These differences among Right-wing populists explain why they are divided in spite of their overall success in the 2019 European elections, though the surge was not as big as they had hoped and predicted. The majority are part of the Identity and Democracy Group (ID), including Lega Nord and France’s Rassemblement national. The ID Group now boasts 73 MEPs compared to 36 prior to the last elections. Other Right-wing populists sit in the Conservatives and Reformists Group.
There are fewer populists on the Left end of the spectrum than there are on the Right. Spain is the only country where a Left-wing populist party is in power, as part of a coalition. However, Left-wing populists are no less of a political reality. They are characterized by a number of specificities and differences that sometimes fuel heated debates within their ranks. This is the case when it comes to the euro, for example, or to the EU, which they all criticize but for which they do not propose the same solutions. Views also diverge on what Left-wing populism should look like. Should they still have political parties in the traditional sense of the word, as Die Linke does in Germany? Or should they rather invent new types of movements, such as La France insoumise and Spain’s Podemos, which both attempt to combine horizontal, participatory, internet-driven democracy with the absolute vertical power of their leaders? Finally, opinions differ on what political strategy to adopt: should they conclude electoral alliances with the reformist Left or not? Above all, though, European populists of the Left, often inspired by populist regimes in Latin America, constantly oscillate between a desire to present themselves as forces that can revive the Left and, conversely, to affirm that the Left-Right divide is outdated and has been replaced by a rift between the people and the elite.
Most populists on the Left and the Right share their hate for the ruling classes and all other organizations they believe to be part of the "system". The irony lies in that, sometimes, they represent the system too. They are opposed to globalization, criticize the EU, want popular sovereignty to prevail and are doubtful of liberal and representative democracy. Their vision of today’s world and the situation in their countries is riddled with catastrophe and placed in contrast with an idealized version of the past and contours for a better future.
Does this mean that Right-wing and Left-wing populists are identical? Absolutely not. Those on the Left, with a few exceptions mainly from Eastern Europe, do not attack immigrants. Jean-Luc Mélenchon of La France insoumise, whose statements are sometimes ambiguous, never ceases to praise France as a country of many ethnicities and to present himself as a resolute anti-fascist and anti-racist, especially in comparison with Right-wing populists like Marine Le Pen and Eric Zemmour. Moreover, Left-wing populist opposition to Europe does not rest on the same basis as that of their Right-wing counterparts. More generally, Left-wing populists advocate an inclusive form of populism, as opposed to the Right. The difference in their notions of "the people" is essential. For Right-wing populists, the term basically refers to the common people. Those on the Left may also address the "plebs", like Mélenchon does when he speaks to "les gens" (French for "the people"). But for them, the term refers mainly to the "populus", meaning the active, politicized citizens who essentially live out Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s theory of general will. Finally, Left- and Right-wing populists do not exactly share the same electorate. Supporters of Right-wing populists are, on the whole, part of the most poorly-educated segments of the working class, those from peripheral regions who face unemployment and are frightened by globalization, Europeanization and the presence of foreigners. There are some exceptions, as is the case of the support for Eric Zemmour in France that is more interclassisits than the more obvious class lines amongst Marine le Pen voters. Left-wing populist voters, on the other hand, are more likely to be educated, urban middle-class citizens with jobs in the public sector.
When they are in power, as is the case in central Europe, populist parties develop policies that have national and European impacts. But the bottom line is that, from now on, populists of the Right and the Left will be an important component of politics in Europe. Even if they don’t win elections.
Copyright: PATRIK STOLLARZ / AFP
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