Populist parties and the double-edged sword of voter mobilisation
Populist parties succeed if they mobilise disaffected constituencies. But they fail if they stimulate their opponents to go one better.
politics, economy and employment & labour
James F Downes is a lecturer in comparative politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is a senior research fellow at The Centre for Analysis of the Radical Right (CARR) and an associate fellow at the Center for Research and Social Progress (Italy). Felix Wiebrecht is a PhD student in the Department of Government and Public Administration at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Populist parties succeed if they mobilise disaffected constituencies. But they fail if they stimulate their opponents to go one better.

Three decades after the fall of the Wall, there is still a ‘wall in the head’ in German politics—and it goes through the party of the far right.
Social Europe ISSN 2628-7641
