Publication type
Journal Article
Authors
Publication date
April 29, 2025
Summary:
The exposure to the automation risk on the labour market is strongly correlated with support for the radical right. In this article, we investigate whether this political realignment is mirrored by a change in individuals’ core political values. We test the impact of different occupational trajectories of the automation ‘losers’ on their socialist-laissez faire and libertarian-authoritarian values using long-run panel data (BHPS 1991–2008). Furthermore, we test the mediating role of status anxiety in the relation between the threat of technological replaceability and political values using structural equation models in a cross-sectional setup (ISSP). Against our main expectations, we do not observe a significant authoritarian turn among routine workers, whereas job loss leads to stronger pro-redistribution stances, and career ‘upgrading’ prompts a libertarian and laissez-faire turn. Status anxiety is found to poorly mediate the correlation between automation risk and authoritarian values, while primarily driving routine workers’ socialist stances on economic issues.
Published in
Political Studies
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/00323217251334017
ISSN
323217
Subjects
Notes
Online Early
© The Author(s) 2025.
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