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Right-wing politics
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Right-wing politics is the range of political ideologies that view certain social orders and hierarchies as inevitable, natural, normal, or desirable,[1][2][3] typically supporting this position in favour of conservatism, natural law, economics, authority, property, religion, or tradition.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10] Hierarchy and inequality may be seen as natural results of traditional social differences[11][12] or competition in market economies.[13][14][15]
Right-wing politics are considered the counterpart to left-wing politics, and the left–right political spectrum is the most common political spectrum.[16] The right includes social conservatives and fiscal conservatives,[17][18][19] as well as right-libertarians. "Right" and "right-wing" have been variously used as compliments and pejoratives describing neoliberal, conservative, and fascist economic and social ideas.[20]
Positions
[edit]The following positions are typically associated with right-wing politics.
Anti-communism
[edit]Early communists used the term "right-wing" in reference to conservatives, placing the conservatives on the right, the liberals in the centre and the communists on the left. Both the conservatives and the liberals were strongly anti-communist, although the conservatives' anti-communism was much stronger than liberals'. The history of the use of the term right-wing about anti-communism is a complicated one.[21]
Early Marxist movements were at odds with the traditional monarchies that ruled over much of the European continent at the time. Many European monarchies outlawed the public expression of communist views and the Communist Manifesto, which began "[a] spectre [that] is haunting Europe", and stated that monarchs feared for their thrones. Advocacy of communism was illegal in the Russian Empire, the German Empire, and Austria-Hungary, the three most powerful monarchies in continental Europe before World War I. Many monarchists (except constitutional monarchists) viewed inequality in wealth and political power as resulting from a divine natural order. The struggle between monarchists and communists was often described as a struggle between the Right and the Left.

By World War I, in most European monarchies the divine right of kings had become discredited and was replaced by liberal and nationalist movements. Most European monarchs became figureheads, or they yielded some power to elected governments. The most conservative European monarchy, the Russian Empire, was replaced by the communist Soviet Union. The Russian Revolution inspired a series of other communist revolutions across Europe in the years 1917–1923. Many of these, such as the German Revolution, were defeated by nationalist and monarchist military units. During this period, nationalism began to be considered right-wing, especially when it opposed the internationalism of the communists.[22][23]
The 1920s and 1930s saw the decline of traditional right-wing politics. The mantle of conservative anti-communism was taken up by the rising fascist movements on the one hand and by American-inspired liberal conservatives on the other. When communist groups and political parties began appearing around the world, their opponents were usually colonial authorities and the term right-wing came to be applied to colonialism.
After World War II, communism became a global phenomenon and anti-communism became an integral part of the domestic and foreign policies of the United States and its NATO allies. Conservatism in the post-war era abandoned its monarchist and aristocratic roots, focusing instead on patriotism, religious values, and nationalism. Throughout the Cold War, postcolonial governments in Asia, Africa, and Latin America turned to the United States for political and economic support. Communists were also enemies of capitalism, portraying Wall Street as the oppressor of the masses. The United States made anti-communism the top priority of its foreign policy, and many American conservatives sought to combat what they saw as communist influence at home. This led to the adoption of several domestic policies that are collectively known under the term McCarthyism. While both liberals and conservatives were anti-communist, the followers of Senator McCarthy were called right-wing and those on the right called liberals who favoured free speech, even for communists, leftist.[22][24]
Economics
[edit]
Early forms of corporatism would be developed in Classical Greece and used in Ancient Rome. Plato would develop the ideas of totalitarian and communitarian corporatist systems of natural based classes and social hierarchies that would be organised based on function, such that groups would cooperate to achieve social harmony by emphasising collectives interests over individual interests.[25][26] Corporatism as a political ideology advocates the organization of society by corporate groups—such as agricultural, labour, military, scientific, or guild associations—based on their common interests.[27][28]
After the decline of the Western Roman Empire corporatism became limited to religious orders and to the idea of Christian brotherhood, especially in the context of economic transactions.[26] From the High Middle Ages onwards corporatist organizations became increasingly common in Europe, including such groups as religious orders, monasteries, fraternities, military orders such as the Knights Templar and the Teutonic Order, educational organizations such as the emerging universities and learned societies, the chartered towns and cities, and most notably the guild system which dominated the economics of population centres in Europe.[26]
In post-revolutionary France, the Right fought against the rising power of those who had grown rich through commerce, and sought to preserve the rights of the hereditary nobility. They were uncomfortable with capitalism, the Enlightenment, individualism, and industrialism, and fought to retain traditional social hierarchies and institutions.[29][30] In Europe's history, there have been strong collectivist right-wing movements, such as in the social Catholic right, that have exhibited hostility to all forms of liberalism (including economic liberalism) and have historically advocated for paternalist class harmony involving an organic-hierarchical society where workers are protected while class hierarchy remains.[31]
In the 19th century, the Right had shifted to support the newly rich in some European countries (particularly Britain) and instead of favouring the nobility over industrialists, favoured capitalists over the working class. Other right-wing movements—such as Carlism in Spain and nationalist movements in France, Germany, and Russia—remained hostile to capitalism and industrialism. Nevertheless, a few right-wing movements—notably the French Nouvelle Droite, CasaPound, and American paleoconservatism—are often in opposition to capitalist ethics and the effects they have on society. These forces see capitalism and industrialism as infringing upon or causing the decay of social traditions or hierarchies that are essential for social order.[32]
Laissez-faire schools
[edit]In modern times, "right-wing" is sometimes used to describe laissez-faire capitalism. In Europe, capitalists formed alliances with the Right during their conflicts with workers after 1848. In 1871, the Austrian school came to be with the work of Carl Menger, Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, Friedrich von Wieser, and others,[33] originating from methodologically opposition to the Historical school, in a dispute known as Methodenstreit.[34] The Austrian school opposition to be heterodox,[35][36][37] advocating strict adherence to methodological individualism, the concept that social phenomena result primarily from the motivations and actions of individuals along with their self interest. Austrian-school theorists hold that economic theory should be exclusively derived from basic principles of human action.[38][39][40]
In France, the Right's support of capitalism can be traced to the late 19th century.[41] The so-called neoliberal Right, popularised by US President Ronald Reagan and UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, combines support for free markets, privatisation, and deregulation with traditional right-wing support for social conformity.[9]
Nationalism
[edit]
In France, nationalism was originally a left-wing and republican ideology.[43] After the period of boulangisme and the Dreyfus affair, nationalism became a trait of the right-wing.[44] Right-wing nationalists sought to define and defend a "true" national identity from elements which they believed were corrupting that identity.[41] Some were supremacists, who in accordance with scientific racism and social Darwinism applied the concept of "survival of the fittest" to nations and races.[45]
Right-wing nationalism was influenced by Romantic nationalism in which the state derives its political legitimacy from the organic unity of those who it governs. This generally includes the language, race, culture, religion, and customs of the nation, all of which were "born" within its culture. Linked with right-wing nationalism is cultural conservatism, which supports the preservation of the heritage of a nation or culture and often sees deviations from cultural norms as an existential threat.[46][page needed]
In the 21st century, neo-nationalism came to prominence after the Cold War in the Western world. It is typically associated with cultural conservatism, populism, anti-globalization, and nativism and is opposed to immigration. The ideology takes historical association in determining membership in a nation, rather than racial concepts.[47][48]
Natural law and traditionalism
[edit]Right-wing politics typically justifies a hierarchical society based on natural law or tradition.[6][7][8][9][10][49]
Traditionalism was advocated by a group of United States university professors (labelled the "New Conservatives" by the popular press) who rejected the concepts of individualism, liberalism, modernity, and social progress, seeking instead to promote what they identified as cultural and educational renewal[50] and a revived interest in concepts perceived by traditionalists as truths that endure from age to age alongside basic institutions of western society such as the church, the family, the state, and business.
Populism
[edit]Right-wing populism is a combination of civic-nationalism, cultural-nationalism and sometimes ethno-nationalism, localism, along with anti-elitism, using populist rhetoric to provide a critique of existing political institutions.[51] According to Margaret Canovan, a right-wing populist is "a charismatic leader, using the tactics of politicians' populism to go past the politicians and intellectual elite and appeal to the reactionary sentiments of the populace, often buttressing his claim to speak for the people by the use of referendums".[52][page needed]
In Europe, right-wing populism often takes the form of distrust of the European Union, and of politicians in general, combined with anti-immigrant rhetoric and a call for a return to traditional, national values.[53] Daniel Stockemer states, the radical right is, "Targeting immigrants as a threat to employment, security and cultural cohesion".[54]
In the United States, the Tea Party movement stated that the core beliefs for membership were the primacy of individual liberties as defined by the Constitution of the United States, preference for a small federal government, and respect for the rule of law. Some policy positions included opposition to illegal immigration and support for a strong national military force, the right to individual gun ownership, cutting taxes, reducing government spending, and balancing the budget.[55]
In Indonesia, Islamic populism has a significant impact on right-wing politics.[56] This is largely due to the historical context which Islamic organizations had during the 1960s in destroying the Indonesian Communist Party.[56] Whilst the party is adopting democratic processes with neo-liberal market economies, socially pluralist positions aren't necessarily adopted.[56] The Islamic populism in Indonesia has boosted its influence in 1998 after the demise of the Suharto authoritarian regime.[56] Islamic populism in Indonesia has similar properties with Islamic populist regimes like in the Middle East, Turkey and North Africa (MENA).[56] The emphasis on social justice, pluralism, equality and progressive agendas could be potentially mobilised by Islamic cultural resources.[56]
In India, supporters of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have more authoritarian, nativist, and populist ideas than other Indian citizens. Under Narendra Modi, populism is a core part of the party's ideology. The party's rhetoric reflects the idea is that the ordinary, "good" individuals are continuously under attack from "bad" political forces, the media, etc. Since Narendra Modi became the leader of the BJP, it has increasingly been considered a populist radical right party (PRR) and has also been considered a Hindu nationalist party.[57]
Religion
[edit]Philosopher and diplomat Joseph de Maistre argued for the indirect authority of the Pope over temporal matters. According to Maistre, only governments which were founded upon Christian constitutions—which were implicit in the customs and institutions of all European societies, especially the Catholic European monarchies—could avoid the disorder and bloodshed that followed the implementation of rationalist political programmes, such as the chaos which occurred during the French Revolution. Some prelates of the Church of England–established by Henry VIII and headed by the current sovereign—are given seats in the House of Lords (as Lords Spiritual), but they are considered politically neutral rather than specifically right- or left-wing.
In The Possessed (1872) and The Brothers Karamazov (1880), Fyodor Dostoevsky portrayed socialism as an attempt to build a kingdom of Man as opposed to kingdom of God. According to Dostoevsky himself, the intention of the latter book was to portray "the seed of the idea of destruction in our time in Russia among the young people uprooted from reality". This seed is depicted as: "the rejection not of God but of the meaning of His creation. Socialism has sprung from the denial of the meaning of historical reality and ended in a programme of destruction and anarchism".[58]

In his 1931 encyclical Quadragesimo Anno, Pope Pius XI wrote that "true socialism" was irreconcilable with the teachings of the Catholic Church "because its concept of society itself is utterly foreign to Christian truth", stating:[59]
"For, according to Christian teaching, man, endowed with a social nature, is placed on this earth so that by leading a life in society and under an authority ordained of God he may fully cultivate and develop all his faculties unto the praise and glory of his Creator; and that by faithfully fulfilling the duties of his craft or other calling he may obtain for himself temporal and at the same time eternal happiness. Socialism, on the other hand, wholly ignoring and indifferent to this sublime end of both man and society, affirms that human association has been instituted for the sake of material advantage alone"
— Pope Pius XI, Quadragesimo Anno, 15 May 1931
American right-wing media outlets oppose sex outside marriage and same-sex marriage, and they sometimes reject scientific positions on evolution and other matters where science tends to disagree with the Bible.[60][61]
The term family values has been used by right-wing parties—such as the Republican Party in the United States, the Family First Party in Australia, the Conservative Party in the United Kingdom, and the Bharatiya Janata Party in India—to signify support for traditional families and opposition to the changes the modern world has made in how families live. Supporters of "family values" may oppose abortion, euthanasia, and birth control.[62][63]
Outside the West, the Hindu nationalist movement has attracted privileged groups which fear encroachment on their dominant positions, as well as "plebeian" and impoverished groups which seek recognition around a majoritarian rhetoric of cultural pride, order, and national strength.[64]
In Israel, Meir Kahane advocated that Israel should be a theocratic state, where non-Jews have no voting rights,[65] and the far-right Lehava strictly opposes Jewish assimilation and the Christian presence in Israel.[66] The Jewish Defence League (JDL) in the United States was classified as "a right wing terrorist group" by the FBI in 2001.[67] Many Islamist groups have been called right-wing, including the Great Union Party,[68] the Combatant Clergy Association/Association of Militant Clergy,[69][70] and the Islamic Society of Engineers of Iran.[71][72]
Social stratification
[edit]
Right-wing politics involves, in varying degrees, the rejection of some egalitarian objectives of left-wing politics, claiming either that social or economic inequality is natural and inevitable or that it is beneficial to society.[49] Right-wing ideologies and movements support social order. The original French right-wing was called "the party of order" and held that France needed a strong political leader to keep order.[41]
Conservative British scholar R. J. White, who rejects egalitarianism, wrote: "Men are equal before God and the laws, but unequal in all else; hierarchy is the order of nature, and privilege is the reward of honourable service".[73] American conservative Russell Kirk also rejected egalitarianism as imposing sameness, stating: "Men are created different; and a government that ignores this law becomes an unjust government for it sacrifices nobility to mediocrity".[73] Italian scholar Norberto Bobbio argued that the right-wing is inegalitarian compared to the left-wing, as he argued that equality is a relative, not absolute, concept.[74]
Right libertarians reject collective or state-imposed equality as undermining reward for personal merit, initiative, and enterprise.[73] In their view, such imposed equality is unjust, limits personal freedom, and leads to social uniformity and mediocrity.[73]
In the view of philosopher Jason Stanley in How Fascism Works, the "politics of hierarchy" is one of the hallmarks of fascism, which refers to a "glorious past" in which members of the rightfully dominant group sat atop the hierarchy, and attempt to recreate this state of being.[75]
History
[edit]According to The Cambridge History of Twentieth-Century Political Thought, (2003) the Right has gone through five distinct historical stages:[76]
- The reactionary right sought a return to aristocracy and established religion.
- The moderate right distrusted intellectuals and sought limited government.
- The radical right favoured a romantic and aggressive form of nationalism.
- The extreme right proposed anti-immigration policies and implicit racism.
- The neo-liberal right sought to combine a market economy and economic deregulation with the traditional right-wing beliefs in patriotism, elitism and law and order.[10][page needed]
The political terms Left and Right were first used in the 18th century, during the French Revolution, referencing the seating arrangement of the French parliament. Those who sat to the right of the chair of the presiding officer (le président) were generally supportive of the institutions of the monarchist Old Regime.[29][77][78][41] The original "Right" in France was formed in reaction to the "Left" and comprised those supporting hierarchy, tradition, and clericalism.[5]: 693 The expression la droite ("the right") increased in use after the restoration of the monarchy in 1815, when it was applied to the ultra-royalists.[79]
From the 1830s to the 1880s, the Western world's social class structure and economy shifted from nobility and aristocracy towards capitalism.[80] This shift affected centre-right movements such as the British Conservative Party, which responded supporting capitalism.[81]
The people of English-speaking countries did not apply the terms right and left to their politics until the 20th century.[82] The term right-wing was originally applied to traditional conservatives, monarchists, and reactionaries; a revision of this which occurred sometime between the 1920s and 1950s considers the far-right to denote fascism, Nazism, and racial supremacy.[83]
Rightist regimes were common in Europe in the Interwar period, 1919–1938.[84]
China
[edit]Republic of China (1912–1949)
[edit]Among Kuomintang (KMT)'s conservatives during the Republic of China, Dai Jitao Thought supporters formed the Western Hills Group in the 1920s.
Chiang Kai-shek initially claimed himself as a 'centrist' in the KMT left-right conflict, but became an anti-communist right-wing after Shanghai massacre. Chiangism (or 'Chiang Kai-shek Thought') was related to Confucianism, party-state capitalism, paternalistic conservatism, and Chinese nationalism.
People's Republic of China
[edit]Neoauthoritarianism is a current of political thought that rose in China in the late 1980's and came into ascendancy after the death of Deng Xiaoping; it advocates a powerful state to facilitate market reforms.[85] It has been described as right-wing, classically conservative even though it incorporated some aspects of Marxist–Leninist and Maoist theories.[86][87]
France
[edit]The political term right-wing was first used during the French Revolution, when liberal deputies of the Third Estate generally sat to the left of the presiding officer's chair, a custom that began in the Estates General of 1789. The nobility, members of the Second Estate, generally sat to the right. In the successive legislative assemblies, monarchists who supported the Old Regime were commonly referred to as rightists because they sat on the right side. A major figure on the right was Joseph de Maistre, who argued for an authoritarian form of conservatism.
Throughout France in the 19th century, the main line dividing the left and right was between supporters of the republic and those of the monarchy, who were often secularist and Catholic respectively.[41] On the right, the Legitimists and Ultra-royalists held counter-revolutionary views, while the Orléanists hoped to create a constitutional monarchy under their preferred branch of the royal family, which briefly became a reality after the 1830 July Revolution.
The centre-right Gaullists in post-World War II France advocated considerable social spending on education and infrastructure development as well as extensive economic regulation, but limited the wealth redistribution measures characteristic of social democracy.[citation needed]
Hungary
[edit]The dominance of the political right of inter-war Hungary, after the collapse of a short-lived Communist regime, was described by historian István Deák:
- Between 1919 and 1944 Hungary was a rightist country. Forged out of a counter-revolutionary heritage, its governments advocated a "nationalist Christian" policy; they extolled heroism, faith, and unity; they despised the French Revolution, and they spurned the liberal and socialist ideologies of the 19th century. The governments saw Hungary as a bulwark against bolshevism and bolshevism's instruments: socialism, cosmopolitanism, and Freemasonry. They perpetrated the rule of a small clique of aristocrats, civil servants, and army officers, and surrounded with adulation the head of the state, the counterrevolutionary Admiral Horthy.[88]
India
[edit]Although freedom fighters are favoured, the right-wing tendency to elect or appoint politicians and government officials based on aristocratic and religious ties is common to almost all the states of India.[89][90][91][92] Multiple political parties however identify with terms and beliefs which are, by political consensus, right or left wing. Certain political parties such as the Bharatiya Janata Party, identify with conservative[93] and nationalist elements. Some, such as the Indian National Congress, take a liberal stance. The Communist Party of India, Communist Party of India (Marxist), and others, identify with left-wing socialist and communist concepts. Other political parties take differing stands, and hence cannot be clearly grouped as the left- and the right-wing.[94]
United Kingdom
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In British politics, the terms right and left came into common use for the first time in the late 1930s during debates over the Spanish Civil War.[95]
United States
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In the United States, following the Second World War, social conservatives joined with right-wing elements of the Republican Party to gain support in traditionally Democratic voting populations like white southerners and Catholics. Ronald Reagan's election to the presidency in 1980 cemented the alliance between the religious right in the United States and social conservatives.[96]
In 2019, the United States populace leaned centre-right, with 37% of Americans self-identifying as conservative, compared to 35% moderate and 24% liberal. This was continuing a decades long trend of the country leaning centre-right.[97]
The United States Department of Homeland Security defines right-wing extremism in the United States as "broadly divided into those groups, movements, and adherents that are primarily hate-oriented (based on hatred of particular religious, racial or ethnic groups), and those that are mainly anti-government, rejecting federal authority in favour of state or local authority, or rejecting government authority entirely. It may include groups and individuals that are dedicated to a single issue, such as opposition to abortion or immigration".[98]
Types
[edit]The meaning of right-wing "varies across societies, historical epochs, and political systems and ideologies".[99] According to The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics, in liberal democracies, the political right opposes socialism and social democracy. Right-wing parties include conservatives, Christian democrats, classical liberals, and nationalists, as well as fascists on the far-right.[100]
British academics Noël O'Sullivan and Roger Eatwell divide the right into five types: reactionary, moderate, radical, extreme, and new.[101] Chip Berlet wrote that each of these "styles of thought" are "responses to the left", including liberalism and socialism, which have arisen since the 1789 French Revolution.[102]
- The reactionary right looks toward the past and is "aristocratic, religious and authoritarian".[102]
- The moderate right, typified by the writings of Edmund Burke, is tolerant of change, provided it is gradual and accepts some aspects of liberalism, including the rule of law and capitalism, although it sees radical laissez-faire and individualism as harmful to society. The moderate right often promotes nationalism and social welfare policies.[103]
- Radical right is a descriptive term that was developed after World War II and it was applied to groups and ideologies such as McCarthyism, the John Birch Society, Thatcherism, and the Republikaner Party. Eatwell stresses that this usage of the term has "major typological problems" because it "has also been applied to clearly democratic developments".[104] The radical right includes right-wing populism and various other subtypes.[102]
- The extreme right has four traits: "1) anti-democracy, 2) ultranationalism, 3) racism, and 4) the strong state".[105]
- The New Right consists of the liberal conservatives, who stress small government, free markets, and individual initiative.[106]
Other authors make a distinction between the centre-right and the far-right.[107]
- Parties of the centre-right generally support liberal democracy, capitalism, the market economy (though they may accept government regulation to control monopolies), private property rights, and a limited welfare state (for example, government provision of education and medical care). They support conservatism and economic liberalism and oppose socialism and communism.
- By contrast, the phrase "far-right" is used to describe those who favour an absolutist government, which uses the power of the state to support the dominant ethnic group or religion and criminalise other ethnic groups or religions.[108][109][110][111][112] Typical examples of leaders to whom the far-right label is often applied are: Francisco Franco in Spain, Benito Mussolini in Italy, Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany, Augusto Pinochet in Chile, and Jorge Rafael Videla in Argentina.[113][114][52][page needed][115][116][117]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Johnson, Paul (2005). "Right-wing, rightist". A Politics Glossary. Auburn University website. Archived from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
- ^ Bobbio, Norberto; Cameron, Allan (1996). Left and Right: The Significance of a Political Distinction. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 51, 62. ISBN 978-0-226-06246-4.
- ^ Goldthorpe, J.E. (1985). An Introduction to Sociology (Third ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 156. ISBN 978-0-521-24545-6.
- ^ "Right". Encyclopædia Britannica. 15 April 2009. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
- ^ a b Carlisle, Rodney P. (2005). Encyclopedia of Politics: The Left and the Right. Thousand Oaks [u.a.]: SAGE Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4129-0409-4.
- ^ a b T. Alexander Smith, Raymond Tatalovich. Cultures at war: moral conflicts in western democracies. Toronto, Canada: Broadview Press, Ltd, 2003. p. 30. "That viewpoint is held by contemporary sociologists, for whom 'right-wing movements' are conceptualized as 'social movements whose stated goals are to maintain structures of order, status, honor, or traditional social differences or values' as compared to left-wing movements which seek 'greater equality or political participation.' In other words, the sociological perspective sees preservationist politics as a right-wing attempt to defend privilege within the social hierarchy."
- ^ a b Left and right: the significance of a political distinction, Norberto Bobbio and Allan Cameron, p. 37, University of Chicago Press, 1997.
- ^ a b Seymour Martin Lipset, cited in Fuchs, D., and Klingemann, H. 1990. The left-right schema. pp. 203–34 in Continuities in Political Action: A Longitudinal Study of Political Orientations in Three Western Democracies, ed.M.Jennings et al. Berlin:de Gruyter
- ^ a b c Lukes, Steven (2003). "Epilogue: The Grand Dichotomy of the Twentieth Century". In Ball, Terence; Bellamy, Richard (eds.). The Cambridge History of Twentieth-Century Political Thought. London: Cambridge University Press. pp. 610–612. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521563543.030. ISBN 9780521563543. OCLC 7334137654.
- ^ a b c Clark, William Roberts (2003). Capitalism, Not Globalism: Capital Mobility, Central Bank Independence, and the Political Control of the Economy ([Online-Ausg.]. ed.). Ann Arbor [u.a.]: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-11293-7.[page needed]
- ^ Smith, T. Alexander and Raymond Tatalovich. Cultures at War: Moral Conflicts in Western Democracies (Toronto, Canada: Broadview Press, Ltd., 2003) p. 30. "That viewpoint is held by contemporary sociologists, for whom 'right-wing movements' are conceptualized as 'social movements whose stated goals are to maintain structures of order, status, honor, or traditional social differences or values' as compared to left-wing movements which seek 'greater equality or political participation.'
- ^ Gidron, N; Ziblatt, D. (2019). "Center-right political parties in advanced democracies 2019" (PDF). Annual Review of Political Science. 22: 23. doi:10.1146/annurev-polisci-090717-092750.
Defining the right by its adherence to the status quo is closely associated with a definition of the right as a defense of inequality (Bobbio 1996, Jost 2009, Luna & Kaltwasser 2014). As noted by Jost (2009), within the context of Western political development, opposition to change is often synonymous with support for inequality. Notwithstanding its prominence in the literature, we are hesitant to adopt this definition of the right since it requires the researcher to interpret ideological claims according to an abstract understanding of equality. For instance, Noel & Therien (2008) argue that right-wing opposition to affirmative action speaks in the name of equality and rejects positive discrimination based on demographic factors. From this perspective, the right is not inegalitarian but is "differently egalitarian" (Noel & Therien 2008, p. 18).
- ^ Scruton, Roger "A Dictionary of Political Thought" "Defined by contrast to (or perhaps more accurately conflict with) the left the term right does not even have the respectability of a history. As now used it denotes several connected and also conflicting ideas (including) 1)conservative, and perhaps authoritarian, doctrines concerning the nature of civil society, with emphasis on custom, tradition, and allegiance as social bonds ... 8) belief in free enterprise free markets and a capitalist economy as the only mode of production compatible with human freedom and suited to the temporary nature of human aspirations ..." pp. 281–2, Macmillan, 1996
- ^ Goldthorpe, J.E. (1985). An Introduction to Sociology (3rd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 156. ISBN 978-0-521-24545-6.
There are ... those who accept inequality as natural, normal, and even desirable. Two main lines of thought converge on the Right or conservative side...the truly Conservative view is that there is a natural hierarchy of skills and talents in which some people are born leaders, whether by heredity or family tradition. ... now ... the more usual right-wing view, which may be called 'liberal-conservative', is that unequal rewards are right and desirable so long as the competition for wealth and power is a fair one.
- ^ Gidron, N; Ziblatt, D. (2019). "Center-right political parties in advanced democracies 2019" (PDF). Annual Review of Political Science. 22: 24. doi:10.1146/annurev-polisci-090717-092750. S2CID 182421002.
...since different currents within the right are drawn to different visions of societal structures. For example, market liberals see social relations as stratified by natural economic inequalities.
- ^ McClosky, Herbert; Chong, Dennis (July 1985). "Similarities and Differences Between Left-Wing and Right-Wing Radicals". British Journal of Political Science. 15 (3): 329–363. doi:10.1017/S0007123400004221. ISSN 1469-2112. S2CID 154330828.
- ^ Leonard V. Kaplan, Rudy Koshar, The Weimar Moment: Liberalism, Political Theology, and Law (2012) p. 7–8.
- ^ Alan S. Kahan, Mind Vs. Money: The War Between Intellectuals and Capitalism (2010), p. 184.
- ^ Jerome L. Himmelstein, To the right: The transformation of American conservatism (1992).
- ^ Wright, Edmund, ed. (2006). The Desk Encyclopedia of World History. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 370, 541. ISBN 978-0-7394-7809-7.
- ^ Hendershot, Cyndy (2003). Anti-Communism and Popular Culture in Mid-Century America. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland. ISBN 978-0786414406.
- ^ a b Nunberg, Geoffrey (17 April 2003). "Sticks and Stones; The Defanging of a Radical Epithet". The New York Times.
- ^ "Revolutions / 1.0 / handbook". 1914-1918-Online (WW1) Encyclopedia. Retrieved 5 February 2025.
- ^ "What was the Cold War—and are we headed to another one?". Culture. 23 March 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2025.
- ^ Adler, Franklin Hugh. Italian Industrialists from Liberalism to Fascism: The Political Development of the Industrial Bourgeoisie, 1906–34. p. 349.
- ^ a b c Wiarda, Howard J. (1997). Corporatism and comparative politics: the other great "ism". Comparative politics series. Armonk, NY: Sharpe. ISBN 978-1-56324-716-3.
- ^ Wiarda, Howard J. (1997). Corporatism and Comparative Politics: The Other Great "Ism". M.E. Sharpe. pp. 27, 141.
- ^ Clarke, Paul A. B; Foweraker, Joe. Encyclopedia of democratic thought. London, UK; New York: Routledge, 2001. Pp. 113
- ^ a b Goodsell, Charles T., "The Architecture of Parliaments: Legislative Houses and Political Culture", British Journal of Political Science, Vol. 18, No. 3 (July 1988), pp. 287–302.
- ^ Marty, Martin E.; Appleby, R. Scott (1994). Fundamentalisms Observed (2nd ed.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-226-50878-8.
Reactionary right-wing themes emphasizing authority, social hierarchy, and obedience, as well as condemnations of liberalism, the democratic ethos, the "rights of man" associated with the legacy of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution, and the political and cultural ethos of modern liberal democracy are especially prominent in the writings and public statements of Archbishop Lefebvre.
- ^ Holland, J., Modern Catholic Social Teaching: The Popes Confront the Industrial Age, 1740–1958. Paulist Press, 2003, p. 132.
- ^ Payne, Stanley G. (1983). Fascism: Comparison and Definition. Madison, Wisc.: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-299-08064-8.
Right radicals and conservative authoritarians almost without exception became corporatists in formal doctrines of political economy, but the fascists were less explicit and in general less schematic.
- ^ Joseph A. Schumpeter, History of economic analysis, Oxford University Press 1996, ISBN 978-0195105599.
- ^ Birner, Jack; van Zijp, Rudy (1994). Hayek, Co-ordination and Evolution: His Legacy in Philosophy, Politics, Economics and the History of Ideas. London, New York: Routledge. p. 94. ISBN 978-0-415-09397-2.
- ^ Boettke, Peter J.; Leeson, Peter T. (2003). "28A: The Austrian School of Economics 1950–2000". In Samuels, Warren; Biddle, Jeff E.; Davis, John B. (eds.). A Companion to the History of Economic Thought. Blackwell Publishing. pp. 446–452. ISBN 978-0-631-22573-7.
- ^ "Heterodox economics: Marginal revolutionaries". The Economist. 31 December 2011. Archived from the original on 22 February 2012. Retrieved 22 February 2012.
- ^ Denis, Andy (2008). "Dialectics and the Austrian School: A Surprising Commonality in the Methodology of Heterodox Economics?". The Journal of Philosophical Economics. 1 (2): 151–173. Retrieved 19 May 2022.
- ^ Menger, Carl (2007) [1871]. Principles of Economics (PDF). Translated by Dingwall, James; Hoselitz, Bert F. Auburn, Alabama: Ludwig von Mises Institute.
- ^ Heath, Joseph (1 May 2018). Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. Retrieved 1 May 2018 – via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- ^ Ludwig von Mises. Human Action, p. 11, "Purposeful Action and Animal Reaction". Referenced 2011-11-23.
- ^ a b c d e Andrew Knapp and Vincent Wright (2006). The Government and Politics of France. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-35732-6.
- ^ Williams, Raymond (2000). "Social Darwinism". In John Offer (ed.). Herbert Spencer: Critical Assessment. London; New York: Routledge. pp. 186–199. ISBN 9780415181846.
- ^ Doyle, William (2002). The Oxford History of the French Revolution (2nd ed.). Oxford [u.a.]: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-925298-5.
An exuberant, uncompromising nationalism lay behind France's revolutionary expansion in the 1790s...", "The message of the French Revolution was that the people are sovereign; and in the two centuries since it was first proclaimed it has conquered the world.
- ^ Winock, Michel (dir.), Histoire de l'extrême droite en France (1993).
- ^ Adams, Ian Political Ideology Today (2nd edition), Manchester University Press, 2002, p. 68.
- ^ Ramet, Sabrina; Griffin, Roger (1999). The Radical Right in Central and Eastern Europe since 1989. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 978-0271018119.
- ^ Barber, Tony (11 July 2016). "A renewed nationalism is stalking Europe". Financial Times. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ "Neo-Nationalism - ECPS". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ a b Left and right: the significance of a political distinction, Norberto Bobbio and Allan Cameron, pg. 68, University of Chicago Press, 1997.
- ^ Bruce Frohnen, Jeremy Beer and Jeffrey O. Nelson, ed. (2006) American Conservatism: An Encyclopedia Wilmington, DE: ISI Books, p. 870.
- ^ Mudde, Cas and Rovira Kaltwasser, Cristóbal (2017) Populism: a Very Short Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press. pp.14-15, 72-73. ISBN 978-0-19-023487-4
- ^ a b Canovan, Margaret (1981). Populism (1st ed.). New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. ISBN 978-0151730780.
- ^ Hayward, Jack (2004). Elitism, Populism, and European Politics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198280354.
- ^ Daniel Stockemer, "Structural data on immigration or immigration perceptions? What accounts for the electoral success of the radical right in Europe?." JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies 54.4 (2016): 999-1016.
- ^ "About Us". Tea Party. 2 September 2004. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f Hadiz, Vedi R. (8 August 2018). "Imagine All the People? Mobilising Islamic Populism for Right-Wing Politics in Indonesia". Journal of Contemporary Asia. 48 (4): 566–583. doi:10.1080/00472336.2018.1433225. ISSN 0047-2336.
- ^ Ammassari, Sofia; Fossati, Diego; McDonnell, Duncan (October 2023). "Supporters of India's BJP: Distinctly Populist and Nativist". Government and Opposition. 58 (4): 807–823. doi:10.1017/gov.2022.18. hdl:10072/415334. ISSN 0017-257X.
- ^ Letter of May 10, 1879, quoted in Frank, Joseph (2010). Dostoevsky A Writer in his Time. Princeton University Press. p. 788. ISBN 9780691128191.
- ^ Quadragesimo anno, 115–118
- ^ DeGette, Diana (2008). Sex, Science, and Stem Cells: Inside the Right Wing Assault on Reason. The Lyons Press. ISBN 978-1-59921-431-3.
- ^ Chris Mooney, The Republican War on Science: Revised and Updated, ASIN: B001OQOIPM
- ^ "2004 Republican Party Platform: A Safer World and a More Hopeful America" (PDF). MSNBC. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 May 2012. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
- ^ Rozsa, Matthew (5 July 2019). "How did the Republican Party become so conservative?". Salon. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
To understand how the Republican Party became associated with right-wing politics — and, for that matter, how the Democratic Party became associated with a left-wing, progressive philosophy — it is essential to understand the history of the Grand Old Party.
- ^ Thomas Blom Hansen, The Saffron Wave: Democracy and Hindu Nationalism in Modern India, Princeton University Press, 2001, ISBN 1-4008-0342-X, 9781400803422.
- ^ "Israel's Ayatollahs: Meir Kahane and the Far Right in Israel". Archived from the original on 19 February 2009.
Any non-Jew, including the Arabs, can have the status of a foreign resident in Israel if he accepts the law of the Halacha. I don't differentiate between Arabs and non-Arabs. The only difference I make is between Jews and non-Jews. If a non-Jew wants to live here, he must agree to be a foreign resident, be he Arab or not. He does not have and cannot have national rights in Israel. He can have civil rights, social rights, but he cannot be a citizen; he won't have the right to vote. Again, whether he's Arab or not.
- ^ Rubin, Shira (24 December 2015). "Good Will and Peace Towards Men Elusive This Year in Nazareth". Forward.
- ^ "FBI — Terrorism 2000/2001". Federal Bureau of Investigation.
- ^ Demirtas, Burcu (27 March 2009). "Rescue Teams Could Not Reach Turkish Party Leader, Muhsin Yazicioglu after Helicopter Crash". Turkishweekly.net. Archived from the original on 5 March 2012. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
- ^ "Readings". uvm.edu. Fall 2007. Archived from the original on 6 October 2012. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
- ^ Muir, Jim (10 February 2000). "Poll test for Iran reformists". BBC News. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
- ^ "Middle East Report Online: Iran's Conservatives Face the Electorate, by Arang Keshavarzian". Merip.org. 23 May 1997. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
- ^ Anoushiravan Ehteshami and Mahjoob Zweiri, Iran and the rise of its neoconservatives: the politics of Tehran's silent revolution, I.B. Tauris, 2007.
- ^ a b c d Moyra Grant. Key Ideas in Politics. Cheltenham, England, UK: Nelson Thornes, Ltd., 2003. p. 52.
- ^ Bobbio, Norberto. Left and right: The significance of a political distinction. University of Chicago Press, 1996, pp.60-62
- ^ Stanley, Jason (2018) How Fascism Works: The Politics of Us and Them. New York: Random House. p.13. ISBN 978-0-52551183-0
- ^ Ball, T. and R. Bellamy, eds., The Cambridge History of Twentieth-Century Political Thought, pp. 610–12.
- ^ Linski, Gerhard, Current Issues and Research In Macrosociology (Brill Archive, 1984) p. 59
- ^ Clark, Barry Political Economy: A Comparative Approach (Praeger Paperback, 1998), pp. 33–34.
- ^ Gauchet, Marcel, "Right and Left" in Nora, Pierre, ed., Realms of Memory: Conflicts and Divisions (1996) pp. 247–248.
- ^ Alan S. Kahan. Mind Vs. Money: The War Between Intellectuals and Capitalism. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers, 2010. p. 88.
- ^ Ian Adams. Political Ideology Today. Manchester, England, UK; New York, New York, US: Manchester University Press, 2001. p. 57.
- ^ The English Ideology: Studies in the Language of Victorian Politics, George Watson Allen Lane, London, 1973, p. 94.
- ^ Iain McLean and Alistair McMillan, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics, Right (-wing)...and for extreme right parties racism and fascism., p. 465, Oxford, 2009, ISBN 978-0-19-920780-0.
- ^ Bresciani, Marco (1 January 2021). "Conservatives and Right Radicals in Interwar Europe". Conservatives and Right Radicals in Interwar Europe.
- ^ Bramall, Chris (2008). Chinese Economic Development. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-19051-5.
- ^ Yuezhi Zhao (20 March 2008). Communication in China: Political Economy, Power, and Conflict. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-7425-7428-1.
- ^ Sautman, Barry (1992). "Sirens of the Strongman: Neo-Authoritarianism in Recent Chinese Political Theory". The China Quarterly. 129 (129): 72–102. doi:10.1017/S0305741000041230. ISSN 0305-7410. JSTOR 654598. S2CID 154374469.
- ^ István Deák, "Hungary" in Hans Roger and Egon Weber, eds., The European right: A historical profile (1963) p 364-407 quoting p. 364.
- ^ "Right wing politics in India, by Archana Venkatesh". osu.edu. 1 October 2019. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ "Hindutva enters, takes centre-stage in Andhra Pradesh politics, by Balakrishna Ganeshan". thenewsminute.com. 1 October 2020. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
- ^ "India Will Move Beyond Modi, his Party, and Right Wing Populism, by Ajay Gudavarthy". NewsClick. newsclick.in. 11 July 2020. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
- ^ Rao, Jaithirth (25 October 2019). The Indian Conservative : A History of Indian Right-Wing Thought (First ed.). New Delhi: Juggernaut Press. p. 280. ISBN 978-9353450625.
- ^ IWANEK, Krzysztof (2019). "Is the BJP Conservative?". Politeja. 16 (59): 55–72. doi:10.12797/Politeja.16.2019.59.04. ISSN 1733-6716. JSTOR 26916353. S2CID 212822106.
- ^ Ghose, Sagarika (24 April 2013). "Left-wing or Right-wing: Why labels simply don't capture India". Firstpost. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
- ^ Charles Loch Mowat, Britain Between the Wars: 1918–1940 (1955), p. 577.
- ^ Farney, James (2012). Social Conservatives and Party Politics in Canada and the United States. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 28. ISBN 978-1-4426-1260-0.
- ^ "The U.S. Remained Center-Right, Ideologically, in 2019". Gallup. 9 January 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
- ^ "Rightwing Extremism: Current Economic and Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in Radicalization and Recruitment" (PDF). United States Department of Homeland Security. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
- ^ Augoustinos, Martha; Walker, Iain; Donaghue, Ngaire (2006). Social Cognition: An Integrated Introduction (2nd ed.). London: Sage Publications. p. 320. ISBN 9780761942191.
- ^ McLean, Iain; McMillan, Alistair (2008). The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics (3rd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 465. ISBN 9780199205165.
- ^ Davies, p. 13.
- ^ a b c Berlet, p. 117.
- ^ Eatwell: 1999, p. 284.
- ^ Eatwell: 2004, pp. 7–8.
- ^ Eatwell: 2004, p. 8, "Today four other traits feature most prominently in definitions: 1) anti-democracy; 2) nationalism; 3) racism; 4) the strong state".
- ^ Vincent, Andrew (1995). Modern Political Ideologies (2nd ed.). Oxford [u.a.]: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-19507-8.
Who to include under the rubric of the New Right remains puzzling. It is usually seen as an amalgam of traditional liberal conservatism, Austrian liberal economic theory ... extreme libertarianism (anarch-capitalism) and crude populism.
- ^ Betz & Immerfall 1998; Betz 1994; Durham 2000; Durham 2002; Hainsworth 2000; Mudde 2000; Berlet & Lyons, 2000.
- ^ Davies, Peter; Davies, Peter Jonathan; Lynch, Derek (2002). The Routledge Companion to Fascism and the Far Right. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-21495-7. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
far right.
- ^ Durham, Martin (2000). The Christian Right, the Far Right and the Boundaries of American Conservatism. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-5486-0. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
- ^ Merkl, Peter H.; Weinberg, Leonard; Leonard, Weinberg; Merkl, Professor Peter (30 June 2000). Right-wing Extremism in the Twenty-first Century. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-7146-5182-8. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
- ^ Eatwell, Roger; Mudde, Cas (2004). Western Democracies and the New Extreme Right Challenge. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-415-36971-8. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
- ^ "Pim Fortuyn: The far-right Dutch maverick". BBC News. 7 March 2002. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
- ^ "A Dictator's Legacy of Economic Growth". NPR. 14 September 2006. Retrieved 15 October 2007.
- ^ Greenwald, Glenn (31 May 2012). "Glenn Greenwald". Salon.com. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
- ^ Betz, Hans-Georg (1994). Radical Right-Wing Populism in Western Europe. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-08390-8.
- ^ Michael E. Brown, Owen R. Cote Jr., Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict, "Anti-immigrant and anti-refugee feeling is being exploited by extreme right-wing parties throughout Europe...", p. 442, MIT Press, 2001, ISBN 978-0-262-52315-8.
- ^ La teoría social latinoamericana: La centralidad del Marxismo (in Spanish). Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociales, Coordinación de Estudios Latinoamericanos, Dirección General de Asuntos del Personal Académico. 1995. ISBN 978-968-36-4710-8.
Further reading
[edit]- Bacchetta, Paola, and Margaret Power, eds. 2002. Right-Wing Women: From Conservatives to Extremists around the World. New York: Routledge.
- Berlet, Chip. 2006. "When Alienation turns Right." In The Evolution of Alienation: Trauma, Promise, and the Millennium, edited by Langman, Lauren, and Kalekin-Fishman. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-7425-1835-3, ISBN 978-0-7425-1835-3
- Davies, Peter. 2002. The Extreme Right in France, 1789 to the Present: From De Maistre to Le Pen. New York, NY: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-23982-6, ISBN 978-0-415-23982-0.
- Eatwell, Roger. 1999. "Conclusion: The 'End of Ideology'." In Contemporary Political Ideologies, edited by R. Eatwell and A. Wright. Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8264-5173-X, ISBN 9780826451736.
- —— 2004. "Introduction: the new extreme right challenge." In Western Democracies and the new Extreme Right Challenge, edited by R. Eatwell and C. Muddle. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-36971-1, ISBN 978-0-415-36971-8
- Fielitz, Maik, and Laura Lotte Laloire, eds. 2016. Trouble on the Far Right. Contemporary Right-Wing Strategies and Practices in Europe. Bielefeld: transcript. ISBN 978-3-8376-3720-5
- Gottlieb, Julie, and Clarisse Berethezéne, eds. 2017. Rethinking right-wing women: Gender and the Conservative Party, 1880s to the present.
- Miles, Michael W. (1980). The Odyssey of the American Right. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195027747.
External links
[edit]
Media related to Right-wing politics at Wikimedia Commons
Quotations related to Right-wing politics at Wikiquote
Right-wing politics
View on GrokipediaRight-wing politics encompasses a spectrum of ideologies and movements that regard established social hierarchies, traditions, and national identities as essential to ordered liberty and societal stability, often favoring limited government, free enterprise, and resistance to egalitarian upheavals. The term originated during the French Revolution in the National Assembly, where deputies supporting the monarchy, aristocracy, and continuity of institutions positioned themselves to the right of the presiding officer, in opposition to left-wing revolutionaries advocating radical restructuring.[1] Core tenets of right-wing thought include adherence to an enduring moral order, respect for custom and convention, prudence in change, and recognition of human imperfection, as outlined in Russell Kirk's foundational principles of conservatism, which form a bedrock for many right-wing perspectives.[2] These principles contrast with left-wing emphases on imposed equality and expansive state intervention, promoting instead individual responsibility, property rights, and voluntary associations to foster prosperity and cohesion.[3] Empirical patterns show right-wing governance historically linked to policies reducing investment risk and supporting market-driven growth, though outcomes vary with implementation.[4] Variants range from classical liberalism, exemplified by economists like Friedrich Hayek who warned against central planning's road to serfdom, to nationalism prioritizing sovereignty amid global challenges.[5] Notable achievements include the defeat of communism through staunch anti-totalitarian stances and economic liberalizations that spurred post-war recoveries, while controversies often stem from mainstream institutions' tendencies to conflate diverse right-wing views with marginal extremism, overlooking causal links between unchecked immigration, cultural erosion, and populist backlashes.[6] Right-wing politics continues to evolve, addressing causal realities like demographic shifts and technological disruptions with realism over ideological abstraction.
Definition and Terminology
Origins of the term and political spectrum
The terms "left-wing" and "right-wing" originated during the French Revolution in 1789, when members of the National Assembly arranged themselves by ideological alignment relative to the presiding officer's position.[1] Those favoring preservation of the monarchy, aristocracy, and established social orders—opposed to radical egalitarian reforms—sat to the speaker's right, while advocates for revolutionary change, including the abolition of feudal privileges and greater popular sovereignty, occupied the left.[7] This seating convention, which began in the Salle des Menus-Plaisirs at Versailles during the Estates-General's reconvening under Louis XVI, crystallized a spatial metaphor for political division that persists today.[8] In contemporary French usage at the time, the right represented the "party of order," emphasizing continuity with traditional institutions like the church and nobility against the left's "party of movement," which prioritized societal transformation and individual rights over inherited hierarchies.[7] The right-wing label thus initially connoted resistance to upheaval, rooted in empirical observations of social stability derived from long-standing customs rather than abstract ideals of uniformity.[1] As the Revolution progressed into the 1790s, these terms extended beyond France, influencing European and later global discourse, where right-wing positions consistently aligned with defending differentiated roles in society—such as property-based distinctions and familial authority—against leveling tendencies.[9] The left-right spectrum evolved into a one-dimensional model for classifying ideologies, plotting positions along a continuum from radical change (far left) to preservation of existing structures (far right), with centrists in between.[10] However, this framework has faced criticism for oversimplifying multidimensional variances, such as tensions between economic liberty and cultural traditionalism, which do not neatly align on a single axis and can lead to misleading categorizations of complex coalitions.[11] Empirical analyses, including voter behavior studies, indicate that while the spectrum captures broad attitudes toward authority and equality—right-wing favoring organic hierarchies observed in historical data over imposed equity—it fails to account for orthogonal factors like attitudes toward state intervention in markets, rendering it a heuristic rather than a comprehensive causal map.[12] Despite these limitations, the model remains prevalent in political science for its historical continuity and utility in tracking aggregate shifts, as seen in post-1789 assemblies where right-wing factions numerically defended pre-revolutionary precedents against left-driven innovations.[13]Core definitional elements emphasizing natural order
Right-wing politics fundamentally incorporates the recognition of a natural order in human affairs, characterized by inherent hierarchies arising from observable differences in individual abilities, temperaments, and social roles. These hierarchies are viewed as emergent from biological and empirical realities rather than artificial constructs, with variations in cognitive capacities, physical attributes, and behavioral traits leading to stratified outcomes in societies across history.[14][15] For instance, data on intelligence distributions show persistent gaps in average IQ scores between populations, correlating with socioeconomic achievements and underscoring the impracticality of enforced equality.[16] Philosophically, this acceptance traces to thinkers like Aristotle, who argued for natural inequalities where some individuals are suited for rule and others for obedience based on virtue and capacity, a view embedded in teleological understandings of human flourishing.[17] Edmund Burke extended this by portraying society as an organic entity grown through intergenerational wisdom, where disrupting established orders—such as familial or communal structures—invites chaos, as evidenced by the French Revolution's upheaval following abstract egalitarian impositions.[18][19] Central to this definitional core is causal realism: outcomes reflect underlying causes like genetic and environmental factors, not malleable social engineering. Right-wing adherents prioritize preserving institutions that align with these realities, such as merit-based authority and traditional divisions of labor, to sustain stability and productivity, contrasting with ideologies that deny such variances in pursuit of uniformity.[20] Empirical support includes cross-cultural studies revealing universal preferences for hierarchical leadership in group settings, suggesting an evolved disposition toward ordered differentiation.[21] This framework posits that ignoring natural order leads to inefficiency and resentment, as forced leveling disregards incentives tied to competence and inheritance.[17]Distinctions from left-wing ideologies
Right-wing ideologies fundamentally differ from left-wing ones in their assessment of human nature, viewing individuals as imperfect and prone to self-interest, thus requiring structured incentives, traditions, and limited government to foster order and prosperity, in contrast to left-wing optimism about human perfectibility through state-led engineering of society.[3] Conservatives emphasize personal responsibility and choice, arguing that one-size-fits-all solutions ignore individual variation and lead to coercion, while progressives prioritize collective solutions via expansive government to address perceived inequalities.[3] On hierarchy and equality, right-wing thought accepts natural and merit-based hierarchies as empirically beneficial for societal functioning, drawing from observations that unequal outcomes reflect differences in ability, effort, and circumstance rather than systemic oppression, whereas left-wing ideologies seek to flatten these through redistribution and affirmative policies, often prioritizing equality of outcome over equality of opportunity.[22] Empirical data supports right-wing skepticism of forced equality; nations with higher economic freedom indices, such as Hong Kong and Singapore in the 1990s-2000s, achieved rapid poverty reduction and growth via market hierarchies, while heavy interventionist regimes like Venezuela post-2010 experienced economic collapse with GDP contracting over 75% from 2013 to 2021. Economically, right-wing positions defend private property and free markets as mechanisms that align self-interest with social good through voluntary exchange, yielding superior outcomes in innovation and wealth creation compared to left-wing advocacy for central planning and wealth transfers, which panel studies show correlated with slower growth pre-1990s due to distorted incentives.[23] Right-wing governments historically pursued deregulation and fiscal restraint, reducing government spending relative to GDP, as seen in right-wing populist administrations cutting expenditures by nearly 1% of GDP, versus left-wing expansions that strain resources without proportional benefits.[24] [6] Socially and culturally, right-wing ideologies prioritize tradition as accumulated empirical wisdom from trial-and-error over generations, including strong family units and national cohesion, which correlate with lower crime and higher social trust in studies of stable societies, in opposition to left-wing deconstruction of norms in favor of fluid identities and expansive moral circles that dilute loyalties and invite disorder.[25] Conservatives maintain closer-knit circles of concern—family, community, nation—fostering accountability, while liberals extend empathy broadly, often leading to policies that undermine local incentives, as evidenced by higher welfare dependency in expansive social democracies versus self-reliant models.[25][26]Philosophical Foundations
Acceptance of hierarchies as empirically grounded
Right-wing political philosophy maintains that hierarchies in society are not arbitrary impositions but emerge from observable differences in individual capabilities, efforts, and outcomes, as evidenced by biological and social sciences. These hierarchies are seen as adaptive structures that facilitate efficient resource allocation and conflict resolution, rather than illusions to be eradicated through egalitarian policies.[27] Empirical studies across species demonstrate that dominance and prestige-based hierarchies reduce intra-group aggression and enhance collective survival, with similar patterns persisting in human interactions.[28][29] In biological contexts, hierarchies have evolved due to the inefficiencies of flat networks, favoring modular structures where higher ranks correlate with access to resources and mating opportunities. For instance, in primates and other social animals, alpha individuals maintain order through displays of strength and competence, minimizing overall conflict costs.[30] Psychologist Jordan Peterson has highlighted lobster dominance hierarchies, which predate humans by over 350 million years and operate via serotonin-modulated postures akin to human status signaling, underscoring a deep evolutionary conservation of hierarchical organization.[31] This neurobiological continuity suggests that human aversion to inequality often overlooks innate mechanisms favoring stratified orders for stability.[27] Human societies exhibit competence hierarchies driven by variations in intelligence, skills, and productivity, leading to disparities in wealth and influence that reflect real differences rather than systemic oppression alone. Economist Thomas Sowell argues in Discrimination and Disparities (2018) that unequal outcomes stem from diverse factors including geography, culture, and behavior, not solely discrimination, with data showing that groups with similar opportunity sets still diverge based on internal attributes.[32][33] For example, Ashkenazi Jews and East Asians outperform others in IQ and socioeconomic metrics despite histories of persecution, indicating that cognitive and cultural variances underpin persistent hierarchies.[33] Right-wing thinkers like Sowell contend that ignoring these empirical realities in pursuit of outcome equality distorts incentives and hampers progress, as seen in policies that penalize high performers.[34] Friedrich Hayek's concept of spontaneous order further grounds hierarchies in decentralized human action, where market and social structures self-organize into layered authorities based on dispersed knowledge, outperforming central planning that flattens distinctions.[35] In this view, hierarchies arise organically from trial-and-error evolution, rewarding those with superior adaptation and foresight, as opposed to contrived equality that suppresses innovation.[36] Conservative defenses emphasize granting greater influence to proven superiors, aligning political weight with demonstrated merit to sustain societal function.[14] Empirical critiques of anti-hierarchical interventions, such as Soviet egalitarianism's collapse by 1991 amid inefficiency, reinforce that denying natural stratification invites disorder.[14]Tradition as accumulated wisdom from causal realism
In right-wing political philosophy, traditions are regarded as repositories of practical knowledge accrued through generations of trial, error, and adaptation to the immutable realities of human nature and social organization. This perspective holds that longstanding customs, institutions, and norms have endured not by chance but because they effectively navigate causal mechanisms—such as incentives, hierarchies, and behavioral patterns—that rationalistic blueprints often overlook or misjudge. Proponents argue that discarding such traditions in favor of ideological redesign risks catastrophic unintended consequences, as evidenced by historical upheavals where abstract theories supplanted evolved practices.[17][37] Edmund Burke articulated this view in his 1790 work Reflections on the Revolution in France, portraying inherited "prejudices"—preconceived notions shaped by collective experience—as a form of supra-rational wisdom superior to the untested deductions of solitary intellects. Burke contended that traditions embody the "bank and capital of nations and ages," tested against real-world contingencies rather than speculative ideals, and warned that severing ties to this heritage invites disorder, as seen in the French Revolution's descent into the Reign of Terror from 1793 to 1794. His emphasis on gradual, experience-informed reform underscores a causal realism: societal stability arises from mechanisms refined over time, not imposed anew.[38][39] Friedrich Hayek extended this reasoning by conceptualizing traditions as emergent "spontaneous orders," arising from decentralized human actions and selected through a cultural evolutionary process akin to natural selection. In works like The Constitution of Liberty (1960), Hayek explained that such orders aggregate dispersed knowledge—insights into cause-and-effect relationships too complex for central planners to replicate—enabling coordination on scales impossible through deliberate design. Traditions thus persist because they align with empirical patterns of cooperation and constraint, fostering prosperity where rationalist interventions, by disregarding this tacit wisdom, distort incentives and erode efficiency.[36][40] Russell Kirk, in The Conservative Mind (1953), reinforced tradition's role as a bulwark against ideological abstraction, defining conservatism through principles like reverence for the "permanent things"—enduring moral and social truths discerned through historical prudence rather than utopian engineering. Kirk viewed traditions as organic guides to human imperfectibility, embodying lessons from causality in governance, such as the fragility of liberty without customary restraints. This framework prioritizes preservation of proven structures, like constitutional limits and communal bonds, over egalitarian experiments that ignore precedented failures in leveling hierarchies.[2][37]Individual agency versus collectivism
Right-wing political thought prioritizes individual agency, emphasizing personal responsibility, free choice, and self-reliance as foundational to human flourishing and societal order. This stance contrasts with collectivist ideologies that subordinate individuals to group interests, often through state coercion to achieve equality of outcomes. Proponents argue that individual agency fosters innovation and moral accountability, as seen in classical liberal traditions adapted by modern conservatives and libertarians.[41] Philosophers like Friedrich Hayek critiqued collectivism for undermining the "spontaneous order" arising from decentralized individual decisions, asserting that central planning ignores the dispersed knowledge held by individuals. In The Road to Serfdom (1944), Hayek warned that collectivist policies erode liberty by concentrating power in the hands of planners who impose uniform ends over voluntary means. Similarly, economists such as Ludwig von Mises and Milton Friedman defended individualism through market mechanisms, where prices signal individual preferences and incentives drive productivity without coercive redistribution.[42][43] Empirical data supports the link between individual economic freedom and prosperity. The Fraser Institute's Economic Freedom of the World index, measuring factors like property rights and sound money, shows countries with higher scores—such as Hong Kong (pre-2020) at 8.58 out of 10 in 2019—achieving greater GDP per capita, averaging $48,000 versus $6,000 in less free nations. Cross-national studies confirm that individualistic societies correlate with higher innovation rates and personal happiness, as voluntary cooperation outperforms mandated collectivism.[44][45][46] Critiques from right-wing perspectives highlight collectivism's causal failures, including resource misallocation and authoritarianism, as evidenced by the Soviet Union's 69 million deaths under collectivized agriculture and industry from 1917 to 1991, per historical estimates. Such systems stifle agency by punishing initiative—e.g., kulak farmers targeted in the 1930s Holodomor—leading to stagnation, whereas individualist policies in post-war West Germany spurred the Wirtschaftswunder, with GDP growth averaging 8% annually from 1950 to 1960. Right-wing analysts, wary of mainstream narratives downplaying these outcomes due to institutional biases, stress that collectivism's appeal lies in moral posturing but empirically yields dependency and reduced agency.[47][41]Economic Principles
Defense of free markets and private property
Right-wing proponents defend free markets as systems of voluntary exchange that efficiently allocate resources through price signals, fostering innovation and prosperity without coercive government intervention.[48] Private property rights underpin this framework by granting individuals control over their assets, incentivizing investment, maintenance, and productive use, thereby avoiding the inefficiencies of communal ownership such as the tragedy of the commons.[49] Economist Gustav Cassel argued that secure private property is vital for economic progress, as it motivates entrepreneurship and capital accumulation essential for growth.[50] Milton Friedman contended that free markets differ fundamentally from government operations because exchanges occur only when both parties gain, promoting mutual benefit and individual freedom over centralized directives.[51] He advocated deregulation and limited state involvement to unleash market forces, asserting that such policies historically correlate with higher living standards.[52] Friedrich Hayek emphasized that private property enables decentralized decision-making, allowing individuals to apply localized knowledge unattainable by planners, thus generating spontaneous order superior to interventionist schemes.[53] This aligns with causal mechanisms where property rights signal scarcity and encourage efficient responses, contrasting with state overrides that distort incentives.[44] Empirical data reinforces these arguments: Over 700 studies link greater economic freedom—encompassing strong property protections and market openness—to enhanced prosperity, including accelerated GDP growth and poverty alleviation, with fewer than one in twenty finding contrary effects.[54] The Heritage Foundation's Index of Economic Freedom reveals that countries scoring highest in areas like property rights and business freedom achieve per capita incomes more than twice the global average, alongside improved life expectancy and environmental quality.[55] Analyses by the Cato Institute further demonstrate that economic liberty precedes and drives sustained growth, countering interventionist models that often yield stagnation, as evidenced by comparative outcomes in freer versus regulated economies.[56][57]
Empirical critiques of interventionist policies
Right-wing critiques of interventionist policies emphasize empirical evidence demonstrating how government distortions in markets lead to inefficiencies, reduced incentives, and unintended harms such as higher unemployment or shortages. Economists associated with these views, including Milton Friedman, argue that policies like minimum wage laws, rent controls, and expansive welfare systems interfere with price signals and voluntary exchanges, often exacerbating the problems they aim to solve.[58][59] In labor markets, minimum wage increases have been linked to elevated unemployment rates, particularly among low-skilled and youth workers. A review of studies indicates that such mandates reduce employment opportunities by pricing out marginal workers, with empirical analyses showing disemployment effects of 1-3% per 10% wage hike in affected sectors.[60][61] For instance, research on U.S. county-level data post-increases reveals declines in job vacancies and hiring, supporting the theoretical prediction that artificial wage floors disrupt labor demand.[62] While some analyses report minimal overall effects, critics highlight that these often overlook heterogeneous impacts on vulnerable groups, where evidence consistently shows job losses.[58][59] Rent control policies, intended to enhance affordability, empirically correlate with housing shortages and diminished supply. Meta-analyses of over 100 studies confirm that controls reduce rental housing stock by discouraging new construction and maintenance, leading to waitlists and black markets in controlled cities like San Francisco and New York.[63][64] One comprehensive review found that rent controls exacerbate shortages in tight urban markets, with supply reductions up to 15% and quality declines due to capped returns on investment.[65][66] Empirical data from international cases, including Sweden and the U.K., further illustrate how such interventions misallocate resources, benefiting incumbents at the expense of new entrants and overall availability.[63] Welfare programs have been critiqued for fostering dependency, with data showing intergenerational transmission and reduced work incentives. Studies using administrative records indicate that parental welfare receipt raises children's participation by 2-3 percentage points, perpetuating cycles through altered family behaviors and norms.[67][68] In the U.S., post-1996 reform evaluations revealed that time limits decreased long-term reliance but also highlighted how prior unlimited benefits correlated with 20+ months of receipt among 45% of youth on aid, undermining self-sufficiency.[69][70] Econometric evidence further links expanded transfers to 2-3% drops in low-skilled employment, as benefits create effective marginal tax rates exceeding 100% on earned income.[71] Broader interventions, such as central planning in socialist economies, provide stark empirical lessons in inefficiency. Historical data from the Soviet Union document chronic shortages, misallocated resources, and growth stagnation, with GDP per capita lagging market-oriented peers by factors of 2-3 despite resource advantages. Friedman's analyses extended this to partial interventions, arguing they accumulate into full distortions, as seen in U.S. regulatory expansions correlating with productivity slowdowns from the 1970s onward.[72] These findings underscore right-wing advocacy for market mechanisms, where decentralized decisions empirically outperform top-down mandates in allocating scarce resources.[73]Fiscal conservatism and incentives for productivity
Fiscal conservatism within right-wing politics prioritizes limited government spending, low tax rates, and balanced budgets to promote economic efficiency and individual responsibility.[74] This approach views excessive public expenditure and high taxation as distortions that undermine personal initiative and market signals.[75] Proponents argue that fiscal restraint preserves resources for private sector allocation, where decisions are driven by profit motives rather than political priorities.[76] Central to this stance is the emphasis on incentives for productivity, rooted in supply-side economics, which holds that reducing marginal tax rates enhances the rewards for work, investment, and innovation.[77] Lower taxes increase after-tax returns, thereby expanding labor supply as individuals opt for more hours or entrepreneurship over leisure or tax avoidance.[78] Similarly, capital formation rises as savers and investors retain more earnings, funding productive assets like machinery and research.[79] Empirical analyses indicate that corporate and personal income taxes exert the strongest negative influence on growth among major tax types, with reductions correlating to higher output per capita.[80] Historical implementation, such as the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 under President Reagan, illustrates these dynamics: the top marginal rate fell from 70% to 50%, coinciding with real GDP growth averaging 3.5% annually from 1983 to 1989 and the creation of over 20 million jobs.[81] Unemployment declined from 7.5% in 1981 to 5.4% by 1989, alongside increased business investment.[82] While deficits expanded due to spending not fully offset, advocates contend the policy spurred a productivity surge that broadened the tax base, partially mitigating revenue losses.[83] Cross-country evidence supports modest positive growth effects from tax cuts, particularly when paired with deregulation.[84] Critics, often from interventionist perspectives, highlight mixed outcomes, such as no uniform acceleration in per capita income trajectories post-major high-income tax reductions.[85] Right-wing analysts counter that such studies undervalue incentive effects in dynamic models, where behavioral responses amplify long-term gains, as seen in post-Reagan expansions.[86] Fiscal conservatism thus aligns with a causal view that government overreach crowds out private productivity, favoring policies that reward effort to sustain wealth creation.[87]Social and Cultural Positions
Preservation of traditional institutions and family
Right-wing thought regards the traditional family—typically defined as a stable union of one man and one woman committed to marriage and child-rearing—as the primary institution for transmitting cultural values, ensuring social stability, and fostering individual responsibility. This structure is defended as empirically superior for child development, drawing on data showing that children raised by their married biological parents experience lower rates of poverty, delinquency, and mental health issues compared to those in single-parent or alternative arrangements. For example, longitudinal studies indicate that adolescents from intact two-parent families score higher on educational achievement tests and exhibit fewer externalizing behaviors, such as aggression and hyperactivity, than peers from single-parent homes.[88][89] Such outcomes persist across socioeconomic controls, suggesting causal links to family stability rather than mere correlation with income or education levels.[90] Conservative intellectuals like Russell Kirk emphasized the family as the "natural source and core of any good society," arguing that its erosion invites collectivist alternatives that undermine voluntary associations and personal liberty.[91] This view echoes Edmund Burke's concept of "little platoons," where family units serve as foundational societal building blocks, preserving accumulated wisdom against radical disruptions like unchecked individualism or state intervention.[92] Empirical correlations support this: regions with stronger ancestral family ties exhibit greater adherence to right-wing cultural policies, including opposition to policies diluting marital norms.[93] Proponents advocate policies such as tax incentives for marriage, restrictions on no-fault divorce, and school choice to reinforce family autonomy, citing evidence that Republican-leaning households maintain higher marital stability and happiness rates than progressive counterparts.[94][95] Broader traditional institutions, such as religious communities intertwined with family life, are preserved for their role in moral cohesion and countering egalitarian reforms that prioritize individual autonomy over relational duties. Data from the General Social Survey reveals that conservative families, often rooted in these institutions, report sustained two-parent households at rates recovering to 70% of children by 2020, amid declines in single-parent arrangements.[96] Critics from left-leaning academia may attribute disparities to systemic biases rather than structure, but right-wing analyses prioritize causal evidence from family investment models, where dual-parent involvement directly predicts better cognitive and non-cognitive child outcomes.[97][98] Thus, preservation efforts aim to safeguard these institutions against policies perceived as incentivizing family fragmentation, such as expansive welfare systems documented to correlate with rising single parenthood since the 1960s.[99]Role of religion in moral and social cohesion
Right-wing political philosophy posits that religion furnishes a stable moral framework grounded in transcendent authority, which fosters social cohesion by aligning individual behavior with communal norms and discouraging relativism that erodes collective trust.[100] This perspective draws from thinkers like Joseph de Maistre, who contended in his 1796 essay Considerations on France that divine providence underpins legitimate authority, rendering religion indispensable for societal order against revolutionary upheaval.[101] Similarly, Edmund Burke, in his 1790 Reflections on the Revolution in France, portrayed religion as integral to the "moral imagination" that sustains inherited institutions, warning that its erosion invites anarchy by severing ethics from eternal truths.[102] Empirical studies corroborate religion's contributions to cohesion, with regular religious participation linked to higher generalized trust, volunteering rates, and perceptions of cooperativeness across diverse populations.[103] For instance, analysis of European Social Survey data from 2002–2018 shows that frequent attendance at religious services correlates positively with these pro-social outcomes, independent of socioeconomic factors, suggesting religion's rituals and doctrines cultivate interpersonal bonds and mutual obligations.[103] In the United States, longitudinal data indicate that active religious practitioners exhibit lower rates of social pathologies, including reduced divorce (by 35% among weekly attendees), teen suicide (cut by half), and out-of-wedlock births, attributing these to religion's reinforcement of family structures and ethical discipline.[100] Conservatives further argue that religion's "binding" moral foundations—emphasizing loyalty, authority, and sanctity—promote ingroup solidarity, contrasting with secular individualism that prioritizes personal autonomy over collective duties.[104] This view aligns with functionalist sociology, where religion acts as a conservative force maintaining equilibrium by integrating diverse members through shared beliefs and rituals, as evidenced in cross-national comparisons where higher religiosity associates with stronger civic engagement.[105] Critics from secular perspectives question causality, citing confounders like cultural homogeneity, yet right-wing analyses highlight religion's historical role in stabilizing post-Enlightenment societies against atheistic ideologies that precipitated 20th-century totalitarianism.[106] In practice, right-wing movements, such as the U.S. Moral Majority founded in 1979, have leveraged religious mobilization to advocate policies reinforcing traditional morality, yielding measurable upticks in community involvement among adherents.[102] Comparatively, secular societies exhibit elevated anomie, with data from the World Values Survey (1981–2022) revealing inverse correlations between declining religiosity and rising social fragmentation in Western Europe, including higher youth alienation and welfare dependency.[100] Right-wing proponents thus advocate religion's public role to counteract these trends, viewing state-enforced secularism as disruptive to the organic cohesion derived from faith-based authority.[101]Resistance to egalitarian social engineering
Right-wing politics critiques egalitarian social engineering—deliberate state or institutional efforts to impose outcome equality across groups—as incompatible with empirical observations of human variation and causal mechanisms of social order. Proponents argue that such interventions, including quotas and preferential treatments, disrupt merit-based allocation, leading to inefficiencies and resentment, as evidenced by Friedrich Hayek's analysis of centralized planning's failure to account for dispersed, tacit knowledge beyond any planner's grasp.[107] Hayek contended that attempts to rationally redesign society ignore evolutionary processes that generate spontaneous orders, often culminating in coercive overreach akin to totalitarianism.[107] Empirical studies on affirmative action illustrate these concerns through the mismatch hypothesis, which posits that admitting students to selective institutions via racial preferences places them in academically demanding environments where they are more likely to struggle, with lower graduation and bar passage rates compared to peers at matched-ability schools. For instance, analysis of law school data shows Black students admitted under preferences at elite institutions had bar passage rates around 45% on first attempt, versus 80-90% for higher-credentialed peers, suggesting net harm from overplacement rather than underplacement.[108] This effect persists after controlling for preparation, with evidence from California post-Proposition 209 (1996), where ending preferences increased Black and Hispanic law school enrollment at lower-tier schools and boosted overall bar passage for these groups by shifting to better-fit institutions.[108] Diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives face similar right-wing scrutiny for prioritizing group identities over individual competence, eroding trust in meritocratic systems. A meta-analysis of mandatory DEI training found it often backfires, increasing prejudice and stereotyping among participants by heightening awareness of differences without resolving underlying biases, with effect sizes indicating worsened attitudes post-training.[109] Critics, drawing on incentive structures, argue these programs incentivize performative compliance over substantive improvement, as seen in corporate scandals where DEI hiring correlated with unqualified placements and subsequent operational failures, though longitudinal data remains contested due to self-reported metrics in pro-DEI studies.[110] Opposition extends to gender quotas in corporate boards or politics, viewed as disregarding biological and psychological sex differences in traits like risk tolerance and interests, which explain occupational disparities without invoking systemic barriers alone. Research documents stable sex differences in variance—men exhibiting greater extremes in cognitive abilities and competitiveness—leading to underrepresentation of women in high-stakes fields not due to discrimination but innate distributions, with quotas thus forcing mismatches that reduce overall performance. Conservative thinkers emphasize that enforcing parity ignores these causal realities, fostering inefficiency; for example, Norway's 2003 quota law for boards correlated with no broad economic gains and potential short-term value drops in affected firms, underscoring the hubris of overriding evolved preferences.[111]Political and International Stances
Nationalism and state sovereignty
Right-wing thought views the nation-state as the primary locus of political authority, prioritizing its sovereignty to maintain cultural, economic, and security independence from supranational entities. This stance derives from the principle that effective governance requires accountability to a defined national community, rather than diffused global bureaucracies that dilute decision-making.[112] National sovereignty is seen as essential for self-determination, enabling states to enforce borders, regulate immigration, and pursue policies aligned with domestic interests without external veto.[113] Proponents argue that erosion of sovereignty, as through open borders or binding international treaties, undermines democratic legitimacy by transferring power from elected governments to unelected international bodies.[114] In opposition to globalism, right-wing nationalism emphasizes the causal link between state control and national cohesion, positing that unchecked integration leads to cultural dilution and economic exploitation. Conservatives critique institutions like the European Union for overriding national parliaments, as evidenced by disputes over fiscal transfers and migration quotas that compel resource sharing across disparate economies.[115] This perspective holds that sovereignty preserves incentives for productive governance, where leaders face direct electoral consequences, rather than insulated transnational elites. Empirical cases include resistance to World Trade Organization rulings perceived as favoring multinational corporations over domestic industries, reinforcing the view that global rules often prioritize uniformity over adaptive national strategies.[116] Modern manifestations underscore this commitment through policy actions reclaiming autonomy. In the United Kingdom, the 2016 Brexit referendum, driven by Conservative-led campaigns under the slogan "Take Back Control," resulted in the UK's withdrawal from the EU on January 31, 2020, restoring legislative supremacy over trade, laws, and borders.[117] Similarly, Donald Trump's 2017-2021 U.S. administration withdrew from the Trans-Pacific Partnership on January 23, 2017, and the Paris Climate Agreement on June 1, 2017, citing threats to American economic sovereignty and job losses from offshoring.[118] In Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has repeatedly invoked sovereignty to reject EU migrant relocation quotas imposed in 2015, arguing they infringe on national self-governance; this stance contributed to Hungary's 2016 referendum rejecting the quotas by 98% of valid votes.[119] These examples illustrate a pattern where right-wing governments prioritize territorial integrity and unilateral policy-making to safeguard against perceived supranational overreach.[120]Law, order, and rule-based governance
Right-wing politics prioritizes stringent enforcement of laws and maintenance of social order as foundational to preserving liberty and prosperity, positing that unchecked deviance leads to societal breakdown through eroded deterrence and institutional legitimacy. This perspective views governance as requiring predictable, impartial rules applied uniformly, rather than discretionary leniency that undermines public confidence.[121][122] The "law and order" imperative emerged as a defining right-wing motif in the mid-20th century, particularly in response to escalating urban crime and civil unrest in the United States during the 1960s. Barry Goldwater's 1964 presidential campaign and Richard Nixon's 1968 platform invoked it to advocate expanded policing, harsher penalties for violent offenses, and federal crackdowns on narcotics, framing disorder as a direct threat to constitutional governance. Nixon's subsequent administration implemented policies like the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, which intensified drug prosecutions, while states adopted measures such as New York's 1973 Rockefeller drug laws mandating severe sentences for possession and trafficking.[123][124] Conservatives extend this to rule-based governance by insisting on legal systems derived from historical precedent and fixed texts, constraining both rulers and citizens to prevent arbitrary power or activist reinterpretations. This contrasts with approaches favoring evolving norms, emphasizing instead legislative supremacy and originalist judicial restraint to ensure stability.[125][126] Proponents cite empirical patterns, such as the U.S. violent crime decline from peaks in the early 1990s—homicide rates falling from 9.8 per 100,000 in 1991 to around 5.5 by 2000—coinciding with incarceration rates tripling under mandatory minimums, three-strikes laws, and enhanced policing strategies like broken windows enforcement. Analyses link 20-25% of the era's crime drop explicitly to incapacitation effects, bolstering arguments that rigorous application of rules deters recidivism and restores order more effectively than rehabilitative or decarceration alternatives.[127][128][129] Critics from left-leaning institutions often downplay these correlations in favor of socioeconomic factors, reflecting institutional biases toward reform narratives despite the data.[130]Anti-totalitarianism and promotion of ordered liberty
Right-wing political thought positions anti-totalitarianism as a core principle, contending that expansive state intervention erodes individual freedoms and paves the way for coercive regimes. Friedrich Hayek's 1944 work The Road to Serfdom posits that centralized economic planning, even if initially pursued for egalitarian ends, requires suppressing dissent to enforce uniform directives, inevitably culminating in totalitarian control as planners coerce compliance to resolve inevitable conflicts over scarce resources.[131] This analysis drew from observations of interwar Europe, where both Nazi Germany (1933–1945) and the Soviet Union under Stalin (1924–1953) exemplified decentralized and popular totalitarianism through ideological monopolies and mass mobilization.[132] Hayek warned that such systems prioritize collective goals over personal autonomy, leading to the "worst" rising to power by exploiting centralized authority.[133] During the Cold War (1947–1991), right-wing figures and movements intensified opposition to Soviet communism, framing it as an existential totalitarian threat that demanded robust defenses of liberal institutions. In the United States, conservative-led anti-communist campaigns, including Senator Joseph McCarthy's investigations from 1950 to 1954, highlighted perceived infiltrations in government and society, fueling policies like the Truman Doctrine (1947) and NATO's formation (1949) to contain expansionist regimes.[134] European conservatives, influenced by thinkers like Raymond Aron, developed antitotalitarian theories from the 1930s onward, analyzing how ideological extremism supplanted pluralism with state worship.[135] These efforts emphasized empirical evidence of communist atrocities, such as the Soviet Gulag system, which imprisoned millions and executed over 680,000 in the Great Purge (1936–1938), to argue for vigilance against any policy trajectory toward similar outcomes.[134] In promoting ordered liberty, right-wing ideology advocates freedoms constrained by constitutional frameworks, moral traditions, and rule of law to avert both anarchy and despotism. Edmund Burke, in his 18th-century reflections, anchored liberty in a transcendent moral order derived from custom and religion, rejecting abstract individualism that disregards societal preconditions for sustained freedom.[136] This contrasts with libertarian emphases on uncoerced action alone, as conservatives maintain that true liberty flourishes only within structures fostering virtue and reciprocity, such as limited government and impartial justice.[137] For instance, Canadian conservative Stephen Harper's thought integrated ordered liberty through private enterprise, free trade, and religious toleration under minimal state interference, viewing these as bulwarks against totalitarian overreach.[138] Empirical support arises from stable constitutional republics like the post-World War II United States, where separation of powers prevented the executive dominance seen in totalitarian states.[139] Right-wing critiques extend to modern interventions, warning that expansive welfare states or regulatory bureaucracies mimic the planning pitfalls Hayek identified, eroding accountability and inviting authoritarian shortcuts.[140] Proponents thus champion decentralized decision-making and property rights as causal mechanisms preserving liberty, evidenced by economic recoveries in post-totalitarian Eastern Europe after 1989, where market reforms correlated with democratic consolidation.[141] This framework underscores a commitment to liberty not as license but as ordered pursuit of human flourishing under enduring institutions.[142]Historical Evolution
Pre-20th century roots in reaction to radicalism
Right-wing political thought in its modern form originated as a reaction against the radical ideologies and upheavals of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution beginning in 1789, which sought to dismantle traditional hierarchies, monarchy, and established religion in favor of abstract rational principles and popular sovereignty.[39] Thinkers emphasized the perils of rapid, theory-driven change, arguing it ignored human nature's complexity and the stabilizing role of inherited institutions.[143] This counter-revolutionary stance prioritized organic social evolution, authority, and continuity over revolutionary experimentation.[144] Edmund Burke, an Irish-born British statesman, articulated a foundational critique in his 1790 pamphlet Reflections on the Revolution in France, warning that the Revolution's rejection of tradition and embrace of metaphysical rights would lead to chaos and tyranny, as evidenced by the subsequent Reign of Terror from 1793 to 1794.[39] Burke contrasted the French events with Britain's Glorious Revolution of 1688, praising the latter for preserving constitutional monarchy and gradual reform rather than wholesale destruction.[144] He advocated prudence, reverence for precedent, and the view of society as a partnership across generations, influencing subsequent conservative emphasis on limited government and skepticism toward utopian schemes.[143] Burke's work, selling over 30,000 copies in its first year despite lacking official endorsement, marked a shift from aristocratic defense to principled conservatism.[145] On the European continent, reactions were often more absolutist and theocratic. Joseph de Maistre, a Savoyard diplomat and philosopher, interpreted the Revolution in his 1797 Considerations on France as divine retribution for Enlightenment irreligion and rationalism, which he blamed for unleashing the Terror's 40,000 executions and widespread anarchy. Maistre championed ultramontanism—the supremacy of the Pope over national churches—and absolute monarchy as bulwarks against liberal individualism, arguing that sovereignty derived from divine authority rather than popular consent.[146] His provocative style and insistence on tradition's irrational yet essential wisdom contrasted with Burke's more evolutionary approach, fostering a strain of right-wing thought that viewed radicalism as inherently atheistic and destructive.[147] In Britain, Tory parliamentarians, whose ideology coalesced in the late 17th century during the Exclusion Crisis of 1679–1681, intensified their opposition to Whig radicalism and Jacobin influences post-1789, defending the Anglican Church's establishment and monarchical prerogative against calls for parliamentary reform and religious toleration.[148] Tories like William Pitt the Younger, prime minister from 1783 to 1801 and 1804 to 1806, enacted repressive measures such as the 1795 Treasonable Practices Act to curb revolutionary agitation, reflecting a commitment to order and constitutional stability amid fears of French-style upheaval.[149] This partisan divide prefigured right-wing prioritization of hierarchy and national continuity over egalitarian innovations. These pre-20th century responses coalesced into a coherent right-wing framework by the early 19th century, countering radicalism's causal chain from abstract ideology to societal breakdown, as seen in the Revolution's progression from constitutional assembly in 1789 to Napoleonic dictatorship by 1799.[150] While Burkean conservatism favored reform within tradition, continental variants like Maistre's stressed restoration of pre-revolutionary authority, both rooted in empirical observation of radicalism's violent outcomes rather than deference to progressive narratives.[151]Interwar and Cold War consolidations
In the aftermath of World War I and the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, right-wing movements in Europe consolidated as bulwarks against communist expansion and social upheaval, often through authoritarian structures that prioritized national order over democratic pluralism. Fascism emerged as a potent right-wing ideology, with Benito Mussolini's National Fascist Party consolidating power via the March on Rome on October 28, 1922, establishing a regime that suppressed socialist organizations, enforced corporatist economics, and glorified the state as an organic hierarchy.[152] This model influenced similar consolidations elsewhere, including António de Oliveira Salazar's Estado Novo in Portugal, formalized in 1933, which blended Catholic traditionalism with anti-communist repression to maintain social stability amid economic turmoil.[153] The Great Depression exacerbated support for such right-wing anti-system parties, as economic distress from 1929 onward correlated with electoral gains for nationalist and authoritarian platforms across interwar Europe.[153] Further consolidation occurred in Spain during the Civil War (1936–1939), where General Francisco Franco's Nationalist forces, backed by conservative monarchists, Carlists, and Falangists, defeated the Republican coalition, securing victory on April 1, 1939, and instituting a regime that emphasized hierarchical order, Catholic integralism, and fierce anti-Bolshevism.[152] Traditional conservative elites, fearing the spread of Soviet-influenced communism as seen in the Republican government's alliances, often accommodated or allied with these authoritarian right-wing factions, viewing them as necessary to preserve property rights, family structures, and national sovereignty against egalitarian radicalism.[154] In Britain, conservative anti-communism manifested in responses to early 1920s labor unrest and perceived Bolshevik threats, with governments enacting measures like the Emergency Powers Act of 1920 to curb strikes and subversive activities.[154] However, not all right-wing elements embraced full authoritarianism; parliamentary conservatives in Western Europe pursued containment through diplomacy, including appeasement toward fascist states to prioritize anti-communist fronts over confrontation.[155] The Cold War era (1947–1991) marked a broader ideological consolidation of right-wing politics in the West, centered on militant anti-communism, defense of free-market capitalism, and preservation of ordered liberty against totalitarian collectivism. In the United States, post-World War II conservatives coalesced around opposition to Soviet expansionism, with intellectual foundations laid by James Burnham's The Struggle for the World (1947), which advocated total victory over communism, and Friedrich Hayek's The Road to Serfdom (1944), warning that central planning inevitably led to despotism.[156] This synthesis, termed "fusionism" by Frank Meyer, integrated traditionalist values, libertarian economics, and aggressive containment, gaining organizational form through William F. Buckley's founding of National Review on November 19, 1955, which provided a platform for critiquing both New Deal statism and communist infiltration.[156][157] Russell Kirk's The Conservative Mind (1953) further solidified this by tracing a lineage of skeptical, prudential conservatism from Edmund Burke, emphasizing moral order and resistance to ideological utopias.[156] European right-wing consolidation during the Cold War emphasized national sovereignty and alliances like NATO, founded in 1949, to counter Warsaw Pact threats, with leaders such as Konrad Adenauer in West Germany (chancellor 1949–1963) pursuing economic miracle policies rooted in social market principles and rearmament against communism.[158] In France, Charles de Gaulle's return to power in 1958 revived a nationalist right-wing strain, withdrawing from NATO's integrated command in 1966 to assert independence while maintaining anti-Soviet postures.[158] These developments reflected a causal prioritization of hierarchical stability and empirical anti-totalitarianism, as right-wing thinkers argued that unchecked egalitarianism paved the way for Soviet-style tyranny, a view empirically supported by the fates of Eastern European states under communist rule post-1945.[157] By the 1980s, this consolidation culminated in transatlantic victories, including Ronald Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative (announced 1983) and support for anti-communist insurgencies, contributing to the Soviet collapse by 1991.[156]Post-Cold War shifts toward populism and globalization critiques
Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, initial right-wing enthusiasm for neoliberal globalization waned as empirical evidence mounted of its adverse effects on national economies and social cohesion. Manufacturing employment in the United States, for instance, fell from approximately 17.2 million jobs in 1990 to 11.5 million by 2010, correlating with expanded trade agreements like NAFTA in 1994 and China's WTO accession in 2001, which critics argued displaced domestic workers without commensurate benefits for the broader populace. Right-wing figures such as Pat Buchanan highlighted these dislocations during his 1992 presidential campaign, decrying free trade as a threat to American sovereignty and wages, marking an early pivot toward protectionist rhetoric within conservative circles.[159] In Europe, similar critiques emerged against supranational integration, particularly the European Union's expansion and the Schengen Area's open borders, which facilitated large-scale migration—peaking at over 1 million asylum seekers in 2015 amid the Syrian crisis. Parties like the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP), led by Nigel Farage, capitalized on these concerns, advocating Brexit to reclaim control over immigration and trade policy; the 2016 referendum resulted in a 51.9% vote to leave the EU on June 23, reflecting widespread disillusionment with elite-driven globalization. In Hungary, Viktor Orbán's Fidesz party, gaining power in 2010, implemented policies restricting foreign influence and prioritizing national economic interests, framing EU mandates as erosions of sovereignty—a stance echoed by Poland's Law and Justice party after its 2015 victory.[160] This populist inflection represented a departure from post-Cold War neoliberal orthodoxy, which had emphasized unfettered markets and international institutions, toward national conservatism emphasizing borders, industry protection, and cultural preservation. Donald Trump's 2016 U.S. presidential win, secured with 304 electoral votes, embodied this shift through "America First" policies rejecting multilateral deals like the Trans-Pacific Partnership and imposing tariffs on steel imports (25% in 2018), justified by trade imbalances exceeding $500 billion annually with China. Economic analyses, such as those by Dani Rodrik, attribute the surge to globalization's uneven distribution of gains, where low-skilled workers bore costs like wage suppression while cosmopolitan elites reaped rewards, fueling demands for reciprocity in trade and immigration.[161] These movements, while varying regionally, converged on causal critiques: globalization's promise of prosperity had instead amplified inequality and identity threats, prompting right-wing realignment toward policies safeguarding national labor markets and sovereignty against abstract global ideals.[162]Regional Manifestations
Europe: From monarchism to modern populism
In the aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars, European right-wing politics crystallized around monarchism as a bulwark against revolutionary upheaval, exemplified by the Congress of Vienna in 1815, which reestablished conservative monarchies and suppressed liberal and nationalist movements across the continent.[163] Austrian statesman Klemens von Metternich emerged as a pivotal figure, enforcing the Concert of Europe to maintain balance of power and quash dissent through censorship and alliances among absolutist regimes.[164] Thinkers like Joseph de Maistre advocated ultramontanism and divine-right monarchy, critiquing Enlightenment rationalism as a precursor to anarchy and emphasizing hierarchical order rooted in tradition and religion.[165] The revolutions of 1830 and 1848 challenged but did not eradicate monarchist conservatism; in France, legitimists upheld Bourbon claims against republicanism, while in Prussia, Otto von Bismarck unified Germany in 1871 under a constitutional monarchy that preserved aristocratic privileges alongside emerging industrial interests.[164] By the late 19th century, right-wing parties evolved to incorporate Catholic social teachings and protectionist economics, as seen in the German Center Party's defense of confessional schools and family structures against socialist encroachment.[166] World War I dismantled several dynasties, including the Romanovs in 1917, Hohenzollerns in Germany, and Habsburgs in Austria-Hungary, compelling right-wing forces to adapt to republican frameworks while retaining emphases on national sovereignty and anti-Bolshevism.[163] In interwar Europe, conservative movements like France's Action Française blended monarchist nostalgia with integral nationalism, opposing both communism and liberal democracy as threats to organic social bonds. Post-World War II, Western European conservatism manifested through Christian democratic parties, such as Germany's CDU under Konrad Adenauer, which prioritized market economies, anti-communism, and supranational integration via the European Coal and Steel Community in 1951, though with reservations about eroding national autonomy.[164] The late 20th century witnessed a pivot toward populist strains amid globalization and mass migration, with parties critiquing EU centralization and multiculturalism as dilutions of cultural identity. The Freedom Party of Austria's entry into coalition government in 2000 marked an early breakthrough for such forces, prioritizing border controls and welfare chauvinism.[167] By the 2010s, formations like Germany's Alternative for Germany (founded 2013), France's National Rally (rebranded 2018), and Italy's Lega gained traction on platforms opposing the 2015 migrant influx—over 1 million arrivals—and fiscal transfers within the Eurozone.[168] In Eastern Europe, post-communist transitions amplified right-wing populism, as in Hungary's Fidesz under Viktor Orbán, which secured a supermajority in 2010 by framing EU policies as elite impositions on national self-determination, enacting reforms like media oversight and constitutional amendments to entrench conservative values.[160] Poland's Law and Justice party, victorious in 2015, advanced similar agendas, including judicial restructuring and promotion of traditional family policies amid resistance to Brussels' regulatory harmonization. By 2025, hard-right parties collectively commanded the largest vote share in European Parliament elections, surpassing traditional conservatives and social democrats, driven by voter concerns over irregular migration exceeding 1 million annually and stagnant wages in deindustrialized regions.[169] This evolution reflects continuity in prioritizing sovereignty and cultural continuity over egalitarian universalism, adapting monarchist hierarchies to democratic mass politics.North America: Constitutional conservatism and libertarian strains
Constitutional conservatism in the United States prioritizes strict adherence to the original meaning of the Constitution, emphasizing limited federal authority, enumerated powers, and safeguards against judicial activism. This approach traces to the Founding Fathers' design of checks and balances to prevent centralized overreach, revived in the 20th century amid reactions to progressive expansions of government during the New Deal and Great Society eras.[170] Barry Goldwater's 1960 book The Conscience of a Conservative codified these tenets, arguing for originalist interpretation to restrain bureaucracy and preserve states' rights, influencing the 1964 Republican platform that opposed federal overreach in civil rights enforcement beyond constitutional bounds.[171] Ronald Reagan's 1980 election advanced this strain through policies like the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981, which cut marginal tax rates from 70% to 50% to align with constitutional limits on taxation and promote fiscal restraint.[170] Libertarian strains within American right-wing politics integrate free-market absolutism and individual sovereignty, drawing from Austrian economists like Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek, who critiqued interventionism as distorting price signals and eroding liberty.[172] Fusionism, articulated by Frank Meyer in the 1950s, reconciled libertarian economic individualism with conservative moral order, underpinning alliances in the National Review circle and later the Reagan coalition.[172] This manifests in advocacy for deregulation, as seen in the 1980s dismantling of interstate trucking and airline controls, which reduced barriers and spurred competition, lowering costs empirically—airfares dropped 40% post-deregulation by 1990.[172] Figures like Milton Friedman influenced policy through monetarist prescriptions, contributing to the Federal Reserve's 1979-1982 Volcker shock that curbed inflation from 13.5% in 1980 to 3.2% by 1983 via tight money supply, prioritizing long-term stability over short-term intervention.[170] In Canada, right-wing manifestations blend constitutional fidelity to the 1982 Charter of Rights and Freedoms with libertarian emphases on minimal state interference, though the Westminster parliamentary framework limits strict originalism compared to the U.S. system. The Conservative Party, formed in 2003, promotes supply-side economics and reduced regulations, as in Stephen Harper's 2006-2015 tenure, which balanced budgets by 2015 through spending cuts and resource sector deregulation, boosting GDP growth to 2.6% annually pre-2014 oil downturn.[173] Libertarian elements appear in the People's Party of Canada, founded in 2018 by Maxime Bernier, advocating abolition of supply management in dairy and poultry—cartels that inflate prices 20-30% above world levels—and opposition to carbon taxes as inefficient interventions, reflecting empirical critiques of their negligible global emissions impact.[173] These strains prioritize market-driven outcomes over egalitarian redistribution, aligning with causal evidence that freer trade, like NAFTA's 1994 implementation, increased bilateral U.S.-Canada trade from $290 billion to over $600 billion by 2016.[173]Asia and other regions: Adaptations to local hierarchies
In East Asia, right-wing politics has adapted to Confucian-influenced hierarchies emphasizing filial piety, social order, and deference to authority, often manifesting through long-dominant conservative parties that prioritize stability over radical change. Japan's Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), in power since 1955 except for brief interruptions, embodies this by upholding traditional values alongside economic policies favoring low taxes and business interests, while factions advocate ultranationalist revisions to wartime history and constitutional limits on military expansion.[174][175] This adaptation reinforces hierarchical governance, as seen in the LDP's factional structure mirroring patron-client networks akin to pre-modern samurai loyalties.[176] In South Asia, India's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) integrates Hindutva ideology with local caste and religious hierarchies, mobilizing lower castes under a unified Hindu identity to transcend traditional divisions while preserving upper-caste cultural dominance. Since assuming power in 2014, the BJP has pursued policies like the revocation of Jammu and Kashmir's autonomy in 2019 and the 2024 inauguration of the Ram Temple in Ayodhya, framing them as restorations of civilizational hierarchy against secular egalitarianism.[177][178] This "subaltern Hindutva" blurs caste lines by subordinating them to religious nationalism, enabling electoral coalitions that sidestep direct caste-based reservations while appealing to hierarchical traditions of dharma.[179][180] Southeast Asian right-wing movements adapt to dynastic and patronage-based hierarchies, blending populism with royalist or familial loyalties in contexts of weak institutions. In Thailand, conservative royalist forces have countered progressive reforms by invoking lèse-majesté laws to protect monarchical hierarchy, as evidenced by the 2023-2024 suppression of youth-led movements challenging elite dominance.[181][182] The Philippines under Rodrigo Duterte (2016-2022) exemplified adaptation to local strongman traditions, with anti-drug campaigns reinforcing hierarchical order through extrajudicial authority reminiscent of pre-colonial datu systems.[183] In Indonesia, rising conservative Islamism aligns with communal hierarchies, prioritizing sharia-influenced moral codes over liberal universalism.[184] In the Middle East, right-wing conservatism adapts to tribal and sectarian hierarchies by embedding Islamist or monarchist ideologies within kinship networks, prioritizing loyalty to kin and faith over individualistic rights. Saudi Arabia's Al Saud dynasty maintains control by co-opting tribal sheikhs into state patronage, as in Vision 2030 reforms that preserve Wahhabi social hierarchies while modernizing the economy.[185][186] Tribal affiliations continue to influence politics in Jordan and Yemen, where conservative factions leverage clan hierarchies to mobilize against pan-Arab or leftist universalism, ensuring resource access remains tied to ascriptive status.[187][188] Latin American right-wing politics incorporates Catholic and caudillo traditions, adapting to hierarchical family and church structures amid backlash against leftist populism. Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro (2019-2023) rallied evangelical and military hierarchies against perceived moral decay, echoing colonial-era patronato systems with policies favoring agribusiness elites and traditional gender roles.[189] Argentina's Javier Milei, elected in 2023, fused libertarian economics with cultural conservatism, appealing to middle-class hierarchies wary of Peronist clientelism.[190] Grassroots conservative movements in the region often defend local traditions like machismo and religious authority against gender equity initiatives.[191] In Africa, right-wing elements adapt to tribal and patriarchal hierarchies, emphasizing communal self-reliance over state redistribution. Cameroon's political tribalism correlates with right-wing authoritarianism, where ethnic loyalties reinforce hierarchical leadership models resistant to multiparty pluralism.[192] Social conservatism prevails in nations like Nigeria, where opposition to abortion and same-sex marriage aligns with extended family hierarchies rooted in indigenous and Islamic traditions.[193] This manifests in parties upholding patriarchal authority, as in Zimbabwe under ZANU-PF's blend of nationalism and tribal patronage since 1980.[194]Ideological Variants
Classical and Burkean conservatism
Classical conservatism, a foundational strand of right-wing thought, prioritizes the preservation of established social hierarchies, traditions, and institutions against the disruptions of radical Enlightenment ideologies. Emerging prominently in the late 18th and early 19th centuries as a reaction to events like the French Revolution, it posits that human society functions best through organic evolution rather than engineered redesign, drawing on empirical observation of historical precedents to argue that abrupt changes often yield disorder. Core tenets include recognition of an enduring moral order derived from natural law, adherence to customs and conventions as repositories of collective wisdom, and a principle of prudence that favors incremental adjustments over speculative reforms.[2][195] This variant also affirms the imperfectibility of human nature, rejecting utopian schemes by emphasizing that individual liberty must be tempered by authority and tradition to prevent anarchy; it views property rights not merely as economic tools but as bulwarks of social stability, linking personal virtue to communal order. Hierarchy is seen as a natural outcome of varying human talents and roles, fostering organic unity rather than imposed equality, with classicism—inspired by ancient Greek and Roman models—reinforcing ideals of balanced governance and civic virtue over mob rule. Historical manifestations include British Tory resistance to parliamentary radicalism post-1688 Glorious Revolution and early 19th-century European monarchist defenses of legitimacy against revolutionary fervor, where conservatives like those in the Congress of Vienna (1814-1815) sought to restore pre-Napoleonic balances through negotiated continuity rather than vengeance or innovation.[196][197] Burkean conservatism, articulated by Irish-born British statesman Edmund Burke (1729–1797), refines these classical elements through a focus on experiential prudence and the "latent wisdom" embedded in inherited practices. In his 1790 treatise Reflections on the Revolution in France, Burke lambasted the revolutionaries' reliance on abstract "rights of man" divorced from historical context, arguing instead that societies evolve like living organisms, with change justified only when addressing specific grievances via tested mechanisms—contrasting the preservative American Revolution (1775–1783), which adapted British constitutional traditions, against the destructive French upheaval that razed them. He advocated limited government intervention, rooted in Whig constitutionalism, to safeguard liberties accumulated over generations, warning that rationalist blueprints ignore the complexity of human motivations and unintended consequences.[198][143][18] While classical conservatism can encompass more rigid defenses of status quo hierarchies, Burkean thought introduces a pragmatic flexibility, permitting reform where tradition demands it but always subordinating ideology to evidence from precedent; this evolutionary bent distinguishes it from counter-revolutionary absolutism, as Burke himself supported Catholic emancipation and free trade measures like the 1775 Conciliation with America. Both strains underpin right-wing commitments to ordered liberty by privileging causal realism—observing that stable polities arise from restraint on human folly—over ideologically driven egalitarianism, influencing later figures who integrated these ideas with market economics while critiquing progressive overreach. Empirical support includes the relative longevity of Burke-inspired British institutions, which endured 19th-century industrialization without the continental upheavals, versus the repeated instability in revolutionary models.[199][200]Libertarian and classical liberal wings
The libertarian and classical liberal wings within right-wing politics emphasize individual autonomy, voluntary exchange, and severely constrained state power as prerequisites for economic efficiency and personal responsibility.[201] Classical liberalism posits that limited government, secure property rights, and free markets foster innovation and wealth creation by aligning incentives with human action, as opposed to coercive redistribution which distorts signals and reduces output. Libertarianism extends this by advocating the non-aggression principle, whereby initiation of force is illegitimate except in defense, leading to preferences for privatization of services like education and security to minimize bureaucratic inefficiency.[202] Fusionism, developed by Frank Meyer in the mid-20th century through his writings at National Review, integrated libertarian means—maximizing freedom—with conservative ends—cultivating moral virtue—to counter socialist expansionism, arguing that liberty enables the pursuit of traditional values without state imposition.[203] This synthesis influenced U.S. conservatism, evident in the 1980s Reagan administration's tax reductions from 70% to 28% top marginal rates and deregulation, which correlated with GDP growth averaging 3.5% annually and inflation dropping from 13.5% in 1980 to 4.1% by 1988.[204] Key intellectual figures include Ludwig von Mises, whose 1944 work Bureaucracy critiqued centralized planning's information failures, and Friedrich Hayek, who in The Road to Serfdom (1944) warned that incremental state control erodes liberties, earning the 1974 Nobel Prize for insights into market processes.[205] Milton Friedman advanced empirical defenses, promoting negative income tax experiments in the 1960s-1970s showing work disincentives from welfare and advocating school vouchers, which expanded choice and improved outcomes in pilot programs like Milwaukee's 1990 initiative.[204] These wings critique expansive welfare states for fostering dependency, citing U.S. data where post-1965 Great Society programs coincided with labor force participation stagnation for single mothers at around 50% through the 1990s.[206] Policy priorities encompass ending corporate subsidies, abolishing conscription, and rejecting fiat monetary expansion to prevent inflation as a hidden tax, with historical precedents like the gold standard era (1879-1913) yielding U.S. real GDP per capita growth of 2.1% annually versus 1.8% under post-1971 fiat.[207] Foreign policy favors non-intervention to avoid entanglements, as Mises argued in Nation, State, and Economy (1919) that free trade obviates imperialism. While diverging from social conservatism on issues like drug prohibition, these wings align on opposing identity-based quotas, viewing them as violations of equal individual rights under law.[208] Empirical validations include Chile's post-1973 Chicago School reforms under Pinochet, which slashed poverty from 45% to 15% by 1990 via market liberalization, though implemented amid authoritarianism.[209]Nationalist and populist subtypes
Right-wing nationalism prioritizes the nation-state's sovereignty and cultural preservation, viewing national identity—often defined ethnically or civically—as essential to social stability and rejecting supranational entities that dilute it.[113] This subtype favors policies restricting immigration to maintain demographic homogeneity, arguing that unchecked inflows erode trust and economic opportunities for citizens.[210] Proponents contend that strong borders and cultural assimilation safeguard against fragmentation, as evidenced by Hungary's 2015 border fence, which reduced illegal crossings from over 400,000 in 2015 to under 4,000 by 2017.[211] Right-wing populism complements nationalism by framing politics as a battle between the authentic people and detached elites, often incorporating nativist appeals to mobilize support against perceived betrayals like open borders or globalist trade deals.[212] It employs anti-establishment rhetoric to advocate direct democratic mechanisms or strong leadership restoring national control, distinguishing it from elite-mediated conservatism by emphasizing popular sovereignty over institutional restraint.[168] In practice, this manifests in opposition to multiculturalism and international organizations, with leaders portraying economic globalization as a elite-driven assault on working-class interests.[213] These subtypes frequently overlap in "national populism," where nationalist goals are pursued through populist strategies, as seen in Europe's resurgence post-2008 financial crisis and 2015 migration surge.[212] Hungary's Fidesz party, under Viktor Orbán since 2010, exemplifies this by enacting constitutional reforms centralizing power, imposing media controls, and rejecting EU migration quotas, securing re-election in 2014, 2018, and 2022 with majorities exceeding 50% of votes.[168] Poland's Law and Justice (PiS), led by Jarosław Kaczyński from 2015, similarly advanced judicial reforms and welfare expansions tied to ethnic Polish identity, winning 37.6% in 2015 and 43.6% in 2019.[168] In the United States, the Populist Right, per 2021 Pew typology, comprises 15% of Republicans favoring immigration halts and government skepticism, aligning with Donald Trump's 2016 victory via 304 electoral votes emphasizing "America First" trade and border policies.[214] Critics from academic and media outlets, often aligned with progressive institutions, decry these movements as authoritarian, yet empirical data show correlations with voter turnout increases and policy shifts toward border enforcement without corresponding rises in violence; for instance, post-Trump U.S. illegal crossings dropped 83% from 2019 peaks by 2020 before policy reversals.[214][215] These subtypes diverge from classical right-wing variants by subordinating free-market universalism to national interests, critiquing libertarian openness as naive amid causal realities of cultural divergence and elite capture.[216]Key Thinkers and Intellectual Influences
Foundational figures like Burke and Hayek
Edmund Burke (1729–1797), an Irish-born British statesman and philosopher, laid foundational principles for modern conservatism through his critique of radical upheaval in Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790).[39] He argued that society functions as an intergenerational contract, where the living inherit tested institutions from ancestors and must preserve them for posterity, rather than subjecting them to abstract rational redesign.[217] Burke warned against the French Revolution's anti-institutionalism, which dismantled established authorities like the monarchy and church, leading to chaos and violence, as evidenced by the Reign of Terror from September 1793 to July 1794 that executed over 16,000 people.[150] He advocated gradual reform rooted in prudence and tradition, viewing abrupt change as destructive to social order, a perspective that influenced right-wing emphasis on stability over utopian experimentation.[218] Burke's defense of property rights and skepticism of unchecked popular sovereignty positioned conservatism against egalitarian abstractions, prioritizing empirical inheritance over ideological purity.[219] Friedrich Hayek (1899–1992), an Austrian-British economist awarded the Nobel Prize in 1974, extended these ideas into economic and social theory, critiquing central planning in The Road to Serfdom (1944).[220] Hayek contended that socialist policies, even pursued democratically, concentrate power in planners unable to aggregate dispersed knowledge held by individuals, inevitably eroding liberty and fostering totalitarianism, as seen in the Soviet Union's Gulag system that imprisoned millions from the 1930s onward.[221] Central to his thought is "spontaneous order," where complex systems like markets arise from voluntary interactions without deliberate design, superior to imposed blueprints because they harness local information and adapt via trial and error.[35] This framework underpins right-wing advocacy for limited government, free markets, and rule of law, warning that interventions distort price signals and incentives, as demonstrated by post-World War II economic recoveries in West Germany and Japan through market-oriented reforms yielding average annual GDP growth of 8% in West Germany from 1950 to 1960.[222] Burke and Hayek converge in rejecting rationalist constructivism, with Burke stressing evolved traditions and Hayek markets as extended orders beyond individual foresight, both informing right-wing resistance to state overreach.[223] Their ideas counter leftist narratives of progress through redesign, emphasizing causal realities of unintended consequences in complex systems, as Burke foresaw revolutionary excess and Hayek predicted planning's slide toward coercion.[224] While Burke focused on political inheritance and Hayek on economic liberty, their shared meta-principles of humility before organic processes bolster right-wing defenses of decentralized authority against centralized utopias.[225]20th-century economists and philosophers
Ludwig von Mises (1881–1973), a foundational figure in the Austrian School of economics, advanced right-wing thought through his critique of socialism and advocacy for methodological individualism and praxeology. In his 1920 article "Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth," Mises argued that without private property and market prices, rational economic calculation becomes impossible, rendering central planning inherently inefficient.[226] This economic calculation problem, empirically validated by the failures of Soviet-style economies in allocating resources without price signals, underpinned his 1949 treatise Human Action, which emphasized human action driven by individual purposes over collectivist aggregates.[226] Mises' defense of laissez-faire capitalism as essential for liberty influenced conservative and libertarian opposition to interventionism, warning that government expansion erodes personal responsibility and fosters dependency.[209] Friedrich Hayek (1899–1992), Mises' student and Nobel laureate in 1974, extended these ideas by highlighting the limits of centralized knowledge in society. In The Road to Serfdom (1944), Hayek contended that socialist planning, by concentrating power to achieve egalitarian ends, inevitably leads to totalitarianism, as seen in the Nazi and Soviet regimes where initial welfare measures devolved into coercion.[227] His concept of spontaneous order—emerging from decentralized individual actions rather than top-down design—supported right-wing skepticism of rationalist state engineering, arguing that traditions and markets better coordinate complex social systems than bureaucratic fiat.[228] Hayek's work, including The Use of Knowledge in Society (1945), demonstrated empirically through historical cases like post-war Europe's recovery via market reforms that dispersed knowledge via prices outperforms planners' hubris.[227] Milton Friedman (1912–2006), associated with the Chicago School, integrated empirical monetarism with free-market advocacy, influencing conservative economic policy. In Capitalism and Freedom (1962), he posited economic freedom as a prerequisite for political liberty, citing data from regulatory capture and inflation under Keynesian policies to advocate minimal government roles in schooling, welfare, and money supply.[229] Friedman's proposals, such as voucher-based education and negative income taxes, aimed to enhance choice while curbing state overreach, with real-world tests like Chile's 1980s reforms under his influence yielding growth rates averaging 7% annually from 1984–1990 despite initial inequality critiques.[229] His critique of fiat money's role in 1970s stagflation provided causal evidence for supply-side policies adopted by Reagan and Thatcher, correlating with disinflation and expanded liberties.[230] Among philosophers, Michael Oakeshott (1901–1990) critiqued ideological rationalism, favoring tradition and civil association over progressive "enterprise" states that impose blueprints on society. In Rationalism in Politics (1962), he argued practical knowledge, embedded in customs, surpasses abstract theory, drawing from historical missteps like French Revolution excesses to defend conservative incrementalism against utopian schemes.[231] Eric Voegelin (1901–1985) analyzed modern ideologies as "political religions" or gnostic revolts against reality, using comparative history of Nazi and Bolshevik movements to show how immanentist myths substitute for transcendent order, eroding liberty through messianic collectivism.[232] Both thinkers reinforced right-wing emphasis on ordered liberty, cautioning that abstract egalitarianism ignores human limits evidenced in 20th-century totalitarian outcomes.[233]Contemporary synthesizers of tradition and markets
In the early 21st century, right-wing intellectuals have advanced syntheses of traditional moral and cultural commitments with free-market economics, often building on fusionist precedents to address perceived failures of both unchecked libertarianism and statist interventions. This approach posits that markets thrive under the stabilizing influence of inherited institutions, family structures, and national loyalties, which in turn depend on economic liberty for material prosperity and individual agency. Proponents argue that such integration counters the atomizing effects of pure individualism while avoiding the stagnation of overregulated economies, drawing empirical support from post-World War II growth in fusionist-influenced regimes like Reagan-era America, where GDP per capita rose 3.5% annually from 1983 to 1989 amid deregulatory reforms and cultural appeals to family values.[234] Yuval Levin exemplifies this synthesis, contending in his 2019 essay "The Free-Market Tradition" that conservatism's core—ordered liberty through mediating institutions like churches and communities—requires defending markets against populist and progressive assaults alike. Levin, director of social, cultural, and constitutional studies at the American Enterprise Institute, emphasizes that free enterprise aligns with Burkean prudence by fostering innovation within moral constraints, as evidenced by his analysis of how decentralized economic decision-making preserved social fabrics in Anglo-American history. He critiques both left-wing central planning, which empirical data links to slower growth (e.g., Soviet Union's 1-2% annual GDP increase versus Western Europe's 3-4% in the Cold War era), and right-wing deviations that subordinate markets to industrial policy without traditional anchors.[235][236] Roger Scruton, a British philosopher active until his death in 2020, further developed this blend by advocating markets as mechanisms for voluntary wealth distribution that respect local customs and property rights, without direct state redistribution that erodes personal responsibility. In essays like "Poverty, the Market and the State," Scruton argued that capitalism, when tempered by cultural conservatism, avoids the moral hazards of welfare dependency, citing Britain's post-Thatcher recovery—unemployment falling from 11.9% in 1984 to 5.2% by 1990—as proof of markets enabling self-reliance within traditional frameworks. He warned, however, that unfettered globalization could dissolve communal ties, a causal concern rooted in observations of urban decay in deindustrialized regions where market disruptions outpaced institutional adaptation. Scruton's "reluctant capitalism" thus prioritizes tradition as the precondition for sustainable economic liberty, influencing European conservative thought amid EU skepticism.[237][238][239] Parallel efforts appear in national conservatism, where figures like John O'Sullivan integrate social traditionalism with classical liberal economics, as articulated in the 2022 National Conservatism statement emphasizing sovereign markets guided by national traditions. O'Sullivan, former editor of National Review, highlights models like Hungary's Danube Institute approach, which pairs pro-family policies with regulated capitalism, yielding 4.1% average GDP growth from 2010 to 2019 despite global headwinds. This counters critiques from post-liberal quarters by grounding market reforms in empirical national successes, such as Poland's PiS-era blend of welfare nationalism and deregulation, which lifted median wages 40% in real terms from 2015 to 2023 while upholding Catholic-influenced social norms. Such syntheses reflect a pragmatic response to data showing that nations with strong traditional institutions—measured by metrics like family stability indices—exhibit higher long-term market resilience than those dominated by individualism or collectivism.[158][240]Empirical Outcomes and Policy Impacts
Successes in economic growth and stability
Right-wing administrations have frequently implemented supply-side reforms, including tax reductions, deregulation, and privatization, which have correlated with sustained economic expansion and macroeconomic stability in several cases. In the United States under President Ronald Reagan (1981–1989), average annual real GDP growth reached 3.6%, recovering from the early 1980s recession inherited from prior policies characterized by high inflation and stagnation.[241] These outcomes stemmed from the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981, which cut marginal tax rates by 25%, alongside deregulation in energy and finance sectors, fostering investment and productivity gains; inflation declined from 13.5% in 1980 to 4.1% by 1988, while the prime interest rate fell from 21.5% in January 1981 to 10% by August 1988.[81] Unemployment dropped from 7.6% in 1981 to 5.3% in 1989, reflecting labor market liberalization and reduced union power.[242] In the United Kingdom, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's government (1979–1990) confronted stagflation through monetarist policies and confrontation with entrenched unions, achieving a sharp reduction in inflation from 18% in 1980 to 4.6% by 1983, with rates remaining below 10% thereafter.[243] GDP growth averaged approximately 2.5% annually from 1983 onward, following an initial recession necessary to unwind post-war nationalizations and wage controls; public sector borrowing fell as a share of GDP, and productivity in privatized industries like telecommunications rose significantly.[244] These reforms, including the sale of state assets generating over £50 billion by 1990, shifted the economy toward market incentives, enabling sustained stability despite short-term unemployment peaks at 11.9% in 1984.[243] Other instances include Chile's adoption of free-market policies post-1973, influenced by University of Chicago economists, which stabilized the economy after hyperinflation exceeding 500% in 1973; real GDP growth averaged 7% annually from 1984 to 1990, with exports expanding via trade liberalization and pension privatization enhancing capital formation.[245] In Singapore under Lee Kuan Yew (1959–1990), pro-business authoritarian conservatism—emphasizing low taxes, foreign investment attraction, and anti-corruption enforcement—propelled per capita GDP from about $500 in 1965 to $14,500 by 1991, a 2,800% increase, through export-oriented industrialization and fiscal prudence maintaining low inflation under 2% annually.[246] These cases illustrate how right-wing emphases on limited government intervention and rule of law have empirically broken cycles of fiscal excess, yielding compounding growth absent in more interventionist regimes.[247]Social order maintenance versus chaos in alternatives
Right-wing governance often prioritizes robust law enforcement, border security, and traditional social structures to preserve order, contrasting with progressive alternatives that emphasize decarceration and reduced policing, which empirical data links to heightened disorder. In the United States, cities adopting "defund the police" measures post-2020 saw significant crime surges; for instance, across 15 major cities with populations totaling 27 million, police stops and arrests dropped 40% following budget cuts, correlating with elevated homicides and violent incidents. [248] [249] These locales, predominantly under Democratic leadership, experienced reversals as officials reinstated funding amid staffing shortages and public safety concerns, with examples including Washington, D.C., Baltimore, Los Angeles, and New York City grappling with violent crime waves. [250] High murder rates in 2024 concentrated in Democratic-controlled urban centers, such as 13 of the 20 worst-affected cities, even within Republican-led states, underscoring local policy impacts over state-level governance. [251] In Europe, conservative administrations enforcing strict migration controls and punitive justice systems demonstrate sustained social stability, while open-border progressive models foster gang proliferation and public unrest. Hungary under Viktor Orbán's Fidesz government, since 2010, has maintained low immigration inflows and correspondingly minimal gang-related violence through border fences and deportations, avoiding the ethnic enclaves and no-go zones reported elsewhere. [252] In contrast, Sweden's lenient asylum policies from the 2010s onward correlated with a surge in organized crime, including underage assassins exploited by networks; by 2024, the government proposed lowering the criminal responsibility age from 15 to 13 to address gang recruitment of children for murders, with over 280 such cases documented. [253] [254] Orbán's critiques highlight Sweden's justice system failures in convicting migrant-linked offenders, contributing to eroded public trust and episodic riots, whereas Hungary's approach preserves cohesive communities without similar escalations. [255] These patterns reflect causal links wherein right-wing commitments to hierarchy, deterrence, and cultural continuity mitigate entropy in social systems, as evidenced by lower violent crime persistence in policy environments favoring enforcement over rehabilitation-first paradigms. Mainstream outlets, often aligned with progressive viewpoints, may underreport such disparities—favoring narratives of systemic bias over policing efficacy—but granular FBI and national statistics affirm that sustained order requires unyielding institutional authority rather than experimental leniency, which invites opportunistic disorder. [256] [257] Historical precedents, like post-war Western European conservative regimes emphasizing national sovereignty, further correlate with reduced ideological fragmentation and civil unrest compared to unchecked welfare expansions elsewhere. [258]Long-term causal effects on prosperity and liberty
Right-wing policies emphasizing limited government intervention, secure property rights, and free-market incentives have demonstrated long-term positive causal effects on prosperity, as evidenced by cross-national indices measuring economic freedom. Countries in the top quartile of the Economic Freedom of the World (EFW) index, published annually by the Fraser Institute, exhibit average GDP per capita levels more than four times higher than those in the bottom quartile, with the relationship holding after controlling for factors like geography and natural resources.[259] This causal link is quantified such that a 17-point increase in the EFW score correlates with approximately a 32% rise in GDP per capita, driven by enhanced investment, productivity, and innovation under policies reducing regulatory burdens and taxation.[44] Similarly, the Heritage Foundation's Index of Economic Freedom links higher scores—reflecting right-leaning reforms like deregulation and fiscal restraint—to sustained progress in income growth and poverty reduction, with top-ranked nations averaging 79% higher incomes than repressed economies.[260] These outcomes stem from causal mechanisms where property rights and sound money encourage capital accumulation and entrepreneurship, contrasting with interventionist regimes where misallocated resources stifle long-term growth.[261] Historical implementations of such policies reinforce these patterns. In the United States, the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 under President Reagan reduced the top marginal income tax rate from 70% to 50%, spurring a decade of GDP growth averaging 3.5% annually and creating over 20 million jobs by the early 1990s, as lower rates incentivized labor participation and investment despite initial revenue shortfalls offset by base broadening.[81][262] In the United Kingdom, Margaret Thatcher's reforms from 1979 to 1990, including privatization of state industries, union power curbs, and top tax rate cuts from 83% to 40%, transformed a stagnant economy into one with 2.5% average annual growth post-1983, reducing inflation from 18% to under 5% and fostering financial sector expansion that boosted national wealth.[243][263] Singapore's trajectory under Lee Kuan Yew from 1965 onward exemplifies authoritarian-infused market liberalism: low tariffs, merit-based civil service, and foreign direct investment incentives propelled GDP per capita from $500 in 1965 to over $60,000 by 2020, via causal channels of export-led industrialization and minimal corruption enabling sustained compounding returns.[247][264] Regarding liberty, right-wing commitments to rule of law and economic liberty yield enduring protections of individual agency. The Cato Institute's Human Freedom Index, integrating personal and economic dimensions, shows top performers like Switzerland and Ireland—characterized by decentralized governance and market openness—scoring highest, with economic freedom components causally supporting personal freedoms through wealth generation that funds security and judicial independence.[265][266] In freer economies, life expectancy averages 76 years versus 54 in repressed ones, as prosperity enables health investments and voluntary associations, while limited state power prevents erosion of civil liberties via overreach.[267] Conversely, prolonged left-leaning expansions of state control, as in high-regulation welfare states, correlate with declining freedom scores due to fiscal unsustainability and regulatory creep, underscoring how right-wing restraint preserves negative liberties like speech and association by prioritizing institutional stability over redistributive mandates.[259][268]Criticisms, Controversies, and Rebuttals
Left-leaning charges of rigidity and exclusion
Left-leaning critics, drawing from social psychology and political theory, frequently characterize right-wing politics as rigid due to its emphasis on tradition, hierarchy, and caution against untested reforms, portraying such stances as dogmatic resistance to social progress and empirical adaptation. For example, research associates conservatism with elevated levels of closed-mindedness, lower cognitive flexibility, and intolerance of ambiguity, suggesting adherents prioritize stability over innovation in areas like cultural norms or institutional change.[269][270] These claims often emerge from academic contexts with documented left-leaning institutional biases, where surveys of faculty reveal disproportionate progressive identification, potentially skewing interpretations toward viewing conservative prudence as inflexibility rather than risk-averse realism grounded in historical precedents of failed utopian experiments.[271] Rebuttals highlight that conservatism's "rigidity" reflects deliberate adherence to first-principles like limited government and organic societal evolution, which have empirically outperformed radical overhauls; for instance, post-World War II economic liberalizations in right-leaning frameworks correlated with sustained growth rates averaging 3-4% annually in Western nations adhering to market-oriented stability, contrasting with left-led experiments yielding higher volatility.[272] Moreover, adversarial studies find only semi-consistent evidence for asymmetry in rigidity, with extreme left positions showing comparable dogmatism—such as inflexible commitments to expansive state interventions despite evidence of fiscal unsustainability—and left-wing authoritarianism manifesting in suppression of dissent on topics like climate orthodoxy or identity mandates.[273][274] Conservative adaptations, like shifts toward recognizing same-sex civil unions while resisting further expansions into gender ideology, demonstrate flexibility calibrated to societal evidence rather than ideological absolutism. On exclusion, progressive charges depict right-wing nativism and opposition to open borders or identity-based entitlements as systematically marginalizing minorities, framing policies favoring national cohesion—such as merit-based immigration or welfare restrictions—as veiled racism that entrenches privilege for majority groups.[275][276] Critics cite populist right platforms in Europe, where anti-immigration rhetoric is linked to exclusionary welfare chauvinism, arguing these stances exacerbate ethnic health disparities and social fragmentation by prioritizing natives over diverse inflows.[277][278] Counterarguments emphasize that right-wing approaches promote genuine inclusion through assimilation requirements and economic opportunity, avoiding the zero-sum identity politics that left policies often perpetuate; empirical data from selective systems, like Australia's points-based model implemented since 1989, show higher integration success rates, with immigrant employment at 70% within two years versus 50% in less restrictive EU contexts, yielding net fiscal contributions rather than drains.[279] Uncontrolled immigration, conversely, correlates with native wage suppression (1-3% for low-skilled workers per decade-long inflows) and elevated crime in high-density areas, justifying restrictive measures as causal safeguards for communal trust and minority advancement via universal merit, not exclusionary animus.[280] Such positions align with causal evidence that cultural homogeneity fosters higher trust levels (e.g., 40-60% in homogeneous Nordic states pre-mass migration versus post-2015 declines), enabling broader prosperity inclusive of assimilated groups without diluting incentives for self-reliance.[281]Associations with authoritarianism: distinctions from true right principles
Right-wing politics has been associated with authoritarianism primarily through historical examples like Benito Mussolini's fascist regime in Italy (1922–1943) and Adolf Hitler's National Socialist government in Germany (1933–1945), which combined ultranationalism, anti-communism, and state-directed economies, leading some classifications to place them on the right spectrum despite their rejection of free-market individualism.[282] These regimes centralized executive power, curtailed civil liberties, and suppressed opposition, fostering a cult of personality and hierarchical obedience that contradicted the decentralized authority structures inherent in classical right-wing thought.[283] True right-wing principles, rooted in thinkers such as Edmund Burke's emphasis on organic societal evolution and prescriptive traditions without revolutionary upheaval, prioritize ordered liberty through constitutional restraints on power, protection of property rights, and voluntary associations rather than imposed uniformity.[284] F.A. Hayek further delineated this by arguing that coercion—intentional control by one over another—undermines liberty, advocating instead for spontaneous order emerging from individual actions under the rule of law, explicitly warning against totalitarian tendencies in both socialist planning and unchecked state intervention.[285][286] Authoritarianism deviates by concentrating decision-making in unaccountable elites or leaders, as seen in Francisco Franco's Spain (1939–1975), where suppression of dissent preserved traditional hierarchies but eroded the limited-government ethos central to conservatism.[287] Empirical distinctions appear in psychological and political science research, which separates conservative ideology—focused on tradition, hierarchy via merit, and market freedoms—from right-wing authoritarianism (RWA), the latter characterized by dogmatic submission to authority and intolerance of deviation irrespective of ideological content.[288] Regimes aligning with authoritarian conservatism, such as Augusto Pinochet's Chile (1973–1990), implemented market-oriented reforms that boosted GDP growth from 1.5% annually pre-coup to over 7% in the 1980s, yet relied on coercive tactics that alienated core right-wing commitments to civil liberties and consent-based governance.[289] In contrast, non-authoritarian right-wing governance, as in Margaret Thatcher's Britain (1979–1990), reduced state economic control and union power through democratic processes, correlating with expanded individual economic freedoms without systemic suppression.[290] This conflation persists partly due to institutional biases in academia and media, where left-leaning frameworks often frame nationalism or traditionalism as proto-authoritarian, overlooking parallel left-wing authoritarian examples like the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin (1924–1953), which enforced egalitarian outcomes via mass coercion and state ownership.[291] True right principles counter this by deriving from causal realism: social stability arises from evolved norms and incentives aligning self-interest with communal order, not top-down fiat, as evidenced by higher liberty scores in economically liberal democracies versus collectivist autocracies per indices tracking government intervention levels.[292] Thus, while deviations exist, authentic right-wing politics safeguards against authoritarian drift by institutionalizing checks on power, fostering prosperity through voluntary exchange over command economies.[293]Debunking normalized media narratives on inequality
Media portrayals often frame income inequality as a moral failing of free-market systems, attributing rising Gini coefficients primarily to exploitation by the wealthy and corporate greed, while advocating redistribution as the remedy.[294] However, empirical evidence indicates that inequality of outcomes arises naturally from variations in individual abilities, efforts, geographic factors, and cultural norms, even among genetically similar groups such as siblings raised in identical environments.[295] Economist Thomas Sowell argues that such disparities persist across human history and societies, predating capitalism, and that focusing on equal outcomes overlooks the greater harm of policies that suppress incentives for productivity and innovation.[33] [296] Globally, extreme poverty—defined by the World Bank as living on less than $2.15 per day—has plummeted from 38 percent of the world's population in 1990 (about 2 billion people) to 8.7 percent in 2019 (around 689 million), coinciding with market-oriented reforms in countries like China and India that increased trade and private enterprise, even as inequality metrics rose.[297] This reduction occurred not through equalization but via absolute wealth creation, where growth in capitalist-leaning economies lifted billions from subsistence levels; for instance, between 1981 and 2015, over 1.1 billion escaped extreme poverty, largely in Asia's export-driven markets. In contrast, persistently socialist regimes, such as those in Venezuela or Cuba, exhibit low inequality via forced redistribution but stagnant or declining living standards, with Venezuela's GDP per capita falling 75 percent from 2013 to 2021 amid hyperinflation exceeding 1 million percent annually. In the United States, real after-tax incomes for the lowest income quintile grew by approximately 20 percent from 1980 to 2020, outpacing middle-quintile gains in some analyses when adjusted for household size and transfers, countering stagnation narratives.[298] Census Bureau data show the bottom quintile's mean household income rising from $13,440 in 1967 to $16,790 in 2022 (in 2022 dollars), with further gains post-2019 recovery to $80,610 median overall in 2023, reflecting broader access to goods like air conditioning (from 30 percent of poor households in 1970 to 99 percent in 2020) and cell phones.[299] [300] High income mobility undermines static inequality views: IRS data reveal that 50 percent of the bottom quintile in 1996 moved to the top three by 2010, while only 25 percent of the top quintile stayed there, indicating dynamic markets enable upward movement absent in rigid socialist systems.[301] Post-tax-and-transfer inequality has risen far less than pre-tax figures suggest, with the top 1 percent's share increasing just 1.4 percentage points since 1960 due to progressive taxation and benefits absorbing much of the gap.[302] Right-wing critiques emphasize that media emphasis on relative inequality distracts from causal drivers like education quality and family structure—factors where cultural choices, not systemic bias, explain persistent gaps, as evidenced by Asian-American income outperformance despite historical discrimination.[33] Policies targeting inequality, such as expansive welfare, often trap recipients in dependency, reducing labor participation; for example, U.S. expansions under the Great Society correlated with black family breakdown from 25 percent single-parent in 1965 to 70 percent by 2010, correlating with stalled mobility.[303] True prosperity stems from market freedoms fostering innovation, where top earners' wealth reflects value creation—e.g., tech billionaires enabling affordable computing—rather than zero-sum hoarding, a view supported by analyses debunking Piketty's r > g thesis as overstated when capital returns are properly risk-adjusted.[304] Mainstream sources' selective focus on snapshots ignores these long-term trends, privileging envy-driven politics over evidence of capitalism's role in elevating the poor absolutely.[305]Recent Developments in the 2020s
Surge in populist electoral victories
In the early 2020s, right-wing populist parties achieved notable electoral breakthroughs across Europe and beyond, reflecting voter discontent with immigration policies, economic stagnation, and perceived failures of establishment governance. This surge built on prior gains but accelerated post-2022, with parties emphasizing national sovereignty, border controls, and cultural preservation securing government roles or significant parliamentary influence in multiple countries. For instance, in Italy's September 2022 general election, Giorgia Meloni's Brothers of Italy party won 26% of the vote, forming a coalition government that marked the first time a post-fascist successor party led Italy since World War II.[306] Similarly, Sweden's September 2022 election saw the Sweden Democrats, a populist party focused on immigration restriction, become the second-largest party with 20.5% support, enabling a right-leaning coalition to take power.[306] The trend intensified in 2024, a "super election year" with over 60 national contests worldwide, where incumbents faced widespread rejection and populist challengers capitalized on anti-immigration sentiment. In the Netherlands' November 2023 election (results finalized in 2024 governance), Geert Wilders' Party for Freedom secured 23.5% of the vote, the largest share, leading to a coalition government incorporating the party despite initial hesitations.[307] France's National Rally, under Marine Le Pen and Jordan Bardella, topped the June 2024 European Parliament elections with 31% nationally and advanced to second round in snap legislative polls, though a tactical voting backlash limited full control.[307] In the United States, Donald Trump's Republican Party won the November 2024 presidential election, with Trump securing 312 electoral votes amid strong turnout in Rust Belt states, signaling renewed populist momentum against globalization and open borders.[308] By mid-2025, right-wing populists held or supported governments in at least seven European nations, including Hungary (Fidesz under Viktor Orbán, re-elected in 2022 with 54% and maintaining dominance), Finland, Slovakia, Croatia, Belgium, and Sweden, often through coalitions prioritizing migration curbs.[309] Germany's February 2025 federal election saw the Alternative for Germany (AfD) surge to around 20% in polls and secure second place in some states, though mainstream isolation persisted; this reflected broader gains amid economic woes and migration spikes.[310] Outside Europe, Argentina's Javier Milei, a libertarian populist, won the 2023 presidency with 56% in the runoff, implementing austerity amid inflation exceeding 200%. In the UK, Reform UK under Nigel Farage gained over 800 council seats in May 2025 local elections, eroding the two-party system despite Labour's national hold.[311]| Election | Date | Party/Leader | Vote Share/Outcome | Key Issues |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Italy General | Sep 2022 | Brothers of Italy / Giorgia Meloni | 26%; formed government | Immigration, national identity[306] |
| Sweden General | Sep 2022 | Sweden Democrats | 20.5%; coalition kingmaker | Crime, welfare strain from migration[306] |
| Netherlands General | Nov 2023 | Party for Freedom / Geert Wilders | 23.5%; led coalition | Asylum crisis, housing shortages[307] |
| US Presidential | Nov 2024 | Republican / Donald Trump | 312 electoral votes | Economy, border security[308] |
| Argentina Presidential | Nov 2023 | La Libertad Avanza / Javier Milei | 56% runoff | Hyperinflation, deregulation[307] |
