REPUBLICAN AND DEMOCRATIC POPULISM

Populism, the force that elected Donald Trump to the US presidency in 2016, is not a new creed – representing, as it does, a distrust by the mass of voters of political and business elites. Indeed, in America, a formal ‘People’s Party’, also called the Populists, was formed in 1892 and ran in that year’s presidential election, with some success, gathering 8.5% of the vote. Unlike Trump, the People’s Party - whose support later collapsed, being dissolved in 1909 - was left-leaning. But, like him, it railed against the so-called establishment. While ...


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