Conceptual Space for Illiberal Democracy

For over a decade, populists have been experimenting with a new political regime–illiberal democracy. Vocal proponents, such as Hungary’s PM Viktor Orbán, develop “democratic illiberalism” as an ideational model for the illiberal‐democratic regime they are building. Exploiting the normative appeal o...

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Main Author: Ruzha Smilova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2025-07-01
Series:Politics and Governance
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Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/9734
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author Ruzha Smilova
author_facet Ruzha Smilova
author_sort Ruzha Smilova
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description For over a decade, populists have been experimenting with a new political regime–illiberal democracy. Vocal proponents, such as Hungary’s PM Viktor Orbán, develop “democratic illiberalism” as an ideational model for the illiberal‐democratic regime they are building. Exploiting the normative appeal of popular sovereignty as the master legitimating frame for political authority in our age, illiberals in power try to subvert liberal democracies from within. Using their democratic mandate, they erode liberal norms and coopt liberal institutions to serve illiberal purposes. The dangers of illiberal democracy prompted many democracy scholars to deny democratic character to illiberal regimes. The concept “illiberal democracy,” they argue, is not useful analytically and is incoherent. Following a critical analysis of the debates surrounding the concept of illiberal democracy, I advance three arguments in support of the conceptual viability of this regime type. The first is a conceptual argument: While there are normatively attractive conceptions of democracy, on which democracy cannot be illiberal, the democratic model currently practiced in “real existing democracies” leaves conceptual space for illiberal forms of democratic regimes. Substantiating my position against scoring definitional victories on illiberal democracy, I advance a second, political argument: Liberals risk losing the long‐term political battle for liberal democracy, as they may be portrayed as anti‐pluralist anti‐democrats, intent on excluding from the democratic arena their illiberal opponents. My third and final point is a normative argument: The central debate concerning illiberal democracy should focus on the normative appeal of its foundational ideas—the core ideational features of the competing political regimes. Political theorists can greatly contribute here by providing a clear understanding of the main ideological competitors—what they are and what makes them attractive to many—and such is precluded by purely conceptual arguments against illiberal democracy.
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spelling doaj-art-ff6b46705de24b7f85df52e6826bdd6b2025-08-21T09:23:08ZengCogitatioPolitics and Governance2183-24632025-07-0113010.17645/pag.97344288Conceptual Space for Illiberal DemocracyRuzha Smilova0Political Science Department, Sofia University St. Kliment Ohridski, BulgariaFor over a decade, populists have been experimenting with a new political regime–illiberal democracy. Vocal proponents, such as Hungary’s PM Viktor Orbán, develop “democratic illiberalism” as an ideational model for the illiberal‐democratic regime they are building. Exploiting the normative appeal of popular sovereignty as the master legitimating frame for political authority in our age, illiberals in power try to subvert liberal democracies from within. Using their democratic mandate, they erode liberal norms and coopt liberal institutions to serve illiberal purposes. The dangers of illiberal democracy prompted many democracy scholars to deny democratic character to illiberal regimes. The concept “illiberal democracy,” they argue, is not useful analytically and is incoherent. Following a critical analysis of the debates surrounding the concept of illiberal democracy, I advance three arguments in support of the conceptual viability of this regime type. The first is a conceptual argument: While there are normatively attractive conceptions of democracy, on which democracy cannot be illiberal, the democratic model currently practiced in “real existing democracies” leaves conceptual space for illiberal forms of democratic regimes. Substantiating my position against scoring definitional victories on illiberal democracy, I advance a second, political argument: Liberals risk losing the long‐term political battle for liberal democracy, as they may be portrayed as anti‐pluralist anti‐democrats, intent on excluding from the democratic arena their illiberal opponents. My third and final point is a normative argument: The central debate concerning illiberal democracy should focus on the normative appeal of its foundational ideas—the core ideational features of the competing political regimes. Political theorists can greatly contribute here by providing a clear understanding of the main ideological competitors—what they are and what makes them attractive to many—and such is precluded by purely conceptual arguments against illiberal democracy.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/9734authoritarianismdemocratic illiberalismilliberal democracyilliberalismliberal democracy
spellingShingle Ruzha Smilova
Conceptual Space for Illiberal Democracy
Politics and Governance
authoritarianism
democratic illiberalism
illiberal democracy
illiberalism
liberal democracy
title Conceptual Space for Illiberal Democracy
title_full Conceptual Space for Illiberal Democracy
title_fullStr Conceptual Space for Illiberal Democracy
title_full_unstemmed Conceptual Space for Illiberal Democracy
title_short Conceptual Space for Illiberal Democracy
title_sort conceptual space for illiberal democracy
topic authoritarianism
democratic illiberalism
illiberal democracy
illiberalism
liberal democracy
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/9734
work_keys_str_mv AT ruzhasmilova conceptualspaceforilliberaldemocracy