2021
DOI: 10.30950/jcer.v17i2.1207
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The EU as a Choice: Populist and Technocratic Narratives of the EU in the Brexit Referendum Campaign

Abstract: The article investigates the main populist and technocratic narratives employed in the campaign in the run-up to the 2016 British EU referendum.  Based on a qualitative dataset comprising 40 selected speeches, interviews and other public interventions by prominent Leave and Remain protagonists and adopting the general orientation of the Discourse Historical Approach in Critical Discourse Analysis, the paper discusses how the language of the Remain and Leave camps bore signs of both populist and technocratic di… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In summation, the UK government is keen to promote the understanding of EU membership as entailing a loss of national sovereignty, democracy and independence, hence pitting the EU directly against the UK (and, by extension, any other member state). In this way, its discourse is marked by strong continuity with the Leavers' rhetoric during the referendum campaign (Cap, 2019; Bennet, 2019; Breeze, 2020; Brusenbauch Meislová, 2021).…”
Section: Three Temporal Regimes Of Brexit Discursive Legitimation: An...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In summation, the UK government is keen to promote the understanding of EU membership as entailing a loss of national sovereignty, democracy and independence, hence pitting the EU directly against the UK (and, by extension, any other member state). In this way, its discourse is marked by strong continuity with the Leavers' rhetoric during the referendum campaign (Cap, 2019; Bennet, 2019; Breeze, 2020; Brusenbauch Meislová, 2021).…”
Section: Three Temporal Regimes Of Brexit Discursive Legitimation: An...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What with Brexit being a policy of rupture, in the sense of ending an existing relationship, my expectation is that the UK government will glorify the presence and future by delegitimating the EU as its ex‐community, its policies and the UK's membership therein. Built around the very idea of difference, this process of contestation will be realized primarily by means of anti‐EU narrative patterns and various functional means of othering (van Dijk, 2005; Wodak, 2001), and will bear a strong resemblance to the Leave campaign's discursive positioning during the referendum campaign (Bennet, 2019; Brusenbauch Meislová, 2021; Buckledee, 2018).…”
Section: Discursive Legitimation Of Brexit: Context and Expectationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent studies on technocracy have focused on issues such as the composition of technocratic governments (Marangoni, 2012; McDonnell and Valbruzzi, 2014; Fabbrini, 2015; Marangoni and Verzichelli, 2015), their legitimacy and democratic credentials (Radaelli, 2017), ensuing challenges to democracy (Bertsou and Caramani, 2020; Gallo, 2022), citizens' aptitude (Bertsou, 2022), factors favouring the formation of technocratic governments (Wratil and Pastorella, 2018; Brunclík and Parìzek, 2019), the growing number of technocratic ministers (Improta, 2021), the appointment of technocrats to key government positions (Emanuele et al ., 2023). While this literature sheds light on important aspects of technocracy, there is a significant lack of more systematic analyses of how technocrats discursively construct and legitimise their policy agendas and the establishment of their governments (for exceptions see McKenna and Graham, 2000; Meislová, 2021). This article aims to fill this gap.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%