"A book that provides a broad overview regarding the relationship between populism and contemporary constitutional democracies. ... This idea seems to be a perspective incompatible with the logic governing the democratic rule of law, and it is precisely this incompatibility between 'We are the people' populism, constitutional democracy, and the pluralistic view allowed by different constitutional actors - such as of courts, parliaments, and political parties - that finds a deep reflection in the book." (Enrico Andreoli, Revista General de Derecho Público Comparado, Vol. 31, 2022)
A. Introduction
I. Populism and Representative Democracy
1.From Populist Parties to Populist Politics. Populism as a unifying ideology
José Tudela Aranda
2. The Critique of Representative Democracy by its New Enemies
Nikos Alivizatos
3. Law-Making through Oversight. Parliaments as Accountability Fora
Marco Antonio Simonelli
4. The Sirens’ Song: when right-wing populism deals with ‘democracy’. The case of the Rassemblement National
François Debras
II. Populism and the Judges
1. Populist Constitutionalism in the EU Member States. An Empirical Analysis
Fruzsina Gárdos Orosz, Zoltan Szente
2.Judicial reforms. Between political pragmatism and populist strategy
Simona Granata Menghini
3. Constitutional courts in an illiberal democracy. Incapacitated but necessary
Miroslaw Granat
4. Has the Guardian Died in Battle? Populists, Constitutional Courts and the future of the Constitutional State
Giovanni de Ghantuz Cubbe
III. Populism and the European Union
1. The effects of populism on the EU legal system
Helle Krunke
2. Amicus Plato, sed magis amica veritas. The EU unease about Populism.
Cesare Pinelli
3. The Authoritarian Conjuncture in the EU and Liberals’ Crocodile Tears. How Supranational Governance Generates Populism
Giovanni Guerra
4. The judicialization of the rule of law in the EU
Cristina Saenz Perez
IV. Populism, the Pandemic and the Future of Democracy
1. Might Covid Help Strengthening European Democracies?
Tania Groppi
2. Preserving Democracy and the Rule of Law in a Pandemic. Some Lessons from the Venice Commission
Josep Maria Castellà
3. Misinformation and fear: the difficult balance between effective responses and legal shortcuts.
Rafael Rubio Nuñez
4. Democracy and State of Emergency
Andres Dueñas Castrillo
V. Conclusions
Josep Maria Castellà Andreu is Full Professor of Constitutional Law, University of Barcelona, Spain.
Marco Antonio Simonelli is Postdoctoral Research Fellow on Constitutional Law, University of Barcelona, Spain.
This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the impact of populism on the European democratic polity. In the last two decades, European democracies have come under strain amid growing populism. By asserting the superiority of the majority over the law, of direct democracy over representation, and claiming the necessity to defend national sovereignty against foreign interferences, the populist conception of democracy is in stark contrast with the longstanding Western notion of liberal democracy. This volume investigates populist attempts to radically change what Bobbio called the “rules of the game” of democracy from an eminently legal perspective. Weaving together normative and empirical analysis, the contributions focus on the institutions that have suffered the most from the rise of populism as well as those that have better resisted the populist tide. Special attention will be paid to the Venice Commission’s opinions and documents, as they represent the best European standards to evaluate the extent to which populism deviates from constitutional democracy requirements. The book also considers the responses of European States to the explosion of the COVID-19 pandemic. The COVID-19 pandemic has indeed been an accelerator of known and studied trends in most constitutional systems, such as the concentration of powers in the executive hands and the consequential loss of parliament's centrality. Various forms of populism across Europe have thus found an ideal breeding ground to implement their agenda of granting the executive broad regulatory and decision-making powers while loosening parliamentary and judicial checks. Against this backdrop, the book analyses how European democracies should adapt to the challenges posed by the pandemic, as this reflection can help respond to populist threats and propose a way forward for liberal democracy.
Josep Maria Castellà Andreu is Full Professor of Constitutional Law, University of Barcelona, Spain.
Marco Antonio Simonelli is Postdoctoral Research Fellow on Constitutional Law, University of Barcelona, Spain.