Abstract

Support for parties opposed to European Union (EU) integration has risen rapidly, and a wave of discontent has taken over the EU. This discontent is purportedly driven by the very factors behind the surge of populism: differences in age, wealth, education, or economic and demographic trajectories. This paper maps the geography of EU discontent across more than 63,000 electoral districts in the EU-28 and assesses which factors push anti-EU voting. The results show that the anti-EU vote is mainly a consequence of local economic and industrial decline in combination with lower employment and a less educated workforce. Many of the other suggested causes of discontent, by contrast, matter less than expected, or…

Citation impact

588
total citations
FWCI
211.01
Percentile
100%
References
29
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Populism
  • Opposition (politics)
  • European union
  • Voting
  • Workforce
  • Political science
  • Political economy
  • Economic geography
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Reduced inequalities
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