He claims the lack of leadership in the business and political world is due to an obsession with populism, which is disenabling the whole system. |
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What exactly is equally valid with sleaze, populism, and unloveliness, I wonder? |
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But how do we create checks and balances in a system that yields to consumer populism? |
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Arguments from incredulity wallow in a vulgar populism that elevates appeal to unlearned prejudice to a categorical imperative. |
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It's fueled by a long legacy of anti-intellectualism and right-wing populism that focuses anger on liberal eggheads. |
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Ironically, however, he says tub-thumping populism is exactly what isn't needed. |
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It is too late to split art and culture, just as it is too late to split populism and decadence. |
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He subsequently dropped much of the textural subtlety in favour of breathless Cuban and funk populism. |
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He embodied a unique combination of populism, talent, success, and family values. |
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Occasionally along comes an example of populism run amok the critics can sink their teeth into. |
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Borges was deep down an old-fashioned liberal, however, who despised the Spanish-American tradition of the caudillo and its vulgar populism. |
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It's about populism and the national propensity for sheer ignorance and execrable taste in visual art. |
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Since his elevation, he has resorted to cheap populism in an effort to win back disaffected working class voters. |
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Its multinational remit is to formulate concrete spaces for experience, reflection, and discussion linked to a contemporary populism. |
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With populism, the working class pays its supposed rise to power with silence. |
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By contaminating the political culture with persuasive but ruinous ideas, populism depraves all electorally-sensitive governments. |
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Pure populism it was, and I thought Australians would see through it big time, which they have. |
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The newspapers love abuse stories, and they love the mixture of celebrity and populism that marries so easily in the culture now. |
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There should be a special award these days for not writing at an elementary school reading level under the guise of populism. |
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In the context of electoral politics as practiced there, populism is attractive to politicians of all shades. |
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Ironically, in view of the grass-roots democratic populism of its rhetoric, the party itself was highly autocratic and centralized. |
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What she liked was the band's implicit populism, the fact that you didn't need years of musical education to appreciate their songs. |
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He breaks new ground, capturing the delicate amalgam of reason and reaction, elitism and populism, that was the counter-revolution. |
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Theirs is unquestionably the most genuinely political version of populism found on television. |
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Statute is too often knee-jerk, headline-led populism with predictably tyrannous consequences for electorally irrelevant minorities. |
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But the elitism and the populism in this claim are less far apart than they might seem. |
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He garnered almost 5 per cent of the vote in 2000, a sign that prairie populism still flourishes here. |
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The authoritarian populism of Thatcher and Reagan were two such successful employments of neo-liberalism by politicians on the right. |
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What he has proved to be is a shrewd tactician and an astute responder to the public mood whose easy-going manner disguises some ruthless populism. |
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At this point, the musical's sendup of the bow-wow populism of our seventh President has taken on a new relevance, if not gravity. |
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To motivate idealization, consider how the public justification fares if it declines to idealize, or endorses justificatory populism. |
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This was a subtle way of playing the card of populism and demagoguery while purely and simply eliminating justice from the equation. |
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Nationalism, populism and protectionism threatened to take root, it warned. |
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We cannot allow ourselves to fall into populism, because the consequence is hyperinflation and hyperinflation makes the poor even poorer. |
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But there is also a certain vagueness, populism and reluctance to answer key questions. |
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The European social model is an exercise in high-minded populism and operates in debt across many countries. |
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But we still see petty-minded politics as well as raw populism all around us. |
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The unsatisfiable anger and alienation of the modern version of false populism is dependent upon keeping people apart. |
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Neither by bowing down to shareholders nor by injecting authoritarian nationalist populism? |
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His bombastic millenarian populism has long irked his more pragmatic conservative allies. |
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Instead, the families' objections have more to do with Mr Murdoch's perceived populism, editorial meddling and rapacity. |
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A polite nod, perhaps, to mannerly indignation but one that carries hints of populism. |
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More than ever, it is the politicians' responsibility not to pander to that populism. |
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Forsaking his famed reformism, Mr Naidu is also matching the open-handed populism of his rival. |
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No one has the slightest idea who will win. The second lesson is that if America tips into recession, the sirens of populism will warble louder. |
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After a decade in power, he has never been more popular, thanks in large part to an unerring instinct for populism. |
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But Carswell is a charming and thoughtful bloke more interested in technology-based libertarianism than kneejerk rightwing populism. |
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Theirs was an unlikely, if fitting, alliance between economic populism and nouveau hippiedom. |
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Now, of course, such thinking opens up cans of worms with regard to academic populism. |
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When Mr Miller was in charge, foreign investors feared that Poland was veering towards populism, fiscal crisis and ungovernability. |
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It has always been thick with reactionary backwoodsmen susceptible to Mr Haider's populism. |
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There is a danger that the essence of higher education will be lost if it succumbs to unconstrained populism. |
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As Mr Letta put it recently in Brussels, the response to excessive technocracy is populism. |
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The Republicans have promoted a powerful variant on populism aimed at an elite of politicians, professors, artsy-fartsy types, and suchlike specimens. |
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It is, regretfully, a good example of the eruption of the ultra far right's new xenophobic populism on the political stage. |
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South of the Rio Bravo, such parties will have to be built in political struggle against widespread illusions in populism and nationalism. |
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The strange thing about the move to radical populism in politics is how much, so far, the young have deferred to the systems designed by the old. |
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It is always difficult to talk about tobacco, for we always end up falling into the trap of populism. |
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We emphasize the fact that, as I said, it can be a popular television network, but it must avoid the traps of populism at all costs. |
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In member states, we are seeing more and more of a resurgence of populism, sadly enhanced by political scandals. |
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Preserving peace and security means fighting the ills rooted in populism and intolerance. |
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Think also about economic nationalism and populism, which are both on the rise. |
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The environment can even become the basis for a type of populism or nationalism. |
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Under what conditions does populism temper the potential ethnicity to provoke disintegrative social conflict, and instead promote pluralist democracy? |
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Cohen thinks maybe some economic populism could work, and that could be true in limited circumstances. |
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Simultaneously Digvijay started on the twin tracks of populism on the one hand and administrative change on the other which kept the opposition on the hop. |
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The spirit of populism is unlike the specter of communism famously invoked by Marx and Engels. |
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But with McGovern gone, it seems that the Democratic tradition of decent populism he epitomized was being interred along with him. |
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Her forte has long been a kind of easy, content-free populism aimed squarely at the lizard brain of the GOP base. |
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In addition to his temperamental aversion to populism, Roosevelt also had a practical reason to be cautious. |
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He has become the most radical pope in modern memory for his economic populism. |
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But Jackson was an experienced hand at public affairs, and his populism, while genuinely felt, was not unthinking or unreflective. |
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Some historians say populism failed because southern Bourbons were able to exploit racial fears and antagonisms and thus split the movement in half in its core region. |
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His rapprochement with his former ideological enemies was made possible by a shift in the radical politics of the seventies from nihilism to populism. |
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It is written in the fulminating language of angry populism. |
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Heavily influenced by revolutionary populism, these leaders struggled to subordinate the immediate means of political action to its universalist ends. |
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Copland's populism represented a voluntary retreat from hard-edged modernism in an attempt to reach a wider public at a time of economic hardship. |
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Football populism has become a substitute for working class solidarity. |
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Its populism, not its profitability, was the network's primary purpose. |
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Thus, the army appeared at the time to be not merely a strong bulwark, not merely a political counterweight to the mass populism of the Hitler movement. |
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We will have a chance to see if last week's lesson in populism renews the desire of all members to do what is right for their ridings and their province. |
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It may introduce an unwelcome element of populism into sentencing decisions and can only exacerbate the problem of unwarranted sentencing disparity. |
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This comparative history by Jean-Pierre Rioux and his team of authors provides us with such knowledge, which is the most powerful weapon against all possible manifestations and modifications of populism in our times. |
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Radical populism and state-oriented military governments appear to be history. |
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In contrast to the reformists who tail the bourgeois populism that is currently resurgent in much of Latin America, the ICL fights for the Trotskyist perspective of permanent revolution. |
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With a steady hand, you calmly steered our monetary policy on a successful course on the basis of the ECB Statute, building up confidence without being swayed by short-term populism, opportunism and carping. |
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Kaufman and Stallings define populism with a set of economic policies designed to achieve some political goals. |
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We know that at this stage neither rhetoric nor populism can be of help. |
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It is high time the press played a role in supporting reconciliation in Lebanon, and stopped giving a helping hand to this stupid escalation and to the resurgence of populism, which is a threat to democracy. |
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His debut album, Belle Ville, manages to combine the best of modernity and tradition and weave an interesting mix of sophistication, populism, tender ballads and caustic humour. |
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The AEDH observes that this rise of populism has to be interpreted as a direct consequence of the increase and persistence of social inequalities. |
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Remember that its political inheritance starts from 500 years of Portuguese colonialism, a war of liberation involving revolutionary populism, a swerve towards Soviet-inspired Marxism and a 15-year civil war. |
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By unleashing the dynamism of the market, the economic rationalists of the 80s relentlessly dissolved established traditions and old hierarchies, a destruction that sometimes enabled a faux neoliberal populism. |
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The marketplace signifies life, community and history, performance and competition, colorful exchange, but also the spectrum from egotism to populism. |
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And this populism continues to confuse production with consumption. |
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We cannot have and cannot even reach for exclusivity in ethic and we should not succumb to ethical populism but have to keep up a serious long-term co-operation within AISAM helping us to become top class corporate citizens. |
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But where Morris, at his best, infuses these ingredients with mordant wit and pathos, Bruce uses them as a recipe for sentimental populism. |
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In this MP's view, the pledge to oppose higher fees was a last relic of the sort of populism that used to infest Lib Dem manifestos back when the party ran no risk of tasting power. |
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Exposed to huckster capitalism and the unfamiliar choices of freedom, they were quick to fall for the absurdest of get-rich-quick schemes and the cheapest of populism. |
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Fukuda cares deeply about policy issues. He worries that Abe is a bit shallow on policy matters, and a bit knee-jerkish in his populism. |
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Central to its populism is its defence of democracy and its claim to represent the true democratic will of the British people. |
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American populism is a little different because it's more detached from that. |
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His reputation rested as much on his eloquence, populism, and style as on original work. |
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As well, the musical form connected a social text of populism and nonelitism to the members' positions as public personalities. |
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It is not crass populism or majoritanianism that ratifies the legitimacy of the polity or the administration. |
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Ms Tymoshenko's actions sometimes smack of populism. |
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The parliamentary jester probably plays the same role, and perhaps we would be better off listening to him entertaining us rather than obsessing over matters of seats, which fuels populism more than you think. |
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Mr Romney, in particular, will have to offer a substantive critique of Mr Huckabee's economic populism and lack of foreign-policy expertise if he is to repulse the Huckabee wave. |
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Making proposals as a mere publicity stunt is also a form of populism. |
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The easy, obvious and superficial answer is that they are all anti-establishment outsiders who share a proclivity for populism. |
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When Latin America embarked on its golden era of cooperative populism, which lasted from 1950 et 1970, the number of cooperatives had already risen from 7,500 to 25,700, and membership from 2 million to almost 10 million. |
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Nevertheless, the existence of broad freedom of speech will always mean the unavoidable existence of a small amount of yellow journalism and false populism. |
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Third, populism is popular with the ruling class. |
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You loathe democracy so much now that you actually call it populism. |
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The literature refers to the breakdown of factions, about the gap between politics and citizens, about cocooning and individualisation, about populism, mediatisation, and a crisis of values. |
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Musically it's no better, stuffed with bland ballads alleviated only by a couple of bouts of sub-Beatles cornball populism that hanker back to Fifties notions of all-round entertainment. |
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The fatal attraction of populism is growing as a result. |
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Two books short-listed for the Goldsmiths Prize also appeared on the Man Booker short list, giving lie to charges made in recent years that the award championed populism over literariness. |
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The missionary populism of a summer-long, plywood village, abstrusely polemical, convened artistic and demotic audiences in mutually puzzled enjoyment. |
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Mr Albertini is campaigning against Mr Berlusconi's swerve into populism and his plans to reforge an alliance with the anti-European Northern League. |
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Former youth wing chair Sanya-Jeet Thandi, 20, whose parents are Indian, said that the UKIP has descended into a form of racist populism. |
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Exclusionary populism and cultural nativism derive their logic and justification from a differentialist ideology, which the populist right has recently adopted from the French nouvelle droite. |
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If there is a political creed behind Sarkozy's government-of-all-the-talents populism, his urge to transcend party or policy, it can be found in what people call his Bonapartism. |
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But it is hated by Latino politicians, who fear Anglicisation will erode their power base. The baldest statement of populism came from Jim Nicholson, chairman of the Republican National Committee. |
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Likeable though he is, Mr Huckabee is tainted by an anti-business strain of populism and a literalist faith that sometimes blinds him to basic science. |
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The computer, the culture of populism and the mass-market, speak Anglo-American from the nightclubs of Portugal to the fast-food emporia of Vladivostok. |
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Are populism and anti-intellectualism rampant in the land? |
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Are we convinced that a diluted hegemonic strategy of democratic populism can function as an emancipative political tool? |
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Strengthening relations between elected representatives and the citizens they represent can help to counter the undesirable consequences of modern democracy, such as abstentionism, populism or even the rise of extremism. |
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Yet mainstream politicians will not see off UKIP by rivalling the populism of a party whose 2010 election manifesto amounted to £120 billion in unbudgeted spending pledges. |
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However the danger of crisis is not crisis itself, actually it is an increased risk of protectionism, corruption, populism, economic nationalism, irresponsibility and moral hazard. |
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It is deplorable that internal policy considerations, mean-mindedness and populism are what are communicated to our citizens instead of talk of visions, opportunities and Europe's big chance. |
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Instead of a battle of ideas, the EU has been marred by a vicious circle between anti-EU populism and technocratic agreements between member states that are afraid of their citizens. |
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Bonaparte did not focus only on Caesar's military career but also on his relation with the masses, a predecessor to populism. |
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Finally, united Europe is also a response to the fears bound up with populism, chauvinism, xenophobia, terrorism and, at the heart of it all, with poverty. |
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But Mr Ivereigh locates the pontiff's roots elsewhere: in the broad Argentine movement known as Peronism, a kind of populism tinged with nationalism which trusts the wisdom of ordinary folk and resents all elites. |
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In a skillful combination of populism, messianism and opportunism, President Saakashvili has, for them, the perfect profile of South American dictators. |
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Judging history with the eyes of the present is a pernicious exercise in populism that simplifies the complex and, consequently, offends the truth. |
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He presents four visions of desktop factories and considers how hobbies can be industrialized, and generally adulates the virtues of entrepreneurial populism. |
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Yasuo Tanaka's recent remarks that those who criticize his consultations with local residents as populism should go to ''a place like North Korea. |
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He also rejected accusations of arbitrariness, voluntarism, and populism. |
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Bernhard's last appearance on a late-night talk show was a handy soapbox to expound on his political message of patriotism, nationalism, and populism. |
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Antagonistic nostalgias legitimated the political claims of movements as diverse as abolitionism, sectionalism, populism, socialism, anarchism, and cosmopolitanism. |
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Radical liberalism, agrarian populism and communism all posed significant electoral challenges to overseas social democracy but here labourism was unchallenged. |
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