Fig 1.
Theoretical model.
Table 1.
Studies focusing on rightwing populism and public opinion on climate change.
Table 2.
Within-country OLS regressions with climate policy support (factor) as the dependent variable.
Fig 2.
Attitudes consistent with the thin ideology of rightwing populism and climate policy support.
Predicted values and 95% CI’s for “Climate policy support” at different values on “Attitudes consistent with the thin ideology of rightwing populism” (RWP), while holding all other control variables (gender, age, education, income, political trust, left-right self-placement, authoritarianism, anti-egalitarianism, and exclusionism) at their mean values. In the analyses, both indicators for thin and thick ideology were included simultaneously in the models, to control for one while estimating the effect of the other.
Fig 3.
Attitudes consistent with the thick ideology of rightwing populism and climate policy support.
Predicted values and 95% CI’s for “Climate policy support” at different values on “Attitudes consistent with the thick ideology of rightwing populism” (RWP), while holding all other control variables (gender, age, education, income, political trust, left-right self-placement, authoritarianism, anti-egalitarianism, and exclusionism) at their mean values. In the analyses, both indicators for thin and thick ideology were included simultaneously in the models, to control for one while estimating the effect of the other.