populists in English

noun
1
a member or adherent of a political party seeking to represent the interests of ordinary people.
Moreover, he was something new in this state with an historic taste for populism - a centrist populist .

Use "populists" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "populists" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "populists", or refer to the context using the word "populists" in the English Dictionary.

1. The populists resorted to conspiracy, terror and regicide.

2. Angry populists like Pat Buchanan will exploit the disaffection of those left behind.

3. Conte’s is serving his second consecutive stint as prime minister — first as the head of an alliance of right-wing nationalists and populists, and then leading a coalition of populists and

4. But, rather than focus on real solutions, today’s populists are often appealing to people’s basest instincts.

5. At first they devoted themselves to self-education, fierce polemics against the populists, and propaganda among circles of selected workers.

6. It was the age-old problem that had not been solved since the Populists first went to the people in the 1870s.

7. During the 1860s and 70s the populists attributed to the primitive peasant commune all the characteristics of a latent socialist order.

8. The strategy developed by the revolutionary populists reflected the same mixture of heroic struggle for the peasantry's cause and utopian illusions.

9. 24 The great majority of revolutionary populists resolutely rejected the deception and unprincipled adventurism of a few untypical deviants like Nechaev.

10. With its Congeries of black sheep constituencies (Alex Jones Libertarian populists, movement leftists, anarchists, white supremacists, New World Order reactionaries, Protocols of the Elders of Zion anti-Semites, crusading architects and theologians) and its lack of a dominant leader or organization, the 9/11 Movement will likely never become

11. Whereas western European populists promise to defend the achievements of the welfare state, access to civil rights and certain, mainly middle-class moral concepts against "foreigners", the Polish populists declare they will protect the population from the sale of its land. The peculiar electoral programmes, which from a western European point of view appear "un-European" and exotic, above all through the dominance of agrarian-populist issues, and the fact that these subjects can also lead to electoral success in the cities, are a product of Poland's development in a direction that deviates from Stein Rokkan's model.