Democracy Paradox Podcast
About the Episode:
Show Notes:
Frantz illustrates personalism through cases such as Nayib Bukele in El Salvador, Vladimir Putin in Russia, and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Turkey. Unlike populism, which can be ideologically ambiguous, personalism is observable in how leaders dominate party structures, control nominations, and sideline internal constraints. In democracies, this concentration of power typically unfolds gradually: leaders weaken executive checks, reshape courts, and tilt electoral rules in their favor, often without a single dramatic rupture. Frantz argues that this slow, incremental accumulation of power represents the contemporary model of democratic collapse.
A central puzzle the episode explores is why voters continue to support personalist leaders even as democratic norms erode. Frantz points to partisan dealignment, frustration with traditional parties, and the changing media environment – especially social media – which allows leaders to bypass party infrastructure and cultivate direct personal brands. Because voters rely heavily on elite cues to interpret democratic health, unified party support for a leader can normalize actions that undermine institutions. In highly polarized contexts, this dynamic makes it difficult for citizens to recognize democratic backsliding in real time.
The conversation concludes with reflections on resistance and renewal. While some countries – including Brazil and Poland – have voted personalist leaders out of office, Frantz warns that windows for democratic correction narrow as incumbents consolidate power. Strong, programmatic parties remain a critical guardrail against executive overreach, whereas hollowed-out, leader-centric parties create fertile ground for elected strongmen. Ultimately, Frantz suggests that understanding the institutional roots of personalism offers an essential early warning system for democracies seeking to defend themselves from erosion within.
Links:
- Learn more about Erica Frantz.
- Learn more about her coauthored book The Origins of Elected Strongmen: How Personalist Parties Destroy Democracy from Within.
- Learn more about the Kellogg Institute.





