Populism Politics in the Current Situation
as an Object of Political Analysis
Post-Democracy and Web Populism
Nubar Gurbanova
1
, Ulviyya Khalilova
2
, Rungthum Rangsikul
3
1
Faculty of Social and Political Studies, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia
2
The Institute of History named after A.Bakikhanov, Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences, Baku, Azerbaijan
3
Faculty of Humanities, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia
Keywords: populism, digital media, illiberal democracy, post-democracy, web populism, political transformation.
Abstract: In the modern environment, characterised by inconsistency and instability, there is a deep crisis in the socio-
economic, political and constitutional-legal spheres, and the phenomenon of populism has become
widespread in our society. The current political situation and the development trend in the US, Europe and
many developing countries can generally be described as a "crisis of leaders". This phenomenon brings
great uncertainty both in domestic and international politics. Modern liberal democracies are not able to
provide citizens with full access to participation in political life: that is why the grey electoral zone is
growing every year, and populist movements and leaders come to power in a number of countries. This
article is devoted to the phenomenon of contemporary populism. Attempts at its conceptualisation give rise
to a contradiction: populism is often described as a phenomenon which is completely ineradicable, but
marginal, receding when the situation is normalised; and at the same time, in discourses that interpret
modernity in the categories of post-politics, postmodernism, post-democracy, post-ideology, etc., populism
appears as a system-forming element of the modern political field. Recent situations in Turkey, Russia and
Myanmar were taken as a case for the paper. The aim of this article is to find answers to the following
questions: What does this concept mean and why does populism act as an impeding factor in the
development of democracy? What measures exist to minimise these political means that are dangerous for
today's reforms?
1 INTRODUCTION
The current political situation and the development
trend in the US, Europe (Mudde and Kaltwasser,
2012) and many developing countries can generally
be described as a "crisis of leaders". This
phenomenon introduces huge uncertainty both in
domestic and in international politics.
When it comes to populism, media and
commentators often suffer from historical myopia,
seeing in the emergence of populist politicians a
specific feature of the post-truth era. In fact,
populism as a phenomenon goes back deeper than
the recent political campaigns of Putin and Erdogan.
Turning to the technological characteristics of
modern populism, it should be noted that it is often
called web-populism, since its successes are largely
based on internet technologies and, first of all, on
working with the social network. Successful web-
populism understands the network not as a new
media, but as a technologically new way of
disseminating information, similar to newspapers
and agitation, but only on the internet. The network
is a set of horizontal interactions between people.
The internet becomes only a means of facilitating
communication between them.
In the 1990s, there was an increase in the
discontented migration and globalisation of right-
wing populists in France, Germany and Italy. Brian
Fishman, the Yale University researcher,
convincingly proves that jihadist movements in
general and the “Islamic State of Syria and Iraq” in
particular are forms of populism in the Islamic
world.
So, populism has acquired a truly global
character, which proves the political success of such
figures as Polina Henson in Australia, Rodrigo
Duterte in the Philippines, Recep Erdogan in
Gurbanova, N., Khalilova, U. and Rangsikul, R.
Populism Politics in the Current Situation as an Object of Political Analysis.
DOI: 10.5220/0008816400370041
In Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Contemporary Social and Political Affairs (ICoCSPA 2018), pages 37-41
ISBN: 978-989-758-393-3
Copyright
c
2019 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
37
Turkey, Rafael Correa in Ecuador, or Vladimir Putin
in Russia. This means that the challenges faced by
these states, namely, the unjustified expectations of
the population, the demand for simplified solutions,
the expectations of paternalistic actions from the
state, the demagogy of irresponsible politicians and
the gap between the demands of citizens and the real
capabilities of the state these challenges are not
unique. This state of affairs is also good news,
because the solution is being sought in Washington,
Buenos Aires and Manila. On the other hand, the
global nature of populism may portend the crisis of
the world political system to which we are
accustomed.
The varieties of populism are quite clearly
defined: right and left, political and economic. The
fundamental difference of right and left populism is
the image of the enemy. The enemy of right-wing
populism is the “immigrant”, “alien”, and “other”
(Schäfer and Streeck, 2013). The enemy of left
populism is the “world of capital”, “oligarchy”,
“banks”. But they both agree on one thing: officials
have moved away from the people and do not
represent the interests of society.
Recent situations in Turkey, Russia and
Myanmar were taken as a case for the paper.
Content analysis was used as a method in order to
enrich the discussion. The aim of the article is to
find answers to the following questions: What does
this concept mean and why does populism act as an
impeding factor in the development of democracy?
What measures exist to minimise these political
means that are dangerous for today's reforms?
2 DISCUSSION
2.1 Populism and Media
Populism (from the Latin populus the people) is a
political stance or style of rhetoric appealing to the
masses of the people. Politicians and public figures
are obliged to appeal to the masses, because the
people are the source of the legitimacy of any
government.
However, the term has acquired a clearly
negative connotation, because, in most cases, it is
just about cheap, reduction populism when we are
dealing with unrealistic promises or overly
emotional PR-reasons on which politicians want to
raise their rating. It is worthwhile to understand that
such populism is certainly dangerous, but it has been
and always will be (Mudde, 2004). Therefore, it is
more important not to strive to eradicate it, but,
remaining within the framework of a public
consensus, to change it towards progress.
The ideological morphology of populism is quite
simple. The core of the ideology consists of four
coherent theses:
In any organized community there are
"people" and elites;
They are in a state of irreconcilable
antagonism between themselves;
The people have the right to sovereignty;
The people are the bearer of all social virtues,
therefore it is necessary to listen to its
thoughts and aspirations.
Semantic primitiveness and morphological
simplicity allow populism to adapt to the problems
and demands of a particular society, because any
social problems and troubles can be explained as the
result of a “conspiracy of greedy elites” but rather
solved by a simple “return of power to the hands of
an industrious and honest people”. Due to its ability
to adapt, it seems that populism can be “right”,
“left”, “religious”, etc. In fact, this ideology is only a
“collection of empty symbols”.
As shown in the book with the eloquent title
How Democracies Die by Levitsky and Ziblatt
(2018), when populists win elections, they often
paralyse the activities of democratic institutions and
try (consciously or not) to establish an authoritarian
regime. For example, of the five populists who won
the presidential elections in Latin America (Evo
Morales, Rafael Correa, Alberto Fujimori, Lucio
Gutierrez and Hugo Chavez), each significantly
weakened democratic institutions (Levitsky and
Roberts, 2013). This applies to R. Erdogan in
Turkey and V. Putin in Russia, that is, the “drift
towards authoritarianism caused by the political
victory of the populists, which does not depend on
the cultural or historical context. As noted by Burton
and Higley, historical events show that when the
regime faces various crisis phenomena and
processes, the elites tend to begin to change
institutions in radical ways (Burton and Higley,
1998). This is especially evident in the last few
years, when the authorities of many transitional
political regimes are trying to strengthen control
over new media.
Specifics of the functioning of the media in
transitional regimes can be considered through the
concept of Bryant and Thompson (2004), who
develop Laswell's idea that the mass media perform
three main functions in society: observing the
external environment, linking fragments of the
external environment, transferring social norms and
regulations. The authors offer several models of
media impact on the audience: transactional,
expectations-estimates, use and dependence (Bryant
and Thompson, 2004, p. 149).
ICoCSPA 2018 - International Conference on Contemporary Social and Political Affairs
38
The instrumental nature of populism determines
the appeal to the values and traditions of the masses,
the simplification of the language, anti-elitist and
people-centered demagogy, that is, populism is one
of the driving forces for the formation of the
electoral behaviour of voters. This is an important
variable in describing specific models of populism is
the political culture of society, whereby, in terms of
Almond and Verba (1965), a participatory
subculture is developed, voters are more demanding
of their own influence on politics and more
stringently ask parties to fulfil election promises.
According to the American expert on populism
John Judis, speaking on behalf of the people against
corrupt elites is a typical example of left populism,
which is vertical in a way the struggle of the lower
classes with the political elite, while right populism
is more like a triangle the struggle of the lower
classes with the elites and another “parasitic” group,
which the elites allegedly “condone” (Judis, 2016).
2.2 Myanmar and Rohingya
Perhaps most clearly the price of the refusal to
counter the populist offensive on human rights
manifested itself in Burma. The growth of rabid
nationalist rhetoric by Buddhist extremists, high-
ranking military and individual members of the civil
government created the prerequisites for ethnic
cleansing against the Rohingya Muslims
(Rohingya), which was motivated by the attacks of
militants on security forces. The military operation
launched by the army resulted in massacre, mass
rape and arson in at least 340 villages. More than
640 thousand people fled to neighbouring
Bangladesh in order to save their lives. These are the
same crimes that the international community once
promised it would no longer tolerate.
The victory of democracy party that promote the
unity between minority and majority seem to be
populism activity because the new form of racism
was built against the Muslim minority especially the
Rohingya people. The campaign for democracy and
standing against ethnic conflict from NLD have
gathered minority and majority who are belong to
the similar identities as Buddhist. However, the
majority consider the Rohingya to be foreigners and
a danger to national identity (Buddhism), therefore
the Rohingya become the victims of racism under
the counter racism policy of the NLD against the
minority.
Aung San Suu Kyii, the founder and chairperson
of NLD, said “I don’t think there is ethnic cleansing
going on. I think ethnic cleansing is too strong an
expression to use for what is happening” (bbc.com,
2017). This is contrary to what was happening in
Arakan state and she refused to use the term
Rohingya in her speech in order to hide the fact. The
researcher assumed that she intended to promote a
counter ethnic conflict issue between the people of
Myanmar; on the other hand, facts regarding human
rights abuses and genocide have always been
revealed by the media and NGO organisations.
The researcher can conclude that the Rohingya
issue has never been discussed in the populist
shadow of the NLD. The figurehead of the party,
Aung San Suu Kyii in this case, seemed to avoid the
issue and distance herself from the problem to
maintain her majority popular vote.
2.3 Russia and Putin
Putin was the first to discover a breach in modern
liberal-democratic regimes: one can enjoy broad
popular support and at the same time act with
impunity in an authoritarian way, handing out empty
promises and using the political shortsightedness
and irresponsibility of the masses. According to this
theory, a new generation of populists is simply
trying to use Putin's recipe to undermine the
foundations of Western democracy.
The reasons for expressing mass discontent were
quite “legitimate”: the manipulation of the
constitution for the transfer of the presidential post
(“castling” of Putin and Medvedev), rigging
elections in 2011, abuse of power by high-ranking
officials, etc.
A separate line of unkind words, of course,
refers to state-controlled media, including federal
television channels and even such exotic things as a
“troll factory”. Unfortunately, however, all this also
does not explain the permanent electoral success of
the regime. First of all, it is possible to effectively
deceive only those who are deceived themselves.
Where a more powerful Soviet propaganda machine
did not save the Soviet Union from collapse, the first
approach to which was the election of allied
deputies.
It is necessary to distinguish between the
keynote of Putin's policy and its arrangement.
Repression, propaganda, falsification all this is
secondary. The primary combination of three chords
is militarism, archaism and left populism. This is the
melody that the people want to hear today, and they
are not happy with anything else. Putin has learned
to perform political symphonies of any complexity
in a masterly way with the help of these three
chords. All this became possible only because Putin
managed to reformat the people “for themselves”
before the 14th year, that is, before the counter-
revolutionary coup. He crushed and subjugated the
elites, turning them into an appendage of state power
(novayagazeta.ru, 2018).
Populism Politics in the Current Situation as an Object of Political Analysis
39
Even before the “Russian spring”, the elites
ceased to play any independent political role in
Russia. This gave Putin the opportunity to “short-
circuit” his power “directly” to the “masses”. There
was a link between the leader and the masses, which
is now almost impossible to open. In this direct
communication of the leader with the masses
bypassing the elite lies, today, the main secret of
the stability of the regime, which explains, among
other things, record high voting figures for Putin and
record low voting figures for his opponents in the
March, 2018 elections.
Militaristic ethics always competed with liberal
ones. In Russia, one can say, there is a struggle
between militaristic ethics and the remnants of
liberalism.
2.4 Erdogan in Turkey
The presidential elections in Turkey ended in the
victory of R.T. Erdogan, and all the forecasts for a
possible second round were untenable even before
all the votes were counted. Immediately after the
announcement of the results, June 25, the new-old
ruler of Turkey said that his victory was “the victory
of the Turkish people, all oppressed in our region
and all oppressed in the world” (vesty.co.il).
The victory of Erdogan was the final stage of the
long reform carried out by the Turkish leader for
many years. He managed to gradually concentrate in
his hands such a volume of power, that foreign
analysts started talking about almost the beginning
of a dictatorship.
Recep Tayyip Erdogan turned Turkey into a
presidential republic, cutting down the powers of
parliament and subjugating the government and the
army. The post of prime minister will be abolished,
and the appointment of cabinet members will
become the prerogative of the president.
Populism began to occupy more and more places
in Erdogan's agitation. The latest example was the
readiness prepared by the president after the
elections to consider the possibility of abolishing the
state of emergency in the country (tass.ru, 2018).
Opponents and critics of Erdogan are convinced
that he has concentrated too much power in his
hands and almost abolished the system of checks
and balances that can support the democratic balance
in the state.
As for foreign policy, many observers are also
not inclined to optimistic forecasts. Most likely,
Erdogan will continue the populist course, which
strengthens the position of Islamists; the issue of
closer interaction with the EU will also not have
priority on his agenda. His pro-Palestinian stance
and Erdogan's populist rhetoric are well known to
Israeli diplomats. Relations between the two
countries, for a long time, have been at a level close
to crisis.
The collective West is certainly dissatisfied with
the haste of the Turkish leadership. For the EU and
the US, Erdogan's Turkey a mixture of
nationalism, Islamism, pan-Turkism, an emphasis on
sovereignty, Islamic populism and, finally, anti-
Western behaviour is absolutely unacceptable
(ria.ru, 2018).
3 CONCLUSION
As the well-known British Sociologist, Z. Bauman,
noted “Populism offers unrealistic methods for
solving real problems. The danger of populism in the
disregard of the rules of democratic play, the
reduction of politics to the struggle between good
and evil” (Bauman, 2008, p. 211).
In our days both in developed and developing
countries there is clearly a tendency for politicians to
rise from social movements. Of course, this is not a
new phenomenon. With each crisis, various social
movements have emerged in democracy, and always
a populist politician has emerged from such
movements. Right-wing and left-wing populists are
everywhere today. On the one hand, they create new
conditions for new politicians, including heads of
state; on the other hand, they introduce huge
uncertainty.
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ICoCSPA 2018 - International Conference on Contemporary Social and Political Affairs
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