TY - JOUR
T1 - Twitting against the enemy
T2 - Populist Radical Right Parties Discourse Against the (Political) “Other”
AU - Cervi, Laura
AU - Tejedor Calvo, Santiago
AU - Gracia Villar, Monica
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 by the author(s); licensee Cogitatio Press (Lisbon, Portugal).
PY - 2023/5/17
Y1 - 2023/5/17
N2 - There is a common agreement in considering populism as a Manichean worldview that oversimplifies and polarizes political options reducing them to a symbolical struggle between an “us” and a “them.” “Us” is embodied by “the people,” equated with “good,” and “them” is identified by political “Others,” often embodied by “the elites” who are depicted as inherently “evil.” Naturally, the nature and composition of the people and the elite vary according to both ideology and political opportunities. This article examines the discursive construction of political opponents in two populist radical right parties: Lega in Italy and Vox in Spain. Based on the analysis of a selection of tweets by the two party leaders, Santiago Abascal and Matteo Salvini, this study applies clause-based semantic text analysis to detect the main discursive representations of political opponents. The article concludes that Salvini focuses all the attention on the left, while Abascal, although predominantly identifying the left as the main enemy, also targets pro-independence parties. The discursive construction of the “enemy” is based on two main strategies: demonization, the framing of opponents as “enemies of the people” who, along with dangerous “Others” such as immigrants, conspire against the “people” and are blamed for everything that is “wrong” in society; secondly, character assassination of individual politicians through personal attacks, which aim to undermine their reputation and deflect attention from the real issues towards their personal traits and actions.
AB - There is a common agreement in considering populism as a Manichean worldview that oversimplifies and polarizes political options reducing them to a symbolical struggle between an “us” and a “them.” “Us” is embodied by “the people,” equated with “good,” and “them” is identified by political “Others,” often embodied by “the elites” who are depicted as inherently “evil.” Naturally, the nature and composition of the people and the elite vary according to both ideology and political opportunities. This article examines the discursive construction of political opponents in two populist radical right parties: Lega in Italy and Vox in Spain. Based on the analysis of a selection of tweets by the two party leaders, Santiago Abascal and Matteo Salvini, this study applies clause-based semantic text analysis to detect the main discursive representations of political opponents. The article concludes that Salvini focuses all the attention on the left, while Abascal, although predominantly identifying the left as the main enemy, also targets pro-independence parties. The discursive construction of the “enemy” is based on two main strategies: demonization, the framing of opponents as “enemies of the people” who, along with dangerous “Others” such as immigrants, conspire against the “people” and are blamed for everything that is “wrong” in society; secondly, character assassination of individual politicians through personal attacks, which aim to undermine their reputation and deflect attention from the real issues towards their personal traits and actions.
KW - Italy
KW - Lega
KW - Spain
KW - Twitter
KW - Vox
KW - character assassination
KW - demonization
KW - political discourse
KW - populism
KW - populist radical right
KW - social media
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85161342802&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.17645/pag.v11i2.6391
DO - 10.17645/pag.v11i2.6391
M3 - Article
SN - 2183-2463
VL - 11
SP - 235
EP - 248
JO - Politics and Governance
JF - Politics and Governance
IS - 2
ER -