The verdict delivered by voters in the 2015 and 2017 British General Elections and the
European Union Referendum surprised pollsters, pundits, the media, and even the victors. Political
choices representative of globalist outlooks saw defeat at the polls. Liberal Democratic support was
below 10% and voting to remain in the EU ...
The verdict delivered by voters in the 2015 and 2017 British General Elections and the
European Union Referendum surprised pollsters, pundits, the media, and even the victors. Political
choices representative of globalist outlooks saw defeat at the polls. Liberal Democratic support was
below 10% and voting to remain in the EU underperformed predictions. Empirical analyses
demonstrate that there is a nationalist-globalist policy divide, partially rooted in demographics and
authoritarian predispositions, which go beyond traditional valence factors in explaining the recent
choices of the British electorate. Moreover, this outlook influences how satisfied citizens are with the
way democracy works in Britain. Nationalist viewpoints, when juxtaposed against globalist outlooks,
are salient in a way they were not during the height of Thatcherism, encompass left-right economic
concerns and may portend a new era in British political culture.