Today’s populism is informed by bigotry, but its roots lie in the promise of equality | Kenan Malik
The dark view of populist politics by renowned historian Richard Hofstadter sheds light on the US election
American politics has often been an arena for angry minds." Not a comment on this year's presidential campaign but an observation on another US presidential race, that of 1964. It is the opening line to one of the most influential political essays of the postwar era, The Paranoid Style in American Politics, first published 60years ago this month.
The very title of Richard Hofstadter's essay is redolent of contemporary fears. As Donald Trump has, over the past decade, built a movement out of anger and disaffection, old copies of Hofstadter have been dusted off and op-eds written with titles such as The paranoid style in American politics is back" and Donald Trump's style perfectly embodies the theories of renowned historian".
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