European Mainstream and the Populist Radical Right

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Anders Widfeldt
Andrej Zaslove
Bertjan Verbeek
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Category=QDTS
CHES Data
Common EU Policy
comparative party politics
contender
Countering Extremist Propaganda
Dismissive Strategy
Dutch Party System
electoral behaviour research
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Eve Hepburn
External Supply Side Factors
Finnish Mainstream
Finnish Rural Party
Flemming Juul Christiansen
Fn's Rate
Fn's Result
Fn’s Rate
Fn’s Result
immigration policy Europe
Internal Supply Side Factors
Joao Carvalho
Jussi Halla Aho
Le Pen's Success
Le Pen’s Success
Mainstream Parties
mainstream party strategies
manifesto analysis
Marijn van Klingeren
Mikael Nygard
Mikko Kuisma
Moderate Personal Approach
Niche Contender
parti
parties
Partij Van De Arbeid
party system dynamics
Pontus Odmalm
prr
PRR Contender
PRR Parti
PRR Party
PRR Politics
Rebecca Partos
restrictive assimilationist policy comparison
SOS Racisme
Van Holsteyn
Van Klingeren
Van Spanje

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367876876
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Are populist radical right (PRR) parties the only alternatives for voters seeking restrictive and assimilationist outcomes? Or is a mainstream choice available? Popular opinion and social media commentaries often criticize mainstream parties for facing in the same liberal and multicultural direction. Literature on parties and elections equally suggests a convergence of policy positions and the disappearance of any significant differences between parties. This edited volume is an attempt to challenge such perceptions and conclusions. By systematically coding manifestos for seventeen mainstream and six PRR parties in Western Europe, the book explores positional differences between mainstream and niche contenders over three key elections between 2002 and 2015. The findings indicate more choice than initially expected, but these restrictive and assimilationist options are usually in close proximity to each other and typically less intense than those of the PRR. This can help explain the continuous growth of the PRR despite the presence of a mainstream alternative. Yet party system dynamics also matter. Contributing authors thus investigate a number of arguments in the precarious relationship between mainstream parties, the electorate and the PRR, as well as between different mainstream parties.

Pontus Odmalm is Senior Lecturer in Politics at the University of Edinburgh.

Eve Hepburn is Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at the University of Edinburgh.