Revealed: populists far more likely to believe in conspiracy theories
Source: The Guardian
Revealed: populists far more likely to believe in conspiracy theories
Largest survey of its kind uncovers suspicion of vaccines in big part of world population
Methodology: How the Guardian analysed YouGov-Cambridge data
Paul Lewis, Sarah Boseley and Pamela Duncan
Wed 1 May 2019 15.02 BST Last modified on Wed 1 May 2019 15.11 BST
Populists across the world are significantly more likely to believe in conspiracy theories about vaccinations, global warming and the 9/11 terrorist attacks, according to a landmark global survey shared exclusively with the Guardian.
The YouGov-Cambridge Globalism Project sheds new light on a section of the world population that appears to have limited faith in scientific experts and representative democracy.
Analysis of the survey found the clearest tendency among people with strongly held populist attitudes was a belief in conspiracy theories that were contradicted by science or factual evidence.
The research may go some way towards understanding the success of rightwing populists such as Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro, who have fuelled conspiracy theories, undermined efforts to address global warming and dismissed fact-based journalism as fake news.
The survey findings may also prove useful to public health officials who are battling to contain outbreaks of measles around the world amid alarming rates of unvaccinated children.
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Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/may/01/revealed-populists-more-likely-believe-conspiracy-theories-vaccines