New article in Party Politics: Blurred positions

Feb 10, 2024

In the new issue of Party Politics, you can find an article by Mattia Zulianello and yours truly. The title of the paper is 'Blurred positions: The ideological ambiguity of valence populist parties'. Here is the abstract:

While the diversity of populism has received considerable attention, surprisingly little is known about populist parties that defy clear-cut left-right categorization. We show that valence populist parties are non-positional and substantially different from both left-wing and right-wing populist parties. First, we demonstrate that valence populist parties deliberately take blurry positions on both the economic and socio-cultural dimensions of competition. Second, we show that such an ambiguity is counterbalanced by a disproportionate emphasis on anti-corruption appeals, the most paradigmatic example of a non-positional dimension. Our results have important implications for our understanding of varieties of populism, in particular, and the positional and non-positional competition strategies of political parties, in general.

The argument is pretty straightforward and nothing fancy is going on empirically. I appreciate what Daniel Coffey had to say about the paper: 'I really like the idea of measuring/analyzing how parties “deliberately take blurry positions” as I think this does not get enough attention in the text analysis literature.' Hopefully, the paper can inspire future work to further examine when and how populist parties pursue specific strategies.

I should note that the title of this post is slightly misleading. Specifically, it is not a new article as it was published online February 27, 2023 (i.e., almost a year ago!). You can find the article here. The replication material is available on GitHub.

Erik Gahner Larsen
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