This article argues that the Lega Nord is best understood, first and foremost, as a regionalist populist party. Following a brief discussion of the importance of the territorial reference in explaining the Lega, the article examines its populist discourse using material from the party's newspaper La Padania over the three days in June 2005 around the annual Lega rally in Pontida.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
AlbertazziD. (2006), ‘The Lega dei Ticinesi: The Embodiment of populism’, Politics26(2), pp. 133–139.
2.
AlbertazziD. and McDonnellD. (2005), ‘The Lega Nord in the Second Berlusconi Government: In a League of its Own’, West European Politics28, pp. 952–972.
3.
BetzH. and JohnsonC. (2004), ‘Against the Current – Stemming the Tide: The Nostalgic Ideology of the Contemporary Radical Populist Right’, Journal of Political Ideologies9, pp. 311–327.
4.
BiorcioR. (1991), ‘La Lega Come Attore Politico: Dal Federalismo al Populismo Regionalista’ in MannheimerR. (ed.), La Lega Lombarda, Milan: Feltrinelli, pp. 34–82.
5.
BiorcioR. (1997), La Padania Promessa: La Storia, le Idee e la Logica d'Azione della Lega Nord, Milan: Il Saggiatore.
6.
BossiU. and VimercatiD. (1992), Vento dal Nord. La mia Lega e la mia Vita, Milan: Sperling & Kupfer.
7.
BossiU. and VimercatiD. (1998), Processo alla Lega, Milan: Sperling & Kupfer.
8.
CanovanM. (1999), ‘Trust the People! Populism and the Two Faces of Democracy’, Political StudiesXLVII, pp. 2–16.
9.
Cento BullA. and GilbertM. (2001), The Lega Nord and the Northern Question in Italian Politics, Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan.
10.
DiamantiI. (1996), Il Male del Nord, Rome: Donzelli.
11.
HoppeM. (2005), ‘Nationalist Parties and Europeanisation’, Paper presented at the 3rd ECPR General Conference, Budapest.
12.
KopeckyP. and MuddeC. (2002), ‘The Two Sides of Euroscepticism: Party Positions on European Integration in East Central Europe’, European Union PoliticsIII, pp. 297–326.
13.
McGannA. and KitscheltH. (2005), ‘The Radical Right in the Alps: Evolution of Support for the Swiss SVP and Austrian FPÖ’, Party Politics11, pp. 147–171.
14.
MastropaoloA. (2005), La Mucca Pazza della Democrazia, Turin: Bollati Boringhieri.
15.
MényY. and SurelY. (2001), ‘The Constitutive Ambiguity of Populism’ in MényY. and SurelY. (eds.), Democracies and the Populist Challenge, Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan.
16.
MényY. and SurelY. (2004), Populismo e Democrazia, Bologna: Il Mulino. Original edn: Y. Mény and Y. Surel (2000), Par le Peuple, Pour le Peuple, Paris: Librairie Arthème Fayard.
17.
MuddeC. (1996), ‘The War of Words: Defining the Extreme Right Party Family’, West European Politics19, pp. 225–248.
18.
MuddeC. (2004), ‘The Populist Zeitgeist’, Government and Opposition29, pp. 541–563.
19.
NorrisP. (2005), Radical Right: Parties and Electoral Competition, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
20.
RydgrenJ. (2005), ‘Is Extreme Right-Wing Populism Contagious? Explaining the Emergence of a New Party Family’, European Journal of Political Research44, pp. 413–437.
21.
StavrakakisY. (2004), ‘Antinomies of Formalism: Laclau's Theory of Populism and the Lessons from Religious Populism in Greece’, Journal of Political Ideologies9, pp. 253–267.
22.
SzczerbiakA. and TaggartP. (2003), ‘Theorising Party-Based Euroscepticism: Problems of Definition, Measurement and Causality’, SEI Working Paper No. 69.
23.
TaggartP. (2000), Populism, Buckingham: Open University Press.
24.
Ta rchiM. (2003), L'Italia Populista: Dal Qualunquismo ai Girotondi, Bologna: Il Mulino.
25.
WeberM. (1995), Economia e Società I: Teoria delle Categorie Sociologiche, Milan: Edizioni di Comunità.
26.
ZasloveA. (2004), ‘The Dark Side of European Politics: Unmasking the Radical Right’, Journal of European Integration26, pp. 61–81.