Re-Stigmatizing the Radical Right: A One-Way Street?


Journal article


Laia Balcells, Sergi Martínez, Vicente Valentim, Ethan vanderWilden
Journal of Experimental Political Science, 2025

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APA   Click to copy
Balcells, L., Martínez, S., Valentim, V., & vanderWilden, E. (2025). Re-Stigmatizing the Radical Right: A One-Way Street? Journal of Experimental Political Science.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Balcells, Laia, Sergi Martínez, Vicente Valentim, and Ethan vanderWilden. “Re-Stigmatizing the Radical Right: A One-Way Street?” Journal of Experimental Political Science (2025).


MLA   Click to copy
Balcells, Laia, et al. “Re-Stigmatizing the Radical Right: A One-Way Street?” Journal of Experimental Political Science, 2025.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{laia2025a,
  title = {Re-Stigmatizing the Radical Right: A One-Way Street?},
  year = {2025},
  journal = {Journal of Experimental Political Science},
  author = {Balcells, Laia and Martínez, Sergi and Valentim, Vicente and vanderWilden, Ethan}
}

Abstract

Radical right behavior and support for radical right parties have increased across many countries in recent decades. A growing body of research has argued that, similar to the spread of other extremist behaviors, this is due to an erosion of political norms. This suggests that re-stigmatizing radical right parties might be an effective way of countering their growth. We use a survey experiment in Spain that compares the effectiveness of three theory-driven interventions aimed at increasing political stigma against a radical right party. Contrary to expectations, we fail to validate the efficacy of vignette-based attempts at stigmatization, instead identifying some backlash effects. Methodologically, our findings underscore the importance of validating treatments, as we show that simple attempts at re-stigmatization can produce null or opposing effects to their intended purpose. Theoretically, our results support the idea that normalization is a “one-way street,” in that re-stigmatizing parties is difficult after a party has become normalized.