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This ground-breaking book goes beyond conventional arguments to explore how and why populists are able to hold power for long periods. It illustrates that exclusionary populist movements maintain power whenever they succeed in stabilizing social structures around a political project promoted as an alternative to the current hegemony.Dani Filc and Amit Avigur-Eshel employ a neo-Gramscian framework grounded in the distinct analytical concepts of ideology, historical blocs, and economic growth models to examine the long rule of Israel’s Likud party during 2009–2019. Exemplifying how public policies are crucial to exclusionary populists retaining power, they find that the combination of neoliberal and heterodox socio-economic policies and the exploitation of Israel’s export-led growth model to improve the material welfare of 'the people', as well as deals struck with non-populist forces based on ideological commonalities were pivotal in Likud’s decade-long reign. Looking beyond Israel, Filc and Avigur-Eshel apply this analytical framework to successful exclusionary populist parties across Asia and Europe to emphasize the importance of understanding the interrelationship between populist historical blocs, their worldviews and growth models. A pioneering study of populism, this book will appeal to students and scholars of political economy, political sociology, international and comparative politics, political parties, public policy, and governance. Policymakers and researchers interested in the relationship between populism and growth models will also find it beneficial.
Dani Filc, Full Professor, Department of Politics and Government, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and Amit Avigur-Eshel, Senior Lecturer, Department of Public Administration and Policy, Sapir Academic College, Israel
Contents:Introduction: Populism as a struggle for hegemony withingrowth model constraints 1 Populism in government as a struggle for hegemony2 Populism and neoliberalism in Israel3 The maturation of the export-led growth modeland growing social discontent4 Liberalism vs exclusionary populism: Ideologiesand historical blocs5 Cooperating with rivals in government, 2009–156 A ‘pure’ exclusionary populist government: 2015–19Conclusion: Expanding the analytical framework throughtime and spaceBibliography
‘At a time when original critiques of Israel are badly required, this book expertly demonstrates how the populist turn taken by successive right wing governments gained support and mobilisation within Israeli civil society. Not only does it provide a much needed Gramscian analysis of how populism in Israel mainstreamed to destructive levels but also provide a sound case-study to examine similar right-wing populist turns in other states.’