A/73/305
rights and racial equality. Although history, for example in Latin America, provides
examples of left-wing populism that have improved the circumstances of marginalized
groups through social reform, there are contemporary examples of left-wing populist
governance presiding over extreme political repression and other human rights
violations. This is partly because, even though left-wing populist parties generally do
not target minorities per se, they can often reject political competition and claim the
sole right to rule. 9 It is thus important to underscore that populism in its dangerous
forms on both the left and the right exhibits anti-pluralist commitments. 10
11. The present report centres on nationalist populism to highlight the specific
threats to racial equality that arise when these two orientations are combined.
Nationalist populism — especially when it is adopted by ethno-nationalists — tends
to limit “the people” to a particular racial, ethnic or religious group understood to be
the only legitimate national group. Right-wing populists champion this ethnonationalist conceptualization of “the people” using the increasingly multicultural nature
of societies as evidence of an imminent threat against the survival and preservation of
the nation. Right-wing nationalist populists regularly take the additional step of arguing
that those identified as “the people” are long-suffering victims of multicultural society,
and that multiculturalism itself is a driver of socioeconomic decline for “the people”.
The strategy, then, is not just to target elites, but also to target multiculturalism and
members of minority races, ethnicities and religions as all part of the problem. Racial,
ethnic and religious minorities are relegated to the status of illegitimate interlopers
whose interests are characterized as oppositional to those of the group exclusively
designated as constituting “the people”. Thus, when nationalist populists appropriate
the language of democratic legitimacy and representation of “the people”, this
language masks exclusionary and typically racialized conceptions of the nation that
are at odds with liberal conceptions of democracy.
12. Where ethno-nationalist populism is a feature of government, those in power
can begin to oversee the rewriting of national history — including to deny the
Holocaust, for example — in order to reaffirm a racially, religiously or ethnically
specified conception of who “the people” are. 11 And even if nationalist populists do
not win seats in government, their participation in public discourse and the electoral
process can nonetheless result in a shift in the mainstream political discourse to
embrace previously marginal, exclusionary positions. 12 Some of these discourses
include a commitment to ethno-nationalist versions of national history that suppress
the vital contributions that racial, ethnic and religious minorities have made to build
the respective nations. Ethno-nationalists can seek to write minorities out of the
history of the nation. The most recent report of the Special Rapporteur to the Human
Rights Council includes a more detailed analysis of ethno -nationalism as a threat to
racial equality, and of the interaction between neo-Nazi and other extremist ideologies
with populist mobilizations. 13
13. Nationalist populism often successfully advances heteronormative, patriarchal
visions of the nation, and a version of “traditional values” that leads to serious
violations against marginalized social groups (including women, gender and sexual
minorities, and persons with disabilities), especially when those who are socially
marginalized are also racial, ethnic or religious minorities. It shores up the dominance
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10
11
12
13
6/22
Ibid., p. 148.
Müller, What is Populism?, p. 3 (“In addition to being anti-elitist, populists are always
anti-pluralist”).
A Croatian submission highlighted government-sanctioned historical revisionism along these
lines.
See Wodak, The Politics of Fear, p. 184 (noting the normalization of right-wing populist policies
that push the entire political spectrum to the right).
See A/HRC/38/52.
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