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Journal article

Subjective economic insecurity and attitudes toward immigration and feminists among voters on the Right in Canada

Abstract

Abstract The recent success of far‐right populism has led to a wave of public attention to its causes. Drawing on novel survey items from the Canadian Election Study, we investigate how economic insecurity, mediated by immigration and feminist attitudes, affects voting behavior. While economic distress has been linked to far‐right voting in Europe, we find support that subjective measures of economic distress are significantly associated with voting for the Right in Canada, when interacting with immigration and feminist attitudes. However, the association only holds for men. The findings suggest that Canada, despite its comparatively weak nativist cleavage, is not immune to tensions arising from globalization and economic insecurity.

Authors

Polacko M; Graefe P; Kiss S

Journal

Social Science Quarterly, Vol. 105, No. 2, pp. 281–295

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

March 1, 2024

DOI

10.1111/ssqu.13336

ISSN

0038-4941

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