Charisma, Leader Effects and Support for Right-Wing Populist Parties
Top Cited Papers
- 1 January 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Party Politics
- Vol. 13 (1) , 29-51
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1354068806071260
Abstract
One of the ways in which support for right-wing populist parties is held to be distinctive from that for other kinds of political parties is that their leaders are alleged to be ‘charismatic’ figures who play a crucial role in the electoral success their parties have enjoyed. Focusing on three Dutch elections, this article tests the charismatic leadership hypothesis, asking whether leader effects are stronger for populist than for established parties and whether they are stronger for populist leaders who are widely held to be more rather than less charismatic. The results indicate that if, following Weber, charisma is seen as an intimate and direct bond between leaders and followers, there is in fact little support for the charismatic leadership hypothesis, at least in the context of leaders shaping electoral outcomes. While recognizing that charisma may manifest itself in other, perhaps indirect, ways, there would seem to us at the very least to be a need for the notion of charisma to be conceptualized more rigorously if it is to continue to be used as an explanation of right-wing populist party success.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Anti-Immigrant Sentiment, Policy Preferences and Populist Party Voting in AustraliaBritish Journal of Political Science, 2006
- Why Some Anti-Immigrant Parties Fail and Others SucceedComparative Political Studies, 2005
- The vulnerable populist right parties: No economic realignment fuelling their electoral successEuropean Journal of Political Research, 2005
- How the LPF Fuelled Discontent: Empirical tests of explanations of LPF supportActa Politica, 2003
- Protest or mainstream? How the European anti‐immigrant parties developed into two separate groups by 19991European Journal of Political Research, 2003
- Distance versus Direction: The Illusory Defeat of the Proximity Theory of Electoral ChoiceAmerican Political Science Review, 1997
- The extreme right in the NetherlandsEuropean Journal of Political Research, 1992
- Issues and Party Support in Multiparty SystemsAmerican Political Science Review, 1991
- Towards a more open model of competitionWest European Politics, 1989
- Regression in Space and Time: A Statistical EssayAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1985