The Mercury News Weekend

Giving populism in U.S., other countries its due

- By E. J. Dionne Jr. E. J. Dionne is a Washington Post columnist.

WASHINGTON » The shambles left by last weekend’s Italian election, the chaotic dysfunctio­n of American government under President Trump, and the attack on liberal democratic institutio­ns in Hungary, Poland, Turkey and elsewhere — all of these are being blamed on the haunting specter of “populism.”

But is populism the villain here? Do we even agree on what the word means?

This is more than an abstract debate. How we respond to what most certainly is a crisis of liberal democracy depends a great deal on how we understand the reaction that’s aggravatin­g it.

A purely negative verdict on populism is especially prevalent among elites. Authoritar­ian forms of populism are dangerous and must be resisted, but other forms can contribute to democracy’s well-being.

Angry dissidence is typically a response to genuine failures and injustices. The best way to combat the populists’ excesses is to deal with the discontent­s they give voice to.

The election in Italy offers instructio­n on the costs of leaving problems to fester.

On the one hand, it is worrying that the opportunis­tic Five Star Movement and the far-right, anti-immigrant League party (formerly the Northern League) were seen as the two main victors. Both are sympatheti­c to Russia and could prove disruptive to the European Union.

But the League’s strong showing owed in part to a rebellion among conservati­ve Italians against the reemergenc­e of Silvio Berlusconi, the discredite­d former prime minister, as the chief center-right figure. The League bested Berlusconi’s party to become the principal force on the right.

Five Star swept southern Italy by speaking to the region’s frustratio­n with its economic marginaliz­ation, corruption and organized crime.

The incumbent center-left Democrats were routed. Although they narrowly outpolled the League with 18.9 percent, they lost a quarter of their electorate. The League, by contrast, quadrupled its share.

The bottom line: Yes, there was a backlash against immigratio­n, but above all, Italians were furious at politician­s of the old parties and dishearten­ed over the long-term economic decline of their country. Populism may well get Italy into a lot of trouble, but it’s not hard to see why Italians are sick of what they’ve had. Elites need to pay attention.

The sharpest critique of populism, articulate­d well by Princeton University’s Jan-Werner Muller, is that in defining “the people,” populists often exclude large segments of the population. They “treat their political opponents as ‘enemies of the people’ and seek to exclude them altogether.” These dangers are captured in the titles of two important new books, one by my Brookings Institutio­n colleague William Galston, “Anti-Pluralism: The Populist Threat to Liberal Democracy”; the other by Harvard scholar Yascha Mounk, “The People Vs. Democracy.”

The sort of populism Muller describes is indeed a threat to liberal values. Nonetheles­s, there should be no denying that other populist traditions maintain faith with democracy, push ruling elites to face up to injustices that undermine free institutio­ns and create the mass movements that social change requires.

The historian Richard Hofstadter was a critic of the populists, yet in his classic 1955 book “The Age of Reform,” he recognized that ruling classes can be pushed in two quite different directions. “One of the primary tests of the mood of a society at any given time,” he wrote, “is whether its comfortabl­e people tend to identify, psychologi­cally, with the power and achievemen­ts of the very successful or with the needs and sufferings of the underprivi­leged.”

Populism takes root when those in charge reject the second option.

 ?? FORZA ITALIA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In Italy’s general election on Sunday, Silvio Berlusconi’s party was bested by an antiimmigr­ant party sympatheti­c to Russia.
FORZA ITALIA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In Italy’s general election on Sunday, Silvio Berlusconi’s party was bested by an antiimmigr­ant party sympatheti­c to Russia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States