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When Populism Goes Local : Analysis of Populist Party Manifestos in the Czech Local Elections (2018–2022)

VODA, Petr and Patrik MIKÓCZI

Basic information

Original name

When Populism Goes Local : Analysis of Populist Party Manifestos in the Czech Local Elections (2018–2022)

Authors

VODA, Petr and Patrik MIKÓCZI

Edition

SISP Convengo 2025 : Political science in the digital age. Napoli, Italy, 2025

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Presentations at conferences

Country of publisher

Italy

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Marked to be transferred to RIV

No

Organization

Fakulta sociálních studií – Repository – Repository

Links

LX22NPO5101, research and development project.
Changed: 24/3/2026 00:50, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

In the original language

In recent years, the study of populist parties has increasingly focused on their activities at the local level. Existing literature highlights that local governments provide fertile ground for populist demands, particularly for technocratic populism. Paxton (2020) argues that local governance offers the most likely context for implementing core populist demands, as it expands the opportunity to emphasize rhetoric defining ‘the people’ and advocating for their authority over elected representatives. However, current research primarily examines populist parties in local government, leaving electoral manifestos relatively underexplored. This study addresses that gap by analyzing over 500 electoral manifestos from local elections in the Czech Republic. We investigate how populist parties (ANO, SPD) frame "the people" and "the elite" and adopt technocratic approaches to local issues. Additionally, we explore how programmatic profiles correlate with contextual characteristics of municipalities, such as size, location (center/periphery), electoral support for these parties in national elections, and personal linkages to regional or national party elites.The results suggest that populist parties are more likely to rely on host ideology in bigger municipalities.

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