Yes, exactly. It's a similar mix of elements to a nationalist populist with a heavy dose of racism like Pauline Hanson over here, even though she comes from a very different personal background.
People who feel disenfranchised warm to politicians who make errors of grammar and even outright factual errors, who are confident and seem like they're practical and not part of the game.
When they're anxious about their economic future they look to policies that sound like they're protective—such as protectionism itself, which shapes both Trump and Hanson's agenda, and anti-immigrant politics.
However, people also get a kind of libidinal enjoyment from the idea of violence in their favour, I think. So for instance Hanson, who has been reelected to the Australian Senate after a long absence, has demanded a "Royal Commission into Islam" which won't happen, but provides a pleasurably vindictive moment to her supporters where they're the ones in power, causing fear, and fucking everyone else off.