The application of Critical Theory to elections—examining how electoral systems are shaped by power, how they serve to legitimate inequality, and how they might be transformed. Critical Theory of Elections asks: What do elections actually do? Do they give people power, or just the feeling of power? How do campaign finance, media control, and voter suppression shape outcomes? How do elections serve to manage dissent and maintain order? Drawing on critical political theory and electoral studies, it insists that elections are never just the voice of the people—they're a system of power, with rules set by the powerful, for the powerful. Understanding elections requires understanding what they achieve—and what they prevent.
"Just vote, they say. Critical Theory of Elections asks: vote for whom? Between options set by whom? Elections matter, but they're not democracy. The real decisions—about war, about economy, about justice—happen elsewhere. Elections can legitimize a system without changing it. Critical theory insists on asking: what happens after the election? Who still has power, and who still doesn't?"
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