The people” may be constituted in any number of ways, but the most common in populism are: (1) the people as a nation (nationalism is particularly common in right-wing populism), (2) the people as a social class (this sort of Marxist/materialist take on community is common in left-wing populism), and (3) the people as politically sovereign (the people as “agents” is common in populism in democratic states). In other words, populism is not necessarily a conservative form of politics or rhetoric, but it can be.