
Populism as the post-Marxist adaptation of leftist Manicheanism
Author(s) -
Fabio Fossati
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
revista eurolatinoamericana de análisis social y político
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2683-7420
DOI - 10.35305/rr.v1i1.39
Subject(s) - populism , left wing politics , political economy , marxist philosophy , ideology , population , political science , democracy , authoritarianism , socialism , politics , development economics , communism , sociology , economics , law , demography
Populism can be defined as the post-Marxist adaptation of leftist Manicheanism. In Western Europe, this process materialized after 1989, while in Latin America populism was applied before 1989. Populism is based on: a Manichean ideology with a binary cosmology of the world; the expansion of the public expenditure with damaging effects (high inflation rates) on the economy; charismatic leaders making plebiscitary appeals to the population, with a limited role of intermediate actors (interests groups or parties) and institutions; a high mobilization process from above leading to a movimientismo of the lower sectors of the population. The four cases of orthodox macro-economic populism were: Peron in Argentina, Allende in Chile, Garcia in Peru, and Chavez/Maduro in Venezuela. In partial populism, there is plebiscitarianism, but the increase of the public expenditure and of the inflation rate remains under control (Syriza, Movimento 5 Stelle, Correa, Morales, and Cristina Kirchner). Orthodox populism has always had negative consequences in politics, leading to authoritarian regimes, increased conflict and military coups; instead, partial populism has never endangered democracy and is usually coupled with hybrid/illiberal regimes. The political cultures of the right are not populist, because there is not the increase of public expenditure, but there is plebiscitarianism.