Jan-Werner Mueller

Jan-Werner Mueller is a professor of politics at Princeton University in the US.

Why Macronism Failed

Legend has it that the first question Napoleon would ask about a military officer was not whether he was talented, but whether he was lucky.

5m ago

What Makes a Fascist?

While we cannot conflate today's far right and fascism, we must watch closely how the former develops.

2y ago

Why Populists Don’t Concede

Populist losers are more likely than not to cry fraud, because the entire basis of their appeal lies in the claim that they, and only they, represent “the real people.”

2y ago

Truth and De-Trumpification

Among Democrats and many Republicans, there is a great temptation to dismiss US President Donald Trump’s administration as a bizarre aberration.

4y ago

What's left of the populist left?

As Venezuela's crisis deepens, conservatives in the United States and elsewhere are gleefully pointing to the disaster of Chavismo to warn of the dangers of “socialism.” And, with Spain's left-wing Podemos party apparently splitting and Greece's Syriza steadily losing popularity since 2015, even impartial observers might conclude that the “pink tide” of left populism is nearing a low ebb.

5y ago

Reviving civil disobedience

With populism and authoritarianism on the rise around the world, there has been considerable talk of “resistance,” especially in the

6y ago

Why freedom of assembly still matters

It is now common knowledge that many democracies around the world are under pressure. But mounting threats to a particularly important democratic right have not received nearly enough attention.

6y ago

How populists win when they lose

Today, it appears that every single election in Europe can be reduced to one central question: “Is it a win or a loss for populism?” Until the Netherlands' election in March, a populist wave – or, as Nigel Farage, the former leader of the UK Independence Party,

7y ago
July 6, 2024
July 6, 2024

Why Macronism Failed

Legend has it that the first question Napoleon would ask about a military officer was not whether he was talented, but whether he was lucky.

November 10, 2022
November 10, 2022

What Makes a Fascist?

While we cannot conflate today's far right and fascism, we must watch closely how the former develops.

October 9, 2022
October 9, 2022

Why Populists Don’t Concede

Populist losers are more likely than not to cry fraud, because the entire basis of their appeal lies in the claim that they, and only they, represent “the real people.”

November 7, 2020
November 7, 2020

Truth and De-Trumpification

Among Democrats and many Republicans, there is a great temptation to dismiss US President Donald Trump’s administration as a bizarre aberration.

February 25, 2019
February 25, 2019

What's left of the populist left?

As Venezuela's crisis deepens, conservatives in the United States and elsewhere are gleefully pointing to the disaster of Chavismo to warn of the dangers of “socialism.” And, with Spain's left-wing Podemos party apparently splitting and Greece's Syriza steadily losing popularity since 2015, even impartial observers might conclude that the “pink tide” of left populism is nearing a low ebb.

December 23, 2018
December 23, 2018

Reviving civil disobedience

With populism and authoritarianism on the rise around the world, there has been considerable talk of “resistance,” especially in the

November 19, 2018
November 19, 2018

Why freedom of assembly still matters

It is now common knowledge that many democracies around the world are under pressure. But mounting threats to a particularly important democratic right have not received nearly enough attention.

June 18, 2017
June 18, 2017

How populists win when they lose

Today, it appears that every single election in Europe can be reduced to one central question: “Is it a win or a loss for populism?” Until the Netherlands' election in March, a populist wave – or, as Nigel Farage, the former leader of the UK Independence Party,