New article published on the ideology of right-wing populism

2022/11/02 by

Jens Steffek and Yannick Laßhof have published a new article on the intellectual history of American populism.

Their article explores the economic thinking of the American populist right and the reservoir of ideological tropes that it draws on. It starts with Steve Bannon and show how he narrates a binary distinction between a healthy, productive capitalism and a perverted, speculative capitalism. While speculative capitalism is attributed to globalist elites and parasitic minorities in the US, productive capitalism is defined as the home-grown American variety that once benefitted workers and entrepreneurs alike. In a comparative ideological analysis, the article documents that Bannon’s move of ‘othering’ has a long history in writings of the extreme right in the US. In the 1920s and 30s, Henry Ford and Charles Coughlin grounded their antisemitism in a dichotomy of productive and speculative capitalism. Lawrence Dennis developed an Americanized version of fascism using a similar distinction. More recent thinkers of the American Alt-Right revived the critique of capitalism along such lines, as we show with reference to the writings of Samuel Francis. The article contributes to the study of populist ideology by showing how economic theorizing is grafted upon its core distinction of the sane people and corrupt elites.

Jens Steffek is professor of transnational governance at the Institute. Yannick Laßhof has been a research assistant in Jens Steffek’s working group and now is Senior Policy Advisor Defence & Security at the German Bundestag.

Link to the article: Jens Steffek/Yannick Lasshof (2022) ‘Steve Bannon on “Productive Capitalism’”: Investigating the Economic Ideology of the American Populist Right.’ Journal of Political Ideologies, online first, https://doi.org/10.1080/13569317.2022.2138295