honorentheos wrote:Pretty sure "right-leaning authoritarian" had you covered, EAllusion. The author used populist to describe - rightly - a common characteristic of both Sanders and Trump's appeal to people on both ends of the political spectrum. Or do you mean that Sanders is also a fascist now?
The author went with "right-leaning authoritarian populist" vs. "democratic socialist."
Trump isn't a populist in the sense that got him that moniker at one point. This, however, is the preferred term used in the American press when wanting to refer to his fascist-like traits. That's what makes sense in this context.
It is true that the author is writing a lament about the weakening of the party system to elect establishment types and refers to the contrary as "populism" but that's a misunderstanding of the other sense of populism and not really coherent in the sentence I am referring to. This is the author borrowing from the conventional descriptive political labels for Trump that very much uses populism as a softer term to refer to fascist traits.
Sanders and Trump both use populism (one more authentic than the other) in the sense of "anti-elitist rabble rousing," but the author is not presenting that as a seemingly extreme choice. Anti-elitist rabble rousing is a common feature of various American political movements over the years. The despair the author presents in the choice between socialism and fascism. That's what the author is going for in that line. It's trying to draw a comparison between unacceptable fringes.