‘Disrupt
or be disrupted’, mainstream parties warned as voters turn to populists
Research
shows voters losing faith in traditional centre-left and centre-right to
deliver meaningful change
Eleni Courea
Political correspondent
Thu 30 Jan
2025 18.00 GMT
Voters in
western democracies are turning away from mainstream political parties and
towards populists because they are losing faith in their ability to implement
meaningful change, a major report based on surveys of 12,000 voters has found.
The
popularity of traditional centre-left and centre-right parties across major
democratic countries has plummeted from 73% in 2000 to 51% today, according to
research by the Tony Blair Institute.
Researchers
looked in depth at the views of samples of 2,000 voters polled in each of six
big democracies – the UK, US, Australia, Germany, France and Canada – and found
they were “remarkably similar”.
They
concluded that voters were increasingly turning away from centre-left and
centre-right parties not for ideological reasons, but because confidence in
their competence and integrity have plummeted.
“Whatever
voters are looking for, they increasingly seem to doubt that it can be
delivered by the parties they have traditionally elected to office,” the report
said.
In the TBI’s
analysis, voters were divided into “insiders”, who were willing mainstream
politicians to work, and “outsiders”, who have given up on traditional parties
and turned to insurgents. Both groups wanted honesty, competence and reform –
but the difference was in their faith in mainstream parties to deliver it, the
thinktank said.
Outsiders
felt they were victims of a system run by remote elites serving their own
interests instead of implementing simple solutions to political problems. They
placed greater value on “common sense” over independent evidence, and strong,
decisive leaders over negotiation and compromise.
In the UK,
older voters were likelier to be outsiders, while in France and Germany – where
the far-right National Rally and Alternative for Germany have surged in
popularity – younger and older voters were equally likely to be outsiders.
Across the
countries surveyed, there was a high degree of economic pessimism among voters,
who expected children born today to be worse off than their parents. This
feeling was most acute in the UK – where 49% expected children to be worse off,
compared with 26% who expected them to be better off – and in Australia and
France.
The report
found that this economic pessimism was linked to declining faith in democracy.
Of those voters who said they had negative views about democracy, 77% said they
believed that children born today would be worse off than their parents.
Voters
generally thought that technology made their lives better, but were ambivalent
about its impact on public services. Asked how optimistic they were about
potential improvements brought about by AI, most placed themselves between a
three and seven out of 10. Outsiders who were distrustful of politicians were
much more pessimistic about technology.
The report
concluded that “the key to bringing coalitions back together is effective
delivery” and “paradoxically, modern technology can offer part of an answer”.
It suggested that, for example, introducing digital IDs, which the UK
government has backed, could help assuage concerns about controlling
immigration.
Ryan Wain,
the TBI’s executive director of politics, said the findings served as a
“clarion call to mainstream parties: disrupt or be disrupted”.
He said that
to build and maintain support, mainstream parties needed to “change through
disruption – of social media feeds, of the old left-right spectrum and by
embracing new technology, especially AI. At the same time, credible answers
must be provided for legitimate grievances, including around immigration.”
Rob Ford, a
professor of political science at the University of Manchester, said the report
reflected that “while the TBI has provided us with an elegant and rigorous
report to give us a diagnosis of the problem, they don’t offer much by way of a
cure. I’m not sure anyone has the answer.”
He added:
“The central conundrum of our times is: is there any kind of deliverable
performance for any government that voters will reward? We’re seeing every
single incumbent getting kicked out whatever they do, whatever they support,
whatever narrative they promote.
“Take a
typical Reform voter – they will say, ‘here’s a list I demand that the
government do’. Some of those things are impossible for any government to do.
They will say they want net migration down to zero and major improvements to
the healthcare system, and also lower taxes. How? If you deliver any one of
those things you are making it drastically harder to deliver the others.”
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