By Davide Vampa
A New House for the Populist Radical Proper in Scotland
Scotland could also be on the point of a political shift. Polling means that Nigel Farage’s Reform UK – a celebration extensively related to populist radical proper politics – might win seats within the Scottish Parliament for the primary time. In some surveys, Reform is even outperforming Labour and the Conservatives, positioning itself as the principle challenger to the governing Scottish Nationwide Celebration (SNP). Whereas a lot might change earlier than the subsequent election, the development is obvious: the electoral area for right-wing populism is increasing in Scotland.
A lot of the present debate focuses on uniquely Scottish or UK-wide elements behind Reform’s rise. However Scotland’s obvious immunity to right-wing populism previously – and its potential unravelling now – may be higher understood by means of a broader lens. Trying throughout Europe reveals patterns, triggers, and penalties that supply essential classes for what could lie forward.
Scotland’s resilience to radical proper populism has lengthy rested on the dominance of constitutional debates, significantly in the course of the 2010s. These debates targeted on Scotland’s place throughout the UK and formed occasion competitors and voter alignments. In addition they allowed the SNP to soak up or neutralise most of the grievances that populist radical proper events elsewhere in Europe have efficiently exploited. However these foundations are shifting. With independence now much less dominant in public discourse, area is opening for brand new political narratives – and Reform UK is looking for to fill that vacuum.
One key purpose Scotland has resisted radical proper populist actions is the way in which they’ve been perceived. Within the UK, events on the novel proper have usually been related to English nationalism and hostility to devolution. Even right-leaning Scottish unionist voters had been reluctant to assist events like UKIP and the Brexit Celebration, which appeared to articulate a imaginative and prescient of Britain that excluded or marginalised Scotland. These events not often engaged with Scotland by itself phrases and had been seen as tone-deaf to the advanced and plural identities throughout the Union.
Classes from Italy: Salvini and the League
Nevertheless, one lesson from overseas – particularly from Italy – is that perceptions of populist radical proper events can change dramatically. A putting instance is the transformation of Italy’s Northern League. Initially a populist, anti-southern occasion advocating better autonomy for the rich North, the League was extensively detested in southern Italy. Its rhetoric portrayed the South as parasitic and backward, calling for a federal and even separatist mannequin that would cut back the South’s political affect and entry to sources.
However below Matteo Salvini’s management, from 2013 onwards, the League rebranded. It dropped ‘Northern’ from its title, softened its regionalist message, and adopted a nationwide populist agenda. The occasion redirected its anti-establishment rhetoric from Rome to Brussels, portraying the EU as the brand new enemy. In doing so, it prolonged its enchantment throughout Italy, together with within the very areas it had beforehand vilified. Within the 2018 common election, the ‘new’ League grew to become a major political participant in all southern Italian areas. It even surpassed 10 per cent of the vote in areas that had been hostile territory – and the place it had beforehand been nearly non-existent – similar to Latium (round Rome), Sardinia, and Abruzzo. By 2019, the League had turn into Italy’s largest occasion and the second-largest within the South, with over 20 per cent of the vote in that a part of the nation – a exceptional turnaround that highlights the pliability, or ‘chameleonic’ nature, of profitable right-wing populists.
This transformation was enabled by altering political situations and the disaster of Italy’s mainstream events. The collapse of the standard occasion system left many citizens politically homeless and opened the door for a repackaged League. Whereas Scotland shouldn’t be experiencing the identical diploma of systemic collapse, it’s getting into a interval of political flux. The SNP’s long-standing dominance is below stress, Labour is trying a comeback, and the Conservatives are struggling to stay related. Reform UK is exploiting this volatility by recalibrating its message to resonate extra instantly with Scottish voters – downplaying its English roots and as an alternative emphasising broader right-wing populist themes, similar to anti-elitism, anti-immigration, disillusionment with the political institution, opposition to web zero insurance policies, and engagement within the so-called tradition wars.
On this context, Farage’s trajectory could echo Salvini’s – albeit in a distinct path with regards to Europe. Earlier than Brexit, Brussels was the principle goal of the anti-establishment rhetoric promoted by Farage’s earlier events – first UKIP, then the Brexit Celebration – and their Euroscepticism served as an implicit automobile for English nationalism. Within the post-Brexit panorama, nevertheless, Reform UK has reframed this message, shifting its focus away from the EU and concentrating nearly completely on political elites inside Britain, together with these within the devolved nations. On this reframing, these in energy in any respect ranges – from Westminster to Holyrood and Cardiff Bay – are forged as enemies of the folks.
Like Salvini in southern Italy, Farage is capitalising on a extra fluid political surroundings. In Scotland, the independence query now not seems to construction occasion competitors as decisively because it as soon as did. For practically a decade, the SNP and the Conservatives – on reverse sides of the constitutional divide – dominated by framing politics across the Union, marginalising extra average pro-devolution events similar to Labour and the Liberal Democrats. That panorama is now fragmenting. Labour briefly benefited from this shift with a fragile and short-lived resurgence in 2024, however the broader vacuum stays. Into this area, rising populist themes – starting from opposition to web zero insurance policies and the so-called ‘struggle on woke’ to a wider anti-establishment temper – could acquire rising traction, providing fertile floor for Reform UK.
The Dangers of Territorial Growth
Nonetheless, Salvini’s technique in Italy was not with out dangers. Whereas the League initially thrived in a unstable political panorama, its fast ascent was constructed on shaky foundations. After a interval of exceptional development, the occasion’s assist declined sharply – falling from Italy’s largest occasion between 2019 and 2020 to a mid-sized drive. But it remained reworked: now not confined to the North, however now a nationwide presence. This enlargement, nevertheless, introduced inner tensions, because the occasion struggled to stability the calls for of its conventional northern base with the expectations of a broader, extra various citizens. Related strains might emerge if Reform UK succeeds in increasing into Scotland and Wales. Progress past its English heartlands could provide short-term beneficial properties and assist set up Farage’s occasion as an genuine UK-wide actor. But it might additionally pose strategic challenges – forcing the occasion to reconcile competing territorial pursuits and coverage preferences inside a single populist platform.
Populist events, significantly on the best, usually thrive by seizing moments of political instability and repackaging acquainted grievances. However translating fast development into long-term relevance is much harder. Because the Italian case exhibits, territorial enlargement is usually a highly effective dynamic – but in addition a supply of pressure and eventual decline. For Reform UK, the true problem will not be whether or not it may well rise throughout Britain, however whether or not it may well maintain collectively as soon as it does.
Davide Vampa is Senior Lecturer in Territorial Politics and Co-Director of the Centre on Constitutional Change, College of Edinburgh.


















