The Brexit Vote and The Trump Vote: A comparative study of the common trends and factors that led to a populist radical right vote in Britain and the United States

The two symbols of Western liberal democracies – Britain and the US – became in 2016 hotbeds of radical right populism. The vote for Brexit and Donald Trump’s election represent two spectacular populist victories and this article will highlight the strikingly similar dynamics at work in both electio...

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Main Author: Laëtitia Langlois
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Maison de la Recherche en Sciences Humaines 2021-07-01
Series:Revue LISA
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/13054
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spelling doaj-75de1efaa75148eaa6338233a9f2640f2021-10-02T19:01:01ZengMaison de la Recherche en Sciences HumainesRevue LISA1762-61532021-07-011910.4000/lisa.13054The Brexit Vote and The Trump Vote: A comparative study of the common trends and factors that led to a populist radical right vote in Britain and the United StatesLaëtitia LangloisThe two symbols of Western liberal democracies – Britain and the US – became in 2016 hotbeds of radical right populism. The vote for Brexit and Donald Trump’s election represent two spectacular populist victories and this article will highlight the strikingly similar dynamics at work in both elections. We will see that the two populist leaders, Nigel Farage in Britain and Donald Trump in the US, mobilised the same arguments and themes to connect to an audience which for years had nourished resentment and anger at the way traditional politicians had governed national politics in their respective countries. Thus, with the Brexit and Trump victories, fringe narratives became mainstream politics and upset the established political order. Nativism, racism and xenophobia, anti-establishment attitudes became the dominant themes of the political debate. It is important to understand how two major Western democracies surrendered to the populist calls and this article tries to provide an analysis on this populist phenomenon in Britain and the US.http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/13054BrexitDonald Trumpnational identitypopulismpopulist radical rightWestern liberalism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laëtitia Langlois
spellingShingle Laëtitia Langlois
The Brexit Vote and The Trump Vote: A comparative study of the common trends and factors that led to a populist radical right vote in Britain and the United States
Revue LISA
Brexit
Donald Trump
national identity
populism
populist radical right
Western liberalism
author_facet Laëtitia Langlois
author_sort Laëtitia Langlois
title The Brexit Vote and The Trump Vote: A comparative study of the common trends and factors that led to a populist radical right vote in Britain and the United States
title_short The Brexit Vote and The Trump Vote: A comparative study of the common trends and factors that led to a populist radical right vote in Britain and the United States
title_full The Brexit Vote and The Trump Vote: A comparative study of the common trends and factors that led to a populist radical right vote in Britain and the United States
title_fullStr The Brexit Vote and The Trump Vote: A comparative study of the common trends and factors that led to a populist radical right vote in Britain and the United States
title_full_unstemmed The Brexit Vote and The Trump Vote: A comparative study of the common trends and factors that led to a populist radical right vote in Britain and the United States
title_sort brexit vote and the trump vote: a comparative study of the common trends and factors that led to a populist radical right vote in britain and the united states
publisher Maison de la Recherche en Sciences Humaines
series Revue LISA
issn 1762-6153
publishDate 2021-07-01
description The two symbols of Western liberal democracies – Britain and the US – became in 2016 hotbeds of radical right populism. The vote for Brexit and Donald Trump’s election represent two spectacular populist victories and this article will highlight the strikingly similar dynamics at work in both elections. We will see that the two populist leaders, Nigel Farage in Britain and Donald Trump in the US, mobilised the same arguments and themes to connect to an audience which for years had nourished resentment and anger at the way traditional politicians had governed national politics in their respective countries. Thus, with the Brexit and Trump victories, fringe narratives became mainstream politics and upset the established political order. Nativism, racism and xenophobia, anti-establishment attitudes became the dominant themes of the political debate. It is important to understand how two major Western democracies surrendered to the populist calls and this article tries to provide an analysis on this populist phenomenon in Britain and the US.
topic Brexit
Donald Trump
national identity
populism
populist radical right
Western liberalism
url http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/13054
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