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Revista mexicana de opinión pública
versión On-line ISSN 2448-4911versión impresa ISSN 1870-7300
Resumen
LYNE, Mona et al. Populist attitudes and support for democracy among Latin American bureaucrats. Rev. mex. opinión pública [online]. 2024, n.36, pp.33-78. Epub 04-Feb-2025. ISSN 2448-4911. https://doi.org/10.22201/fcpys.24484911e.2024.36.86857.
Despite macro-level patterns that link populists in power with democratic backsliding, it is unclear how populist attitudes correlate with attitudes about democracy among individuals. Scholarship has only recently considered this issue and produced inconclusive results. Using a unique survey of Latin American bureaucrats, we investigate how populism operates among bureaucrats, a set of actors with a crucial role in democratic governance. We analyze each of three dimensions of populism separately (anti-elitism, pro-people orientation and Manicheanism). Building on recent scholarship finding that populists are dissatisfied democrats, we examine the relationship between attitudes about each dimension of populism and satisfaction with and support for democracy. We extend current scholarship by deploying two measures of satisfaction with democracy and four measures of support for democracy, including support for checks on the executive. We find that those scoring high on underlying dimensions of populism rate the quality of democracy lower but are not less satisfied with the system in their countries. We also find that those with pro-people attitudes consistently support democracy, including checks on the executive. Those with a Manichean outlook, in contrast, are less supportive of democracy and favor increased executive powers. These complexities suggest the need for more research on the relationship between attitudes about populism and democracy, as well as the need for understanding how attitudes among important social groups, particularly institutional actors, may differ from the overall population.
Palabras llave : Populist attitudes; Support for democracy; Latin America; Bureaucrats.
