Populism has experienced a global resurgence. Yet at the individual level, little empirical research has been conducted to validate theories surrounding this phenomenon, including claims that anger is necessary to trigger populist sentiment and that contemporary populists have a strongly negative perception of society. I conduct a novel survey experiment on US adults (n = 488) that induces anger among various groups and measures populist sentiment as well as opinions on domestic society and the global commons. I perform this examination by first comparing control and treatment groups, ascertaining anger’s impact on populist sentiment while accounting for preexisting anger and populism. I then compare the opinions of right-wing populists, left-wing populists, and individuals that express little-to-no populist sentiment across a wide range of topics relevant to domestic and international politics. Ultimately, I find that anger is not a necessary cause of populism, and that inducing anger does not consistently reinforce a populist mindset. While the variety of populism causes differences of opinion on certain issues, left-wing and right-wing populists agree on several political subjects. Likewise, differences in opinion between populists and non-populists are often significant but fall short of binary opposition. This holds large implications for the future of domestic politics and international relations alike.
Date of Award | 2021 |
---|
Original language | American English |
---|
Awarding Institution | - Eastern Illinois University
|
---|
Supervisor | Paul Danyi (Supervisor) |
---|
- Political Science and International Relations
Emotions and Opinions: The Causes and Effects of Contemporary Populism
Driggers, H. (Author). 2021
Student thesis: Master's Thesis › Master of Arts (MA)