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Poisonous Bubbles: The Support for the League in the Prosecco Region in Italy as a Case of Radical Right-Wing Populism in a (Wealthy) Rural Area

Comparative Politics
European Politics
Populism
Mobilisation
Southern Europe
Lorenzo Zamponi
Scuola Normale Superiore
Lorenzo Zamponi
Scuola Normale Superiore
Enrico Padoan
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile

Abstract

Electoral success of radical right-wing radical populist parties (RRPPs) is often associated with the ‘losers of globalization’. Such broad and stylized accounts may, at least apparently and/or partially, enter in collision with empirical reality, though. This research focuses on the mechanisms of (re)production of the political consensus of the radical right-wing populist League in an emblematic rural area of North-eastern Italy: the “Prosecco Hills”. It is a wealthy area, where export-oriented intensive agriculture and tourism are both well-established and on the rise, in a province where the unemployment rate is 50% lower than the national average: quite far from the usual depiction of those places left behind by globalization processes. Our research aims at offering some accounts for the long-lasting and even increasing popular support for the League in this area, even more striking if we take into account recent and well-known political evolution of the League from an ethno-regionalist party to a populist-nationalist party, while maintaining the main attributes of right-wing populism: anti-establishment narrative, authoritarianism and nativism. How can this happen? How can RRPP take such deep roots in a well-off rural area that they can resist such an ideological shift? And which of the characteristics of this area, and of similar areas of North-eastern Italy, play a role in this process? The paper aims at answering these questions, relying on the collection and the analysis of individual-level survey data from an on-line questionnaire submitted through local Facebook groups, as well as on semi-structured interviews with local key players.