For the employed and economically more abled. The popularity of a government might be based on its policies and promises intended to maintain and/or improve their status in the medium-to long-term.
They are better able to weather the economic storm, if you like, so they might opt not to go on the streets to protest on their own behalf.
If anything, they might even be more attracted to espousing social and human rights issues.
For the more politically committed, the popularity of a government is more likely to be predicated on the basis of their feelings about its success.
In achieving political goals they hold dear.
Whether those goals are of the nationalistic kind, or the internal 'rich versus poor', or 'haves versus haves-not' kind.
What is clear in considering the dilemma confronting nations and their people, is the impermanence of things.
The fact that no government can ever satisfy the immediate needs and/or the aspirations of all the people it serves at anytime or all of the times.
To be continued!
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