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In the beginning, there was the word: Political representation as communicative practice

https://feps-europe.eu/inspiration/in-the-beginning-there-was-the-word/


Almost 15 years ago, one of the iconic political scientists of this century, Pippa Norris, published a book with the gloomy title Democratic Deficit (Cambridge University Press, 2011). It begins with the statement that an infinite number of pages have already been written about the crisis of representative democracy. Nevertheless, she argues, there are still things to add and she challenges her readership to think about the gap between the performance of democracy and the aspirations of citizens. Norris points to the fact that there is a growing dissatisfaction among the people with the failure of public institutions to deliver, leading to an erosion of trust. The process is further fuelled by what she calls negative news. Remembering her groundbreaking work today, while watching the tectonic shifts that are taking place across the political landscape in Europe, prompts a question: is the issue of delivering on political promises still relevant, or has the main question become one of perception? This is one of several key considerations pondered in a book by the same publisher, but written by two political scientists of a new generation: Fabio Wolkenstein and Christopher Wratil (both scholars at the University of Vienna).
In Political Representation as Communicative Practice, they reflect an ambition to broaden Norriss approach, or even to be pioneers in a new field of research a task they accomplish in just 92 pages. Wolkenstein and Wratil go beyond the traditional schemes used to describe the crisis of political representation through the lenses of opinion polls and electoral figures. They challenge these schemes by claiming that on the one hand, there is no linear development when it comes to levels of trust in institutions and stakeholders across the EU, and that on the other hand, the discourse focused only on electoral aspects misses an entire dimension of political life. Instead, the authors argue that the degree to which democracies are representative should be determined from the perspective of democracy as a communication process.
This is a critical reflection in a context where so much is influenced by media and social media bubbles, and where so much content is controlled by global media oligarchs or pushed through by so-called influencers. Wolkenstein and Wratils way of considering the degree to which a democracy is representative is an invitation to think differently about politics and, hence, the role of communication processes. Potentially, it liberates political analysts from focusing exclusively on the decline of traditional electorates and stakeholders and it shows that categories of traditional voters or parties and their performance are not sufficient for grasping the nature of political changes, the shifts in opinions and attitudes and the transfer of voters.
Wolkenstein and Wratils book departs from the often-repeated question how can the historical political parties reconnect with disenchanted citizens? Instead, it asks a new question: how can the historical political parties become the political agents seen as speaking on behalf of diverse citizens?. Wolkenstein and Wratil argue that it is impossible to continue thinking that only elected politicians can speak on others behalf, and they mention social mobilisation, as well as public figures such as Bono from U2 (p. 29/ who claimed to speak for those who have no voice). The authors suggest that in the current era, the constituencies that vote for certain parties or politicians (and not for the others) are no longer to be framed as a parenthesis of the traditional core electorates or as their spin-off. Instead, these constituencies must be understood as creations resulting from communicative acts. It is about how an issue is articulated that forms a collective, which eventually supports one political force or another. This makes the electorate much more volatile and leads to a situation the authors call political surrogacy. Citizens can feel represented by politicians they had not voted for a situation frequent in multipartisan systems, where voters swinging between the parties is common. Interestingly, the authors state that the readiness to relate to political surrogates is greater among more educated cohorts. These innovative ideas shed new light on how populism can be attractive to those whom the authors describe as more sophisticated consumers of communication acts a group only a relatively small body of literature has focused on so far (p.51).
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