Building Legitimacy

After the collapse of the communist regime in Eastern Europe, political parties were faced with the necessity of building political legitimacy. This research aims to find out how political myths were instrumentalized by political leaders during the presidential campaigns in order to gain popu...

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Main Author: Andrei Dălălău
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Association for Political Science Students (IAPSS) 2021-12-01
Series:Politikon
Subjects:
Online Access:https://politikon.iapss.org/index.php/politikon/article/view/362
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author Andrei Dălălău
author_facet Andrei Dălălău
author_sort Andrei Dălălău
collection DOAJ
description After the collapse of the communist regime in Eastern Europe, political parties were faced with the necessity of building political legitimacy. This research aims to find out how political myths were instrumentalized by political leaders during the presidential campaigns in order to gain popular support. In the first part, the article focuses on defining “myth” as a legitimizing political instrument. In the second part four political myths used in the early 1990s in Romania are being analyzed: the myth of the interwar period, the myth of original democracy, the myth of political reform and the providential man. The method used is political discourse and party platform analysis. The results suggest that, during the early 90s, different political groups tried to build their legitimacy using political myths instead of rational politics, which ended up in their failure to address the real issues of a changing society.
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spelling doaj.art-dd0289631d334f4fab4e84b98e5a63ff2023-10-06T09:46:56ZengInternational Association for Political Science Students (IAPSS)Politikon2414-66332021-12-015110.22151/politikon.51.2Building LegitimacyAndrei Dălălău0Babes-Bolyai University After the collapse of the communist regime in Eastern Europe, political parties were faced with the necessity of building political legitimacy. This research aims to find out how political myths were instrumentalized by political leaders during the presidential campaigns in order to gain popular support. In the first part, the article focuses on defining “myth” as a legitimizing political instrument. In the second part four political myths used in the early 1990s in Romania are being analyzed: the myth of the interwar period, the myth of original democracy, the myth of political reform and the providential man. The method used is political discourse and party platform analysis. The results suggest that, during the early 90s, different political groups tried to build their legitimacy using political myths instead of rational politics, which ended up in their failure to address the real issues of a changing society. https://politikon.iapss.org/index.php/politikon/article/view/362Democratic TransitionLegitimacyPolitical MythsPost-communismRomanian Elections
spellingShingle Andrei Dălălău
Building Legitimacy
Politikon
Democratic Transition
Legitimacy
Political Myths
Post-communism
Romanian Elections
title Building Legitimacy
title_full Building Legitimacy
title_fullStr Building Legitimacy
title_full_unstemmed Building Legitimacy
title_short Building Legitimacy
title_sort building legitimacy
topic Democratic Transition
Legitimacy
Political Myths
Post-communism
Romanian Elections
url https://politikon.iapss.org/index.php/politikon/article/view/362
work_keys_str_mv AT andreidalalau buildinglegitimacy