Klausism

[4][7] Klaus is known for his Euroscepticism, climate change denial, homophobia, and anti-immigration, and support of free-market capitalism.

Jan Pauer described Klaus's political ideology as a combination of the monetarism of Milton Friedman, Thatcherite neoliberalism ("economic libertarianism"), Czech national conservatism, and leadership pragmatism.

[10] Bohumil Doležal believes that Klausism is about "fighting against isms", including environmentalism, pro-Europeanism, NGOism, or "homosexualism" (a phrase itself coined by Klaus).

According to Doležal, Klausism is a fight for "realistic policies that solve problems and do not serve dogmatic ideologies".

Both ideologies support the strong position of the president, but in the case of Klaus it is informal and balancing at the edge of the Czech constitution.

Klausism without Klaus supports economic liberalism, political responsibility, a small state, opposition to other ideologies, and the "rule of common sense".

He called Klausism an "ideology of arbitrariness that threatens democracy", comparing it to Communism due to its lack of principles.

Václav Klaus in 2015