Right-wing politics
In
politics,
right-wing,
the political right or simply
the right, are terms that refer to the segment of the
political spectrum often associated with any of several strains of
conservatism, the
religious right, and areas of
classical liberalism, or simply the opposite of
left-wing politics.
The term originates from the
French Revolution, when
liberal deputies from the
Third Estate generally sat to the left of the president's chair, a habit which began in the
Estates General of 1789. The nobility, members of the
Second Estate, generally sat to the right. In the successive
legislative assemblies,
monarchists who supported the
Ancien Régime were commonly referred to as
rightists because they sat on the right side. It is still the tradition in the French
Assemblée Nationale for the representatives to be seated left-to-right (relative to the Assemblée president) according to their political alignment.
As this original reference became obsolete, the meaning of the term has changed as appropriate to the spectrum of ideas and stances being compared, and the point of view of the speaker. In recent times, the term almost always includes some forms of conservatism.
Some consider the political Right to include those forms of
liberalism that emphasize the
free market more than
egalitarianism in wealth, but many free-market advocates, including most
libertarians, share certain political ideologies with the
left-wing and conceive of a two-dimensional political spectrum that they say more accurately portrays their political position.[
1] (
See Nolan chart, Pournelle Chart, Political Compass). Many anarchists (including
libertarian socialists) also avoid placing themselves on the classic political spectrum.
See political spectrum and left-right politics for further discussion of this kind of classification.Outside the
United States (where
capitalism is supported by a broad range of politicians and intellectuals), the most notable distinction between left and right is in economic policy. The right advanced
capitalism, whereas the left advocated
socialism (often democratic socialism) or
communism. However, many on the left accept limited capitalism to a large degree, but in a socialistic form in which government mandates significant amounts of social spending on the military, education, infrastructure development, economic regulation, and wealth redistribution measures to prevent poverty.
More recently as new social issues arise, right wing views have been concerned with keeping "traditional" values (often
Christian values) and the preservation of individual and corporate rights through constraints on government power. In a hard-line form the second and third of these priorities are associated with
libertarianism, but some on the right reject the most ardent assumptions of libertarianism, especially outside of the
United States. Many libertarians do not consider themselves to be right wing and reject the traditional one-dimensional political spectrum, preferring to think in terms of liberty vs. authority rather than socialism vs. capitalism.
A more obscure strand of right wing thought, often associated with the original right wing from the times of
monarchy, supports the preservation of wealth and power in the hands that have traditionally held them, social stability, and national solidarity and ambition.
Strands of right wing thought come in many forms, and individuals who support some of the objectives of one of the above stands will not necessarily support all of the others. At the level of practical political policy, there are endless variations in the means that right wing thinkers advocate to achieve their basic aims.
The values and policy concerns of the right vary in different countries and eras. Also, individual right wing politicians and thinkers often have individual priorities. It is not always possible or helpful to try to work out which of two sets of beliefs or policies is more right-wing (see
political spectrum).
Since the French Revolution, the political use of the terms "left" and "right" has evolved across linguistic, societal, and national boundaries, sometimes taking on meanings in one time and place that contrast sharply with those in another. For example, as of
2004 the government of the
People's Republic of China claims to remain on the "left," despite an evolution that has brought it quite close to what is elsewhere characterized as "right," supporting national cultural traditions, the interests of wealth, and privately owned industry. Conversely, the late dictator of
Spain,
Francisco Franco, who was firmly allied internationally with the right and who brutally suppressed the Spanish left, nonetheless pursued numerous development policies quite similar to those of the
Soviet Union and other
communist states, which are almost universally considered to be on the "left." Similarly, while "right" originally referred to those who supported the interests of
aristocracy, in many countries today (notably the
United States) the left-right distinction is not strongly correlated with wealth or ancestry.
Fascism is generally considered right-wing, although some scholars dispute that classification. Others argue that there are elements of both left and right ideology in the philosophy underlying the development of Fascism. See:
Far right and
Fascism and ideology.
*
Left-Right politics**
Ultra leftism**
Far-left**
Left-wing politics**
Far right*
Extremism*
Ideology*
Glossary of the French Revolution*
Political spectrum*
Political compass*
Nolan chart*
Sinistrisme*
World's Smallest Political Quiz*
The Political Compass, an alternative view of the political spectrum.
*
The Nolan Charts, other alternative political spectra (mostly libertarian-oriented).
*
publiceye.org - A leftist organization's perspective on the right.
*
The Political Compass and Why Libertarianism is Not Right Wing by J. C. Lester