Acts of collusion: myth,media, and the populist imagination in the 2016 United States presidential election |
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Authors: | Sorin Radu Cucu |
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Affiliation: | 1. English Department, LaGuardia Community College, City University of New York , Long Island City, NY, USA sorinradu27@gmail.com |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT This article considers the hypothesis that the 2016 nomination of Hillary Clinton appeared rigged because the Democratic Party persuaded itself that the next step in guaranteeing Obama’s legacy and advancing democratic progress would be the election of the first woman president. Democracy finds logical steps in politics suspicious (even dangerous); consequently, the constructed stability and order begin to falter or appear compromised. In this context, populist figures like Trump may gain political legitimacy by claiming to be outsiders speaking with the voice of the people. Populism, founded on a mythical notion of sovereignty, promises direct access to the democratic experience through four interconnected mythologies (unity, conspiracy, the golden age, and the savior), as evident in the 2016 election. The democratic struggle accordingly extended to Trump’s attacks on the media (as “fake news”) and to the Mueller investigation of collusion between the Trump campaign and foreign actors representing the Russian government. |
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Keywords: | US populism political myth collusion Russian interference media democracy |
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