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Populism and Euroscepticism

Populism
Electoral Behaviour
Euroscepticism
Public Opinion
Survey Research
INN266
Ioannis Andreadis
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Danilo Di Mauro
Università di Catania

Building: D, Floor: 1, Room: SRVI

Monday 15:15 - 17:00 CEST (22/08/2022)

Abstract

The connection between populism and Euroscepticism has been the focus of previous studies. For instance, Pirro & Taggart (2018) refer to “the unexceptional overlap between populist and Eurosceptic politics”, but of course they recognize that “not every Eurosceptic party is necessarily populist … and not every populist party is necessarily Eurosceptic” concluding that “there is no necessary convergence between populism and Euroscepticism”. Harmsen (2010) refers to other differences between the two concepts, e.g. that populism can be traced back to the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries while Euroscepticism constitutes a more recent phenomenon that dates from the early 1990s and is, of course, confined to Europe alone. However, as Harmsen (2010) argues, although euroscepticism is not a subset of populism, there may be a strong connection between them: “opposition to European integration has unquestionably been shaped by wider anti-elite discourses, and in turn has served to reshape these discourses – as well as the parties which deploy them”. In addition, focusing on Hungary and Poland, Csehi and Zgut (2021) show that, in Orbán’s and Kaczyński’s discourses, “the EU is equated with ‘the corrupt elite’ that stands in conflict with ‘the pure people’, the Hungarians and Poles, and … the EU is claimed to act against the notion of popular sovereignty”. For many years studies on populism and euroscepticism operated predominantly on the basis of applying text analysis methods on party manifestos and speeches by party leaders. Only recently, there have been studies that try to cover both the supply and the demand side of populism and euroscepticism by including batteries of items in survey questionnaires, while there is also an increasing number of expert surveys focusing on both research directions. At the focus of the DataPopEU Research Project funded by the Hellenic Foundation for Research & Innovation is the interplay between populism and euroscepticism. Most of the papers of this panel use data collected by DataPopEU.

Title Details
Unpacking the interplay between populism and euroscepticism: towards a new operationalisation View Paper Details
Comparison of the positions of voters and candidates on populism: the Greek case View Paper Details
Populism monitoring: web (text) data collection, cleaning and analysis. View Paper Details
This crisis hits differently? Trust towards the EU during the pandemic View Paper Details
Measuring Populism and Euroscepticism with surveys: The DATAPOPEU Political Compass View Paper Details