilderness and uncontrolled because that very much matters in how you go about thinking about if it's dangerous or not getting back to populism i think the inherent combativeness of populism and the flattening of nuance the flattening of pluralism that's needed in populism makes it inherently alarming and you can even say concerning but i think to elevate that to calling it dangerous requires you to know something about the movement and it requires you to know the context that the movement's in so some populist movements are extremely dangerous say that the movement is malicious say the movement actually wants to hurt other people and say that it's happening in a society that has weak institutions so the movement threatens to actually take over that society then that's very dangerous populism that populist movement is extremely dangerous but then there's other movements where say they just want to fight political corruption and say that that political corruption is demonstrably happening and say that it's a leaderless movement so nobody wants to run for office all they're trying to do is use populism to galvanize public support and create reform to fight corruption i wouldn't call that movement dangerous so i think to call populism dangerous to elevate it beyond being just concerning requires you to know something about the populist movement so just like fire is inherently you could say concerning but only truly dangerous in some contexts populism is also inherently concerning but only truly dangerous in some contexts where the word danger is really appropriate and you could argue even helpful in other contexts with the caveat that there might be a better way to solve that same problem that's more cooperative and allows for ideological diversity and that's all i've got for today as always thanks for watching thanks for listening and i'll see you next time [Music]
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Channel: Ryan Chapman
Views: 153,608
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Keywords: populism, what is populism, populism explained, populism crash course
Id: Bd_326sVloI
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Length: 14min 54sec (894 seconds)
Published: Mon Sep 27 2021
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