http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/sunday-times/all-that-matters/why-both-modi-and-trump-are-textbook-populists/articleshow/56711860.cms

Why both Modi and Trump are textbook populists

Jan 22, 2017, 09.06 AM IST

Amit Varma

As Donald Trump raised his tiny paw and took the presidential oath
this Friday, I had just finished reading an outstanding book that, I
thought, explained Trump as well as many other leaders on the world
stage today. In 'What is Populism?' Jan-Werner Muller, a Princeton
professor, lays out all the ingredients from which you can cook up a
populist movement. I was struck by how closely our own prime minister,
Narendra Modi, matched Muller's definition. Consider the following
characteristics that characterise populists, as defined by Muller.

One, they claim that not only do they represent the people, but that
whoever does not support them is, by definition, not part of 'the
people'. Muller says this is "the core claim of populism: only some of
the people are really the people." As Trump put it in May last year,
"the only important thing is the unification of the people— because
the other people don't mean anything." Think of how the BJP treats
Muslims and Dalits as second-class citizens.
Two, populists are not just anti-pluralism, but they're also
anti-elite. Muller writes, "Populists pit the pure, innocent, always
hardworking people against a corrupt elite who do not really work
(...) and, in right-wing populism, also against the very bottom of
society." Think of Modi's railings against the "Lutyens elite".

Three, they portray themselves as victims even when they are in power.
As Muller puts it, "majorities act like mistreated minorities." Modi
still rants against the elite even though he is now their leader, and
paid BJP trolls still call journalists 'presstitutes' even though they
control much of the media. Trump, who has been a crony capitalist
insider all his life, is a classic example of a pig calling the pigsty
dirty.

Four, populist parties tend to become monolithic, "with the
rank-and-file clearly subordinated to a single leader." Trump
decimated the Republican Party on the way up, just as Modi is now the
Supreme Leader within the BJP, which once had multiple leaders of
stature.

Five, populists pride themselves on their "proximity to the people."
Modi being a 'chaiwalla' is a key part of his narrative, and as that
famous photoshopped picture of him sweeping a floor shows, the
common-man element is important to him. As it is, indeed, to other
populists. Hungary's Viktor Orban and Venezuela's Hugo Chavez both
hosted shows similar to Modi's Mann Ki Baat.

Six, populism is simplistic, so populists can only think in simplistic
terms, which can lead to "an oversimplification of policy challenges."
Modi's demonetisation is an example of this, as is Trump's attribution
of America's job losses to immigration and outsourcing.
Seven, they tend to believe in conspiracy theories, which "are rooted
in and emerge from the very logic of populism itself." Indeed, the
RSS's view of history is itself a sort of giant conspiracy theory.

How do populists behave once in power? Muller outlines three things
that they tend to do.

One, they "colonize or occupy the state". They fill up all the
institutions with their own people, co-opt those that are independent,
and reshape the system to their will. Think of Modi's appointments of
cronies to the Censor Board and FTII, the replacement of the Planning
Commission with Niti Aayog, and the recent virtual demotion of the RBI
to an arm of the finance ministry.

Two, they "engage in mass clientelism: the exchange of material and
immaterial favors by elites for mass political support." Think of the
sops Modi offered before the Bihar elections, or the ones expected in
the next couple of budgets leading up to important elections.

Three, they shut down dissent in civil society, starting with NGOs.
Muller writes, "rulers like Vladimir Putin in Russia, Viktor Orban in
Hungary, and PiS in Poland have gone out of their way to try to
discredit NGOs as being controlled by outside powers (and declare them
'foreign agents')." Sounds familiar?

I'll leave you with a pleasant thought, though. Here's why I think
both Modi's and Trump's populism will ultimately fail. The narratives
of populism, based on some of the people being all of the people, only
work in broadly homogenous societies. The US will be a
minority-majority country by the middle of the century (ie, whites
will be less than 50% of the population), and a Trump won't be
possible then. As for India, our diversity is our greatest defence
against creeping fascism. Populism might work at the state level, but
nationally, we are too diverse. That puts a ceiling on how much
support Modi can get, which I believe already peaked in 2014, when he
could be all things to all people. I think he already senses this. How
will he respond?
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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