Democratic Elections: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly 

Times change, and so does the definition of “legitimate” elections. As populist movements surge across Europe—AfD in Germany, RN in France, Meloni’s Fratelli d’Italia in Italy—the old accusation of “fascism” is losing its power. Voters, it seems, are no longer afraid to make the wrong choices.

Naturally, the centrist establishment isn’t about to let a little thing like the electoral system get in the way of good governance. If moral shaming won’t work, there are always more sophisticated tools: judicial interventions, media narratives and institutional barriers to ensure that ‘democracy’ remains safe from those who would like to engage in it. After all, if democracy is truly sacred, shouldn’t it be protected from the people who vote incorrectly?

Institutional Safeguards or Overreach?

Recent political developments illustrate the complexity of this debate. In Romania, judicial intervention altered an electoral outcome deemed to threaten democratic stability. In Germany, mainstream parties have debated the potential prohibition of the AfD, citing threats to constitutional integrity. A crucial actor in this process is the Verfassungsschutz, Germany’s domestic intelligence agency, created after World War II to guard against authoritarian threats.

Backed by judicial authorities, the Verfassungsschutz has regularly targeted the AfD and its former youth wing, Junge Alternative, which was recently dissolved. Labeled as far-right and anti-democratic due to its strict anti-immigration stance, the organisation was effectively banned. This is a move that highlights a growing trend where opposition to prevailing immigration policies is equated with ‘right-wing extremism’.

The legal consequences of such classifications are profound. Through judicial authority, they actively reshape the perception of  dissident political movements. It seems now that in Germany, there still exists a  traditional separation of powers or whether governance is shifting toward opinion management.

While proponents argue that such measures safeguard democratic values, critics contend they serve to preserve the current political class by restricting competition. Holding a divergent opinion, then, seems to have become a crime. According to the power elite, perhaps democracy hasn’t failed; but the people keep failing it. Fortunately, there’s always someone ready to step in and “help” them make the correct choice.

When Politics Breaks Free

Once upon a time, democracy was a hands-on endeavor, where citizenship meant active participation and not just filling in a ballot every few years. Now, democracy has become the political equivalent of online shopping: click, confirm, and expect results, no further involvement required. 

While voter turnout in Germany has recovered from its early 2000s slump, nearly a quarter of eligible voters still abstain, signaling persistent political disengagement. The biggest political force today? The non-voters, whose silent influence continues to shape electoral outcomes just as much as those who cast a ballot.

Once, freedom came with responsibility: understanding the political system, engaging in debate, and making an informed decision at the ballot box. But vigilance has been traded for distraction, and politics has evolved accordingly. 

Yet, something is stirring. People are being roused from their slumber; not by a rekindled love for democracy, but by displeasure with the status quo. Populist movements, once taboo, are surging. The once-forbidden ideas of national sovereignty, border control, and cultural preservation are making a comeback, and the youth— the very same generation raised on hedonism—are now looking for meaning. Gen Z, facing economic instability and a world that doesn’t seem to work in their favor, is becoming more radical than its predecessors. 

In Germany, the figures speak for themselves: AfD support among young voters has more than doubled in just three years, from 9% in 2022 to over 22% in 2025. If this trend continues, the real shock in upcoming elections won’t be who wins, but what it means for Europe’s political order.  A victory for the AfD wouldn’t just be an electoral shift; it would be proof that the liberal consensus is anything but, that a  carefully managed political discourse is a relic of the past. In short, the Overton window (the range of subjects and arguments politically acceptable to the mainstream population) is widening. Whether this signals a lasting  transformation or just a temporary rebellion is yet to be seen, but one thing is clear: the era of complacency is over.

‘You are the media now’

Traditional media has long shaped public discourse, not by reflecting a diversity of opinions, but by reinforcing ideological boundaries. In Germany, the bias isn’t even subtle: a survey by ARD,  the joint organisation of Germany's regional public-service broadcasters, found that 57.1% of their trainees supported the Greens, while only 1.4% leaned conservative. Unsurprisingly, political debates and interviews reflected this; populist figures faced scrutiny, while centrist narratives remained comfortably unchallenged.

POLITICO offers another example, when on November 2, 2024, it uncovered the scandal of AfD co-chairwoman Alice Weidel’s grandfather having served as a military judge during the Nazi era. Nor her policies, nor her record were discussed, but her ancestry. Meanwhile, Björn Höcke, the AfD leader in Thuringia, remains the media’s favorite punching bag, with selective outrage defining their  coverage of him. 

Media narratives are equally at play at the ballot box. When the AfD won Thuringia’s 2020 election, its deputies supported, in a surprise-decision, the election of the (liberal) minister-president Thomas Kemmerich: a result that was deemed unacceptable by all other parties, by the media and by Angela Merkel. Democracy then did what democracy does best when the wrong party wins: it hits the reset button. A new vote was arranged, ensuring a more appropriate outcome. Electoral processes increasingly prioritise stability over voters’ unpredictability.

More than about bringing the facts, journalism has become about business first and foremost. Germany’s public broadcasters, funded by the Rundfunkbeitrag (€18.36 per month per household), collected over €7.9 billion in 2006 alone. With funding independent from either public trust or ratings, neutrality is unnecessary, and even becomes a bad idea. When your paycheck comes from an establishment, questioning that establishment becomes optional, if not outright reckless.

It is then no great surprise that disillusioned, younger generations are leaving traditional media—only 48% of individuals aged 16 to 24 watched live television weekly—, for alternative platforms where speech isn’t dictated by gatekeepers. 

X (formerly Twitter) has become the new battleground, where independent voices can compete with mainstream outlets.. But perhaps free speech is just another business model, and figures like Musk and Zuckerberg are cashing in. If democracy is now just a contest of opinions rather than real political agency, are the people truly free or merely choosing their preferred illusion? 

Democracy against democracy

As populist frustration mounts and voter backlash intensifies, how will the centrist establishment respond? In France, the government is already adjusting its rhetoric, hoping to either charm or contain an electorate that is growing increasingly restless. In Germany, where the upcoming election, as Elon Musk puts it, will “decide the fate of the country,” the ruling coalition faces a critical dilemma. Even if the AfD doesn’t secure victory, the Overton Window has already shifted; remigration is now openly discussed, and for the first time, the CDU and AfD have aligned on tightening family reunification laws. The once deemed to be impenetrable ideological barriers are beginning to show cracks.

But what if the AfD does win? Would Germany descend into chaos, with clashes between migrants and nationalists? Would the party be banned, and the election quietly annulled, as happened in Romania? If right-wing electoral victories have long been framed as threats to democracy itself, why not take the next logical step and simply outlaw the competition altogether?

Yet, beyond the electoral theatrics, a more profound question remains: If the AfD—or any right-wing alternative—actually takes power, will it be capable of delivering real change? Will it break free from the bureaucratic machinery that has neutralised countless parties before it? Or will it become just another managed opposition, absorbed into the system it once sought to challenge? If populists rise only to be absorbed into the system, then the real battleground is not elections, but the bureaucratic structures that determine the limits of governance. For those betting on disruption, the real test may not be winning power but keeping it.