Conceiving of populism as the charismatic mobilization of a mass
movement in pursuit of political power, this Element theorizes that
populists thrive where ties between voters and either bureaucratic
or clientelistic parties do not exist or have decayed. This is
because populists' ability to mobilize electoral support directly
is made much more likely by voters not being deeply embedded in
existing party networks. This model is used to explain the
prevalence of populism across the major states in
post-authoritarian Southeast Asia: the Philippines, Indonesia, and
Thailand. It extracts lessons from these Southeast Asian cases for
the study of populism.
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