ON
← Back to feed
Why populism fails
United Kingdom🏛️ Politics4 hr. ago

Why populism fails

The article discusses the global rise of populism, citing examples from the United States, the United Kingdom, Latin America, and Asia. It notes that the Republican Party in the U.S. has shifted toward populism under Donald Trump, while Democratic candidates like Graham Platner are also showing populist tendencies. The piece highlights the decline in support for traditional center-left and center-right parties across several democracies, including the UK, US, Australia, Germany, France, and Canada. It references studies suggesting that populist leadership correlates with reduced democratic freedoms and slower economic growth. The author emphasizes the need to define populism, referencing political scientist definitions that frame it as a movement opposing 'corrupt elites' and advocating for the 'pure people.'

How each side covered it

The same event, grouped by the political lean of the outlets covering it.

How each side covered it

Support independent, bias-aware news and unlock the social pulse, community voting, and your personalized For You feed.

Become a Supporter

Covered around the world

The same event as reported in other countries.

Covered around the world

Support independent, bias-aware news and unlock the social pulse, community voting, and your personalized For You feed.

Become a Supporter

Claims check

Key factual claims, and how many sources assert vs dispute each.

Claims check

Support independent, bias-aware news and unlock the social pulse, community voting, and your personalized For You feed.

Become a Supporter

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

1 reports

UnHerd logoUnHerdIndependentLeftFactual 65Objective 554 hr. ago
Why populism fails

The article discusses the global rise of populism, citing examples from the United States, the United Kingdom, Latin America, and Asia. It notes that the Republican Party in the U.S. has shifted toward populism under Donald Trump, while Democratic candidates like Graham Platner are also showing populist tendencies. The piece highlights the decline in support for traditional center-left and center-right parties across several democracies, including the UK, US, Australia, Germany, France, and Canada. It references studies suggesting that populist leadership correlates with reduced democratic freedoms and slower economic growth. The author emphasizes the need to define populism, referencing political scientist definitions that frame it as a movement opposing 'corrupt elites' and advocating for the 'pure people.'

Bias read (Left): The article frames populism as a negative force that undermines democracy and economic growth, aligning with progressive critiques. While it acknowledges the spread of populism globally, it presents a largely critical view of populist movements, particularly those associated with right-wing leaders.

Why these scores (Factual 65 · Objective 55): Factuality is moderate as the article references a database showing increased populist leadership but does not cite specific primary sources or provide detailed methodology. Objectivity is low due to the author's clear preference against populism and the use of emotionally charged language like 'pra

Keep the news honest.

ObjectiveNews is reader-funded and ad-free — we show you the bias instead of hiding it. Support independent journalism for €5/month.

Become a Supporter

Related stories