Introduction
This study aims to explore the presence and types of emotions in the populist political discourse, and above all, across the ‘varieties of populisms’: right wing, left wing or hybrid (Zulianello, Reference Zulianello2020). Often in academia and beyond, it is noted that there is a special connection between emotions and populism (Nguyen, Reference Nguyen2019), and that populist parties and leaders have an additional emotional ingredient among their political communication tools (Canovan, Reference Canovan1999) and that emotional appeals are a recurrent characteristic of populist speeches, language, and style (Alvares and Dahlgren, Reference Alvares and Dahlgren2016; Bossetta, Reference Bossetta2017; Ernst et al., Reference Ernst, Blassnig, Engesser, Büchel and Esser2019a, Reference Ernst, Esser, Blassnig and Engesser2019b). These appeals are one of the essential drivers of populism (Kenny, Reference Kenny2017) an aid in ‘framing injustice’ and in creating a populist collective identity (Cossarini and Vallespin, Reference Cossarini and Vallespín2019). Many scholars have also credited emotions for the electoral success of populists. This specific type of communication is characterized by ‘emotion-eliciting appeals rather than rational argument’ (Hameleers et al., Reference Hameleers, Bos, de Vreese, Aalberg, Esser, Reinemann, Strömbäck and Vreese2016; Wirz, Reference Wirz2018). Indeed, studies have shown the role of emotions in increasing ‘populist attitudes’ of citizens and in favouring the propensity for the vote to populist parties (Rico et al., Reference Rico, Guinjoan and Anduiza2017; Vasilopoulos et al., Reference Vasilopoulos, George and Foucault2018, Reference Vasilopoulos, George, Nicholas and Foucault2019).
However, compared to other subfields of populism research (e.g. definitions, causes, measurements, etc., for an overview, see Manucci, Reference Manucci2022), the presumed link between populism and emotional communication still merits attention, especially for what concerns a ‘systematic empirical scrutiny’ (Widmann, Reference Widmann2021). Moreover, comparative studies across varieties of populisms and different types of emotions remain scarce and are often conducted more in the normative-theoretical than empirical realm (see the theoretical framework by Salmeila and Von Scheve, Reference Salmeila and von Scheve2018).
This study aims to unpack the role of emotions in the political discourse of populist and non-populist parties and above all, across ‘varieties of populism’ (right wing vs. left wing or hybrid). Is there an empirical connection between emotions and populist parties’ discourse? Have non-populist parties increasingly adopted the populist ‘emotional appeal’ style of communication? Are different types of emotional appeals, generally used by different types of populisms?
Focusing on Italy as a ‘crucial’ case study for the analysis of populism, due to its endurance in the political party system and its varieties, and using a novel methodological approach based on supervised machine learning Footnote 1, the study systematically investigates the presence, intensity and trends of different types of emotions (i.e. anger, distrust, hate against outgroups, hope, joy) in the discourses of populist vs. non-populist political parties over the last 20 years in Italian politics (from 2000 to 2020). More in particular, analysing the political discourse (institutional vs. more informal, i.e. electoral manifestoes vs. leaders’ speeches) of all the Italian political parties (with a corpus of more than 13,000 sentences analysed), and combining quantitative and qualitative data, it shows the similarities and differences among various populistsFootnote 2, and among populists and non-populist parties, in terms of the use of various types of emotions in their rhetoric as well as different communication arenas.
We start from the assumption that there is an increasing strand of literature which addresses populism as a political communication style that also takes emotions into account (just to mention a few, Crabtree et al., Reference Crabtree, College, Golder, Gschwend and Indriđason2018; Nai, Reference Nai2021; Widmann, Reference Widmann2021). Moreover, some of these studies also focus on the Italian case (e.g. Bracciale et al., Reference Bracciale, Andretta and Martella2021; Martella and Bracciale, Reference Martella and Bracciale2022). However, they mainly focus on the social media communication (i.e. Facebook and Twitter) of a limited number of Italian leaders, during specific electoral campaigns (i.e. 2018). Our study, which is an attempt to translate the Salmela and von Scheve conceptual framework into a machine learning analysis, is positioned within this growing field of research, building on it and attempting to offer an empirical and methodological contribution to it. Previous studies (e.g. Ernst et al., Reference Ernst, Blassnig, Engesser, Büchel and Esser2019a, Reference Ernst, Esser, Blassnig and Engesser2019b; Bracciale et al., Reference Bracciale, Andretta and Martella2021) stress that populists use emotional language by expressing ‘discrete’ positive (e.g., happiness, contentment, hope, pride, trust) or negative (e.g., anger, hate, uneasiness, sadness, fear, regret, affection) emotions.
Disentangling varying types of emotions predominant in the political discourse of a specific type of party or ‘party families’, such as populists, or varieties of populism, may be important given that emotions have been found to be ‘key strategic styles’ for attracting voters attention (ibid., Boussalis and Coan, Reference Boussalis and Coan2021Footnote 3). Moreover, looking at the populist phenomenon in terms of its communication style with a focus on emotions seems particularly relevant as it may affect the overall political communication of a political system (ibid., Ernst et al., Reference Ernst, Blassnig, Engesser, Büchel and Esser2019a, Reference Ernst, Esser, Blassnig and Engesser2019b). For this reason, our cross time study, over a large timespan, on a ‘most likely’ case study for populism and populist political communication, may thus have important implications for research on emotional appeals in politics, populist communication and political campaigning, as well as studies on the ‘populist contagion’ (Widmann, Reference Widmann2021; 11).
Following the literature review on populism and emotions (section 2) and a section on data and method (3), we turn to the discussion building on the empirical analysis (4, 5). In the conclusion, we problematize our findings to future research (6). We argue that not only are Italian populists consistently found to be more ‘emotional’ than non-populists, but also that the prominence of emotions in the overall Italian political party discourse has increased in recent years and, significantly, that the types of emotions mobilized (both positive and negative) vary considerably depending on the party ideological alignment (and the communication arena).
Theory and analytical guidelines: populism/populisms and varieties of emotions
First, both populism and the role of affective politics are two prominent topics in the academic debate in recent decades (Neuman et al., Reference Neuman, Marcus, Crigler and MacKuen2007; Hameleers et al., Reference Hameleers, Bos, de Vreese, Aalberg, Esser, Reinemann, Strömbäck and Vreese2016; Arias-Maldonado, Reference Arias-Maldonado2017). Emotions are considered to play a role in defining and influencing cognitive processes and value judgements on politics, including citizens’ electoral preferences (Bakker et al., Reference Bakker, Schumacher and Roodujin2021). They also have a role in mobilization, recruitment and collective political actors’ endurance (e.g. on social movements, see Jasper Reference Jasper2011), as well as in social and political in group/outgroup identification (Sindic and Condor, Reference Sindic and Condor2014), an aspect particularly resonant in populism.
Second, those studies looking at the nexus between populism and emotions have underlined the role of emotions in boosting populist attitudes and an increasing propensity to vote for these parties has been emphasized (Bakker et al., Reference Bakker, Rooduijn and Schumacher2016; Rico et al., Reference Rico, Guinjoan and Anduiza2017; Vasilopoulos et al., Reference Vasilopoulos, George and Foucault2018; Reference Vasilopoulos, George, Nicholas and Foucault2019). Emotions, and the emotive content of political campaign messages (Utych, Reference Utych2018) may influence the political behaviour (e.g. Vasilopoulos et al. (Reference Vasilopoulos, George, Nicholas and Foucault2019) – on the role of fear and anger on the vote for the radical right); as well as citizens’ attitudes and opinions (e.g. Vasilopoulou and Wagner (Reference Vasilopoulou and Wagner2017) – on fear, anger and enthusiasm on attitudes towards European integration), since they also affect how people process information (e.g. Kuhne and Schemer (Reference Kuhne and Schemer2015) – on the role of fear for new voters for the populist radical right). For example, Widmann (Reference Widmann2021), on the basis of press releases and twitter communications of all the major parties in Austria, Germany and Switzerland (from 2016 to 2018) showed that populists use significantly more negative emotional appeals than non-populist parties. Similarly, Crabtree et al. (Reference Crabtree, College, Golder, Gschwend and Indriđason2018), focusing on election manifestoes from the 1980s up to 2012 in various European countries, including Italy, explain the type of electoral campaign run by political parties, showing that the level of positive sentiment used depends on their incumbency status, their policy position, and the objective economic conditions (for a similar study, see Kosmidis et al., Reference Kosmidis, Sara, Eamonn and Whitefield2019). Finally, Nguyen (Reference Nguyen2019), comparing panel data from Austria and Germany, investigates the relationship between anger and anxiety on the one hand, and support for populist parties on the other; and Wirz (Reference Wirz2018) focusing on German-speaking regions in Europe, shows that populist appeals do indeed elicit emotions and that this increases the persuasiveness of the appeals. Most of these studies offer valuable insights when examining the Italian case. We build on and update them, and moving beyond the focus of only one type of populism (i.e. right wing), while not focusing selectively on some electoral campaigns or on the Internet sphere.
Third, with regards to specific, different types of emotions, populism has been linked to various emotions like hope, anger and resentment (Wagner, Reference Wagner2014Footnote 4; Rico et al., Reference Rico, Guinjoan and Anduiza2017; Salmeila and Von Scheve, Reference Salmeila and von Scheve2018). Emotions mobilized by populists can be differentiated into the so-called ‘negative’, such as fear, anger, emergency, and insecurity feelings (Alvares and Dahlgren, Reference Alvares and Dahlgren2016; Caiani and Graziano Reference Caiani and Graziano2016; Hameleers et al., Reference Hameleers, Bos, de Vreese, Aalberg, Esser, Reinemann, Strömbäck and Vreese2016) or the ‘positive’, such as enthusiasm, pride, and hope (Wirz, Reference Wirz2018; Ernst et al., Reference Ernst, Esser, Blassnig and Engesser2019b; Bracciale et al., Reference Bracciale, Andretta and Martella2021).
Studies have also centred on the association of specific types of emotions with different political ideologies, such as ‘conservative or liberal thinking’ (Taber and Young, Reference Taber, Young, Huddy, Levy and Sears2013). In this regard, fear, nostalgia Footnote 5 and anger, are considered essential components in reactionary views and anti-liberal political parties (Hochschild, Reference Hochschild2018), but even (especially anger) in radical left wing politics (Cossarini and Vallespín, Reference Cossarini and Vallespín2019; Magni, Reference Magni2017). Anger, has been connected to insecurity and seen as a reaction to citizens’ vulnerabilities (Salmeila and von Scheve, Reference Salmeila and von Scheve2018). Those populist messages provoking anger aim to ‘deflect shame-induced anger and hatred away from the self and instead toward the political and cultural establishment and various ‘Others’’ (Salmela and von Scheve, Reference Salmeila and von Scheve2018: 443). Insecurities or resentment, understood as complex affective states that intertwine in the web of past, present and future (Bonansinga, Reference Bonansinga2020), have been linked to feelings of social disintegration, economic insecurity, relative deprivation and powerlessness (Abts et al., Reference Abts, Dalle Mulle and Laermans2019) and considered a strong predictor of (right wing) ethno-populism, anti-immigrant attitudes and welfare chauvinism (Abts and Kochuyt, Reference Abts and Kochuyt2013), even in times of economic prosperity (Mols and Jetten, Reference Mols and Jetten2016). However, through the use of anger, populists might also tap into discourses on morality and injustice (e.g. against neo-liberalism), as many left wing populist leaders do (Rico et al., Reference Rico, Guinjoan and Anduiza2017).
So-called positive emotions, like pride and joy, are often assigned by populists to the notion of honesty of the ordinary man (Bonansinga, Reference Bonansinga2020). The populist left would especially relay on them in its political communication, due to its ideal of participation from below and collaborative sentiments which enable the transformation of shame into high-energy, active emotions, such as also indignation and anger (ibid., 446).
While repressed shame, resentment, anger and hate targeted at other generic groups would lead to, and be mobilized mainly by right wing populism; acknowledged shame, indignation, but also joy and pride, would be favoured and mobilized more typically by the populist left (Salmeila and Von Scheve, Reference Salmeila and von Scheve2018: 449). This differentiation has also been applied to understand the emergence and success of different types of populisms in structurally and socially similar conditions (e.g. of modernization, globalization, etc.) related to crises (Brubaker, Reference Brubaker2017). In this regard, a concept elaborated, though not tested empirically, is the ‘emotional opportunity structure’ (Salmeila and Von Scheve, Reference Salmeila and von Scheve2018: 438), which shows how structural factors may interact with (individual and collective) emotions to set the terrain for populist entrepreneurs, who, in turn, often exploit such opportunities for their political gain. Indeed, conditions refer not only to structural factors, but rather are ‘constituted and maintained by social and cultural processes that render (certain) emotions more visible, desirable, and acceptable than others’ (ibid., 439). This analytical lens seems particularly fruitful in investigating the Italian case, as its (similar) contextual ‘emotional opportunities’ can be exploited in different ways by different varieties of populism. In this study, we look at the actors who may connect the macro level causes with the macro level outcomes.
Against the background of this scholarship in this study we will focus on five main (‘positive’ and ‘negative’) emotions (see also Bracciale et al., Reference Bracciale, Andretta and Martella2021; Nai, Reference Nai2021) generally attributed to populism: fear and insecurity; anger; hate against outgroup (i.e. generic others)Footnote 6; indignation against neoliberalism; joy and pride (for the definition and operationalization of the specific emotions we analyse, see the method section and table A in the appendix), elaborating the following assumptions: i. that the populist Italian political discourse is more emotional than the non-populist one (hyp.1); ii. that all in all, Italian political parties use of emotions in their political discourse will increase over time (hyp.2, or the ‘populistisation’ of the political discourse with regards to emotions); and, finally, that, iii. different types of populist parties (i.e. right wing vs left wing/hybrid) will tend to mobilize different types of emotions in their political discourse (hyp. 3).
Some of these assumptions are not new (i.e. see the reflections on the difference between Widmann's results and the Italian context, e.g. Bracciale et al., Reference Bracciale, Andretta and Martella2021; Martella and Bracciale, Reference Martella and Bracciale2022), however we expanded on them by focusing on a broad(er) timeframe, on varieties of populists and communication arenas (institutional vs. informal). In particular, while our first and third expectations are based on insights derived from the literature review illustrated above, the second is a broader interpretation of the so-called ‘contagion effect’ of populism – in terms of emotions. Populist parties are considered to have a contagion effect on the mainstream parties, polarizing or radicalizing the content of the political debate (Iyengar et al., Reference Iyengar, Lelkes, Levendusky, Malhotra and Westwood2019), beyond increasing the salience of specific issues (Akkerman, Reference Akkerman2015), so that mainstream parties would react to the success of populist parties by, among other things, adopting a populist rhetoric (Schwörer, Reference Schwörer2021). Finally, although this is an exploratory research effort, we are also guided by the hypothesis that we should expect populist features to grow (i.e. the ‘emotional appeal style’) due to the presence – since 2008 – of an ‘exogenous shock’ such as the financial and economic crisis. Moreover, in this regard (and beyond the general trend), as emotions can be influenced by the (cultural) context (Lim, Reference Lim2016), Italy seems to provide a perfect setting to clarify, beyond the context (i.e. ‘ceteris paribus’), specificities (in the ‘agency’) of varieties of populisms.
Method and sources
Italy appears as a paradigmatic case to such a study on populist communication, as it offers a great variety of populisms throughout its history – (i.e. left wing and right wing, even centrist; ‘fourth types’, Biancalana, Reference Biancalana, Blokker and Anselmi2020; Verzichelli and Castaldo, Reference Verzichelli and Castaldo2020) and has been considered a ‘laboratory’ and ‘showcase’ of populism, for its success and endurance (Albertazzi et al., Reference Albertazzi, Giovannini and Seddone2018; Hamdaoui, Reference Hamdaoui2021)Footnote 7.
To investigate the presence and types of (‘complex’, although discrete) emotions mobilized in the political discourse by populist actors in Italy, we analysed the national party manifestos and leaders’ speeches of all the political parties (populist and non-populist) in the country (for details on the parties included in the analysis, see table B and B2 in the appendix), across the left – right wing ideological spectrum, over the last two decades (2000–2020)Footnote 8. We took into account both the institutional (i.e. manifestoes) and more informal political communication (i.e. leaders’ speeches during electoral campaigns, party rallies and congresses, talk shows)Footnote 9. Our unit of analysis is the sentenceFootnote 10 comprising a final corpus of 13,530.
The sentiment analysis approach usually relies on dictionary-based approaches (e.g. Widmann, Reference Widmann2021)Footnote 11. However, this approach may be insufficient to intercept complex emotions, like those in which we are interested and that can be considered the ‘features of the populist communication styles’ (Ernst et al., Reference Ernst, Blassnig, Engesser, Büchel and Esser2019a)Footnote 12.
In supervised machine learning, still scarcely applied to measure aspects of populism (see Di Cocco and Monechi, Reference Di Cocco and Monechi2022), the researcher in contrast ‘trains’ an algorithm, simulating coders’ activity (for more information on this ‘training’, see appendix table C)Footnote 13. In order to train the algorithm, we derived emotional scores per sentence using a Random Forest (RF) classification algorithm (Breiman, Reference Breiman2001)Footnote 14, adopting a bag-of-words approach after text pre-processing. In terms of our procedure, first of all, we went through a manual coding process involving 15% of the Italian corpus (totalling 1917 sentences), randomly selected, in which the presence of an emotion was assessed and a type attributedFootnote 15.
Specifically, based on the extant literature, we focused on five broad emotions particularly relevant to populism (see table A in the appendix): a. ‘hate against outgroup (i.e. generic others)’, mainly referred to the hostility towards immigrants, ethnic and social minorities (e.g. homosexuals, Roma people, Muslims); b.‘anger’ towards political opponents, judicial and intellectual elites, or the ‘others’ in the Manichaean perspective of the society; c. ‘fear and insecurity’, referred to uncertainty, dissatisfaction and insecurity with the economic dimension and wellbeing; d. ‘joy and pride’, which include any emotional feelings connected with pride and cheerfulness regarding political topics or achievements and the Italian political situation; and, finally, e. ‘indignation and victims of neoliberalism’, which refers in particular to the feeling of losing out as a result of globalization and neoliberalism, but also to the opposition of these economic processes.
Secondly, on the remaining part of our dataset we implemented the automated coding process based on machine learning. We trained five different models, one for each emotion. The goal was to obtain classifiers to assign class labels to chunks of texts where different classes represent different emotions. We used 70% of the corpus sentences for training the model, 20% for validating and tuning the model parameters, and the remaining 10% to build the score and test its predictive power. The models predict whether a sentence could be classified as including that specific emotion (Y = 1) or not (Y = 0). We finally obtained our emotional scores measuring the probability that a specific emotion is found over the years. To validate the results, we measured the accuracy on the validation test (see table E and F in the appendix). For all the types of emotions we obtained good average precision scores and AuROCs, considering the complexity of the emotions classified and the standard positive-neutral-negative classification- which makes our approach particularly effective (performing better than existing alternatives to measure emotions and populism)Footnote 16.
Empirical analysis: ‘emotional populism’, emotional times
When looking at the presence and intensity of emotions (i.e. aggregate emotional level) in the political discourse of Italian political parties over the last two decades, our data suggest that, overall, the populist political communication is more emotional than the non-populist. (Figure 1a and b).
Populist parties (and leaders) generally make more frequent (and broader) use of emotions than non-populists, especially since the 2008 economic crisisFootnote 17. This trend is constant over time, with minimal fluctuations and it also holds true when distinguishing among arenas of communication (electoral manifestoes vs. speeches) – although, on the whole, the informal arena of speeches is characterized by higher emotional levels for both the populist and non-populist parties. However, as a comparison, non-populist Italian parties have generally increased their use of emotional tones over time in their electoral manifestoes (especially since 2008), almost on a par with the populist levels by the end of our timeframeFootnote 18. These findings suggest that studies on emotions and political discourse should be based on different sources, to better intercept variations of the political style and to be in line with current research on the populist communication and social media, which emphasizes how informal arenas of communication are particularly conducive in the mobilization of emotions (Aalberg et al., Reference Aalberg, Esser, Reinemann, Strömbäck and de Vreese2017).
Moreover, looking at Figure 2, which shows the presence and levels of specific emotions in the populist and non-populist political discourse, we see that, for both actors there is an increase in the use of all types of emotions analysed over the years (i.e. hate against outgroup, anger, fear and insecurity, joy and pride, indignation).
The levels of emotions are, overall, higher between 2016–2020 than at the beginning of our analysis (2000)Footnote 19. However, since the majority of the emotions we analysed are negative, this result seems to corroborate the relationship between populism and polarization of the political debate.
In particular, hate (i.e. hostility against various types of ‘outgroups’, such as social and ethnic minorities, immigrants, gypsies, homosexuals)Footnote 20 increases over the years, although with fluctuations (after a peak in 2008 it slightly decreases, at first, for both types of actors before increasing again) always remaining higher in the populist political discourse. On the other hand, anger against other generic groupsFootnote 21 (i.e. mainly political elites and adversaries) increases over the years for all actors, but particularly since 2008 in the populist political discourse – remaining constantly higher than among the non-populistsFootnote 22. Finally, fear and insecurity, which also appear more frequently mobilized in the discourse of the populist Italian partiesFootnote 23, are significantly prevalent among the non-populist actors too in the most recent years.
In sum, our data point out that overall the Italian political parties’ use of emotions increases over time and that the discourse of populist parties seems to be characterized by some recurring emotions: they are in particular anger against political opponents and hostility towards minorities (hate). The new populist era, at least in the Italian case, seems to be mainly populated by negative emotions, especially among the populists. Moreover, this picture remains true when we differentiate by communication arenas (as figure A in the appendix shows).
With a closer look from our qualitative analysis, we can see that hate usually assumes an immigration-oriented dimension. For instance, in his speeches Salvini frequently reiterates the hostility towards migrants (e.g. the ‘law and the control of borders’, ‘the expulsion of hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants’, 2018, speech)Footnote 24, mobilizing this emotion by framing the political discourse around the idea that some outgroups receive more attention than neglected in-groups (i.e. deserving vs. undeserving people). He often stresses ‘the unequal and unfair treatment of Italian citizens (election speeches, 2013, 2018), intercepting a resentment strongly connected to feelings of economic insecurity and powerlessness (Abts et al., Reference Abts, Dalle Mulle and Laermans2019). However, the targeted outgroups have changed over time. For example, between 2006–2008, when the Northern League was a federalist and separatist political party, its speeches mainly focused on ‘Padania's independence’ and opposition to ‘Southern Italian regions and people’. Conversely, in 2013, and even more in 2018, under Matteo Salvini's leadership, the enemies were no longer from the South but were now ‘foreign people’ (‘concrete problems are work, food (…) not the discussions about the citizenship for immigrants’ children’; 2013, TV speech).Footnote 25 Indeed, during the 2018 electoral campaign, Salvini often stresses the need to ‘campaign on truth, honesty and seriousness. No miraculous promises (…)’, but instead towards ‘a total control of borders, with mass expulsions for the hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants in Italy’Footnote 26.
Anger often includes anger towards political opponents and the government. Critical examples of this emotion are the speeches of Beppe Grillo'sFootnote 27, in which he delegitimizes the Italian political class as ‘the people who go there [in parliament] to fuck us again’ (2013)’Footnote 28, who ‘have occupied the Parliament all their lives’ (2013)Footnote 29. However, it also included frequent claims over the years referring to anger towards an ambiguous, not specified or easily identifiable ‘Other’ (e.g. ‘they’/‘them’), typical of the populist ‘conspiracy’ discourse in various European countries (Pirro and Taggart, Reference Pirro and Taggart2022).
Fear and insecurity target both the national and the European level of governance, and even the global levels, in the appeals of populist leaders. For example, Salvini often emphasizes that European treaties ‘condemn Italy to hunger and poverty’ and that the solution is ‘to stop financing the EU’, which is for Italians ‘only a damage’Footnote 30, a ‘sacrifice policies enriching few and ruining many’.Footnote 31 Different leaders, however, tend to mobilize this emotion by making reference to different aspects of it. For example, sometimes (as seen in many speeches of the leader of Fratelli d'Italia party, Giorgia Meloni – not classified as a populist party in this study) fear and insecurity are coupled with a feeling of ‘political powerlessness’ or ‘inefficiency’ (e.g. talking about Fornero laws, the ‘dichotomy between first-class workers in Italy and second-class workers’ is stressed, or a ‘hyper-protected generation and one that will never be guaranteed’, 2013)Footnote 32. At times, this emotional category includes more insecurity about economic instability (especially in left wing populist discourses). Less common, do we see fear and insecurity linked to feelings of nostalgia, where a rhetoric of fear-insecurity-evoking’ is prevalent.
Claims conveying joy and pride are present in the Italian political debate too (although accounting for less than 10% of the total sentences of populists’ communication). Examples are discourses which emphasize ‘pride’, ‘enthusiasm’, ‘faith and values’, ‘[our young people]’, ‘being passionate’, ‘courageous’, ‘grateful’, ‘excited’, etc. (for examples see speeches of the radical right-wing politician Daniela Satanchè in which this emotion is quite present, e.g. 2008Footnote 33), or the electoral campaign in 2013 of the Democratic party (‘we are able to put on our shoulders a concrete alternative to the right!’ speech of Bersani).Footnote 34 Beppe Grillo and his party has appeared to mobilize this emotion more frequently, as in the case of one of his famous speeches where ‘the discovery’ of ‘the path towards a better future’ is stressed, which is described as ‘honest, concrete, supportive and happy’ (2013, speech).Footnote 35
As for indignation related to neoliberalism (e.g. ‘victims of..’), Italian populist political parties and leaders seem to mobilize it mainly as a collective ‘action frame’, namely by a framing of the political discourse where the economic and political elites are blamed, and a call for political action (usually ‘new’, from the people) is made – referring to acknowledged shame and allowing for self-identifying as victims of neoliberalism ('this old man is ashamed, he feels like a failure for losing his job. …Footnote 36’). In the same vein, there was a strong emphasis placed on ‘the effects of globalisation’ on the Eurozone, in the 2018 5SM electoral manifesto, a process that ‘escaped the initial good intentions, betraying its own founding values’, which embeds ‘clearly distorting elements of a globalising mechanism’, ‘widens the gap between institutions and citizens’.
Varieties of populism(s) and different types of emotions
Our data over 20 years of Italian political discourses, show that specific types of emotions which distinguish populist parties leaning towards different ideologies (left wing or hybrid vs. right wingFootnote 37). Indeed, as Figure 3 shows (see also fig. B in the appendix), if we consider populists depending on their (hosting) ideology, outgroup hostility is mainly mobilized by right wing populist parties and leaders, in line with the literature on right-wing populism, which link its emergence and success to the cultural dimension crisis (Kriesi, Reference Kriesi2018).
As we see in many discourses of Salvini addressing the EU this sentiment is frequently evoked, stressing that ‘[regarding immigration policies] another Europe is necessary which is independent from Brussels’, ‘crazy’ and ‘criminal’ on the management of these issues, 2013, speech.Footnote 38
Anger is mainly used by left wing and hybrid populists, similarly to joy and pride. On the contrary, when looking at fear and insecurity, the picture appears less clear cut among different types of populisms. The usage of this emotion in political discourses seems divided equally among various actors: before 2012 it features mainly in right wing populism, and afterwards in left wing (and hybrid) populism. Looking more in depth at our qualitative data we see however that this emerging emotion does not often exclude a reference to anger against others (for example the ‘political caste’, as in many claims of the 5SM) or indignation against neoliberalism. As always, the empirical reality is more complex than any classification. For instance, during the 2013 national electoral campaign, the leader of the 5SM, Beppe Grillo often emphasized that ‘banks cannot fail because it is an oxymoron and a lie, while thousands and hundreds of families fail with their savings’.Footnote 39 Similarly, Di Battista (5SM), talking about access to educational opportunities in the country, emphatically stresses the dimension of insecurity and fear for the lower classes.Footnote 40.
Finally, when considering feelings of indignation against neoliberalism, although this emotion is (in absolute terms) less mobilized than the others in the Italian political discourse, it is above all found in the discourse of left wing (and partly hybrid) populism, such as the 5SM and Potere al Popolo – supporting the expectation in literature that left wing populists are more joyful than other parties along the ideological spectrum. For example, talking about the 2018 election polls, Carofalo (representative of the party Potere al Popolo) emphatically stresses that his party is ‘building something huge today (…), with assemblies in 150 cities in Italy’, and was ‘optimistic’ to enter the Parliament.Footnote 41 Similarly, the 5SM political discourse is often characterized by the rhetoric of joyful ‘rebellion’, positive ‘expectations’, ‘hope’, as well as ‘pride of being part of a sovereign people who can promote a change’ in the society (e.g. the ‘Let's take our lives together democratically, rebel’, speech).Footnote 42
In sum, as our qualitative analysis indicates, in the emotional appeals of right wing populists fear is mainly related to the discourse on powerlessness and déclassement, hate against out-groups while anger is directed against the corrupt political and cultural elites, failing to protect peoples’ interest and favouring outgroups at the expense of the ingroup or against those who have a ‘good life’ without having to work hard (such as politicians and managers, welfare recipients and refugees, the long-term unemployed, as well as ethnic, cultural, and sexual minorities). On the other hand, in left wing populist discourses, anger is more often framed towards the domestic and foreign political establishment implementing austerity politics for instance or as being responsible for enforcing politics that increases injustice, inequality, and precariousness.
Conclusions
Since the 1990s, many social scientists have considered Italy as a fertile testing ground for populist communication or even a populist ‘paradise’ (Tarchi, Reference Tarchi2015). In this article, we looked at this case in terms of emotions and populism, with a descriptive effort (across types of emotions, type of populisms, time and types of communication arenas) that seems to offer an empirical and methodological contribution to this field of enquiry. In sum: Why is populist communication intrinsically emotional? And what are we still lacking in terms of our theoretical understanding about the links between populism and emotions? Our study includes some of these answers in particular in terms of the different emotions used by different types of populisms, and the role of different platforms, or communication arenas, where the political debate takes place.
First, confirming our easiest hypothesis (n. 1), our study showed that Italian populist parties, like pre-existing ones in other countries and on social media (Béland, Reference Béland2020), adopt a more emotional political discourse than non-populists (consistently over time and regardless of the communication arena). This is however coupled with the evidence that, as similarly suggested by studies on the populism communication in social media (e.g. Engesser et al., Reference Engesser, Fawzi and Larsson2017), the more informal arena of speeches seems more conducive, overall, to the use of emotions (see similarly Widmann (Reference Widmann2021) on Italy regarding social media messages of political parties).
Second, if this is the characteristic of (Italian) emotional populism, confirming and integrating Bracciale et al. (Reference Bracciale, Andretta and Martella2021) (who focused on Italian populist communication on social media), we also found that emotions are increasingly adopted by Italian political parties and leaders as communicative tools to command attention and gain consent. Another important finding of this study (confirming our hypothesis n.2) is indeed that non-populist Italian parties have also increased their emotional appeals over time. We can therefore argue that the (Italian) political field in general is becoming more emotional, with mainly populist political speeches increasing the general level of hostility against various relevant ‘outgroups’ in the Italian political discourse – in line with the polarization of the political debate potential of populism (also in line with evidences on emotional rhetoric in German state Parliaments (Valentim and Widmann, Reference Valentim and Widmann2023)). These findings might also align to previous studies which emphasized for the Italian case how the ‘exogenous shock’ of the 2008 financial and economic crisis, seems to have favoured the growth of populist features among the Italian political parties (Caiani and Graziano, Reference Caiani and Graziano2016).
A third relevant finding is the broad correlation found between different types of emotions and types of populisms, in line with our third expectation. In particular (partly in contrast to Bracciale et al., Reference Bracciale, Andretta and Martella2021), we have found a strong association between negative emotions and right wing populism and positive emotions and left wing populists. These findings confirm the idea that politicians use different emotions systematically for different purposes (Widmann, Reference Widmann2021). However, beyond this general trend, our qualitative analysis also showed some nuances: Left wing populist parties may also mobilize negative emotions (e.g. fear or anger) but in a different way; joy and pride are also used with right wing populism. Indeed, as the qualitative analysis showed, anger is mainly characterized by anti-elitism, whereas fear and insecurity are often both linked to the socio-economic dimension and the cultural backlash.
Although limited in scope, these findings can also be read as complementary to previous work theorizing different causes behind different types of populism (Kriesi, Reference Kriesi2018). If different crises (economic, political or cultural-backlash) are ‘performed’ (Moffitt, Reference Moffitt2015) and amplified by (different types of) populisms (Pirro and Taggart, Reference Pirro and Taggart2022), our findings may suggest that emotions can be understood as the ‘mechanisms’ (Jasper, Reference Jasper2011) linking macro causes to macro effects.
As for the Italian case, against the background of the same context of political and ‘emotional opportunities’, a different framing of different types of crises by varieties of populists can be helped by the different emotions mobilized. Understanding the link between populism and emotions could therefore provide not only important insights into the activation of populist attitudes (Hawkins et al., Reference Hawkins, Carlin, Littvay and Kaltwasser2018), but also illuminate a crucial mechanism for the way in which populist parties (of different types) maintain support over time.
Beyond providing an updated trajectory of the phenomenon in Italy, our study could elucidate similar trends in other countries, as populist actors and leaders, as shown by previous work, tend to behave similarly with regards to political campaign styles and emotions in particular, across various regions of the World (Gerstlè and Nai, Reference Gerstlé and Nai2019).
Furthermore, methodologically, our original approach to emotion detection based on supervised machine learning, which combines the strength (and richness of nuances) of manual and automated method for text analysis typical of natural language processing, is a useful test exercise for future studies, as it can capture emotions related to populism in a systematic and accurate way. What this method is unable to do, and what in fact we did not do in this study was, beyond differentiating which party was more emotive-populist in which periods, was to explore the ‘why’. Future qualitative and historically driven studies should explore, perhaps starting from our systematic empirical overview, how the populist emotive communication has ‘travelled’ and materialized historically in the defined time-loops over the last 20 years in Italy, and how it has been shaped by specific political trajectories of Italian politics.
Finally, at the end of the story, we can also re-read all these results under a different light. Moving from a radical democratic theory perspective, we could contend that by using a Laclauian framework which sees politics as equal to hegemony as equal to populism, one can conclude that populist actors are no different from other political actors: emotions and affects are always central to any political identity (Eklundh, Reference Eklundh2019). In this regard, we could argue that the division between the emotional and rational in politics serves to sediment exclusionary practices against newcomers and challengers of the status quo (ibid.).
Funding
This research received no specific grant from any public or private funding agency.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/ipo.2023.8.
Data
The replication dataset is available at https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/HRN6TP.
Acknowledgements
We thank Bernardo Monechi for his feedback and suggestions on the methodological part of the research that led to this manuscript. We also thank Enrico Padoan for his insightful comments on the nexus between populism and emotions.
Competing interests
The authors declare none.