The Aspen Institute | Rising National Populism—and Religion @aspeninstitute | Uploaded August 2024 | Updated October 2024, 21 hours ago.
Both Europe and the United States have recently witnessed an unmistakable rise in national populist authoritarianism: from UKIP’s catalyzing of Brexit, to Donald Trump’s election, to the increasing influence of strongmen in Hungary, Austria, Italy, and France. But beneath each of these political waves were silent revolutions in values through which incisive, sometimes religious, ideologies were siphoned into populist platforms. Dr. Matthew Goodwin of the University of Kent joins Ed Luce, US national editor for the Financial Times, for a conversation about the rise of national populism and the ways in which religion has contributed to it.
Both Europe and the United States have recently witnessed an unmistakable rise in national populist authoritarianism: from UKIP’s catalyzing of Brexit, to Donald Trump’s election, to the increasing influence of strongmen in Hungary, Austria, Italy, and France. But beneath each of these political waves were silent revolutions in values through which incisive, sometimes religious, ideologies were siphoned into populist platforms. Dr. Matthew Goodwin of the University of Kent joins Ed Luce, US national editor for the Financial Times, for a conversation about the rise of national populism and the ways in which religion has contributed to it.