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Populist Attitudes and Conspiratorial Thinking: Empirical Evidence from Turkey

Political Parties
Populism
Voting Behaviour
Evren Balta
Özyeğin University
Evren Balta
Özyeğin University
Cristóbal Rovira Kaltwasser
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Alper Yagci
University of Massachusetts Amherst

Abstract

What happens to the anti-establishment sentiments of pro-incumbent voters for a populist force that is in government and thus controls the political system? This article examines this question utilizing the case of Turkey, a country in which a populist force has been in power for more than a decade. By analyzing a survey of populist attitudes among a nationally representative sample, we demonstrate that while the voters of the incumbent populist party (AKP) are less likely, compared to everyone else, to hold populist sentiments, the same voters are also substantially more likely to endorse conspiracy theories that center on malign foreign powers. This finding is relevant beyond Turkey, because it demonstrates that populist forces might be able to maintain popular support and thus stay in power for a long stretch of time by employing government propaganda to fuel an antagonism against conspiratorial foreign and global forces.