Sei sulla pagina 1di 6

Voting Intentions Before and After

Corruption Scandals in Romania

Student:

Roxana Alina Madalina Ghidanac


Student no.:

10968016

Preparatory Programme for Communication Science Master


University of Amsterdam
2015

Voting Intentions before and after a Corruption Scandal in Romania

Corruption is a serious problem in Romania. According to Transparency International


(Corruption Perception Index, 2014), Romania is one of the most corrupt countries in Europe,
with a score of 43, which makes it the 69th country in the corruption ranking.
Corruption has always been an important subject for romanian politicians during electoral
campaigns. They say that they are committed to the fight against corruption, that they have zero
tolerance to those who do not respect the Constitution. Last years practice had proven to us that
romanian politicians are not that committed to the fight against corruption as they say. When
they face a corruption scandal, or when another man/woman within the same party is involved in
such a scandal, they tend to forget all the promisses they made durring electoral campaigns.
Last year, as shown in The Annualy Report of the National Anticorruption Departament (citeaza
siteul dna), more than 100 of Romanias politically connected people have been indicted,
including 20 mayors, eight members of parliament, five county presidents, along with more than
120 others who have been accused by prosecutors, arrested, or announced as suspects.
It is obviously that Romania is passing through a critical time in its modern history, long
considered to be one of the most corrupt nations of European Union and Europe. It is also clear
that along with this major problem of corruption, come a lot of other problems that Romania is
forced to deal with. This is the case of economic growth and welfare, not to mention the
difficulties to join Schengen Area.
The last two months has been a real marathon of arrests among elite politicians, accused of
bribery, money laudering, embezzlement or trading in influence. The most important names here
are: Elena Udrea, Tourism ex-Minister and former presidency candidate; Marian Vanghelie, the
mayor of the fith district of Bucharest since 2000; Radu Mazare, the mayor of Constanta since
2000; Relu Fenechiu, former Transport Minister and many others.
How does these facts influence peoples voting intentions? Are romanian voters sensitive to
corruption scandals? How this sensitiveness affects their preferences?
It seems like in the last couple of years, the increasingly documentated image about corruption
has led to continuous depreciation in the credibility of the romanian political class. Although

elections should be seen as a weapon and an instrument of voters to punish politicians, the reality
of recent elections shows that romanian citizens are not aware of this power that they have.
The research question that is going to be analyzed is : Does a corruption scandal in the
romanian political scene influences voting intentions?
There are a lot of previous studies related to the corruption phenomena, but there is no existing
research trying to connect corruption scandals among politicians with voting intentions in
Romania.
The main aim of the paper is to examine whether romanian citizens change their voting
intentions or modify their participation in elections after a corruption scandal involving a
politician.
There are two hypoteses proposed for the current paper. Hypothesis 1 proposes that corruption
scandals change voting preferences, meaning that people will not vote again for a politician who
has been accused or convicted in a corruption scandal. Hypotesis 2 proposes that in general,
corruption scandals demotivate romanian citizens to vote.
Operationalization of concepts.
There are three concepts that need to be operationalized here. The first one is corruption.
Defining corruption, though, it seems to be not an easy task, because of the fact that this concept
includes a lot of complications and faces several ambiguity. But, to be able to operationalize this
concept, it is important to know in advance what is corruption and what kind of aspects we have
to look at when measuring it.
The existing literature is very generous in giving us various definitions of the term corruption.
According to The Oxford Dictionary, corruption is a dishonest or fraudulent conduct by those in
power, tipically including bribery. But this is, though, a very broad definition, and we are
particularly interested in political corruption. Most of the political scientists have agreed that
corruption is any transaction between public and private sector actors through which collective
goods are illegitimately converted into private-regarding payoffs (heidenheimer, 1993cauta
exact).

Political corruption is the manipulation of the political institutions and the rules of procedure,
and therefore it influences the institutions of government and the political system, and it
frequently leads to institutional decay (Amundsen, 1999, p. 3).
Arround the concept of corruption, there are some other terms that are related and interconnected with it, such as: bribery the payment (in money or kind) given to or taken by
thestate official in a corrupt relationship (amundsen, 1999, p. 11); embezzlement theft of
public resources by public officials (amundsen, 1999, p. 11); fraud a crime that involves
some kind of trickery, swindle or deceit, and it is a broader legal and popular term that covers
both bribery and embezzlement (amundsen, 1999, p. 11); extorsion money (or other
resources) extracted by the use of coercion, violence or the threats to use force (amundsen,
1999, p. 11); trading in influence a corrupt trilateral relationship in which a person with real
or supported influence on other persons, often public officials, trades this influence against
money with someone seeking influence (trading in influence and the illegal financing of
political parties council of europe publishing, 2000, p. 10); money laundering a process
whereby the proceeds of crime are transformed into apparently legitimate money or other assets
(duhaime christine what is money laundering, 2015).
The measurement of corruption is not a easy task, because of the many ways in which the
concept is defined, and therefore it implies a lot of chalenges for those who want to examine it in
a more dipper way. The most useful method is by using the CPI (Corruption Perception Index) of
Transparency International. Transparency International measures the level of corruption using as
a basis the public sector, so this includes civil servants, public officials, politicians.
The second concept that needs operationalization is romanian political scene. Romania is a
semi-presidencial republic, governed on the basis of multi-party democratic system and on the
division of the judicial, executive and legislative powers. In December 1989, Romania won the
battle with the communist regime, after 42 years of dicatorship. As Willian Crowther said,
There have been two signicant turning points in Romanias transition. Each played a decisive
role in shaping political dynamics in the period that followed, and each shifted the country
further toward the mainstream of Central European politics. The rst of these was the December
1989 revolution that displaced the Ceausescu dictatorship. Second was the 1996 transfer of
power to the liberal opposition parties which initiated a second phase of reform. Many hoped that
4

the 2004 election of Traian Basescu would constitute a third such dening moment and, for
symbolic purposes at least, mark the nale of the countrys transition to democracy (2010, p.1).
After one decade of fighting corruption and trying to put Romania in a good place in Europe and
European Union, after believing that the corrupt system has been repressed, it seems that we are
not even at the half of the road. Indeed, the battle that Traian Basescu declared to anyone who
was not working for the wellfare of Romania leaded the country to a new level, meaning that we
can see an obvious improvement in the operation of judicial system, and there have been
important stepts in the modernization and purification of the political system.
As mentioned above, the political system of Romania is based on a multi-party system. The main
political parties that are represented in the Parliament are: PSD (Social Democrat Party), PNL
(National Liberal Party), PMP (Popular Movement Party), UDMR (Democratic Union of
Hungarians in Romania), UNPR (National Union for the Progress of Romania). There is a small
chance that only one of these parties will gain the parliamentary majority alone, so most of the
governs are based on government coalitions between parties. An important thing to mention is
that these coalitions do not respect always respect the political spectrum.
The Parliament of Romania is the legislative power of the state. It is a bicameral parliament,
consisting of The Chamber of Deputies and The Senate.
The third concept that needs operationalization is voting intention. Voting intention is not a
single-unit decision based upon a voter's evaluation of a particular candidate. Rather, it is a
multi-evaluative process relying upon simultaneous decisions to vote for one candidate while
necessarily implying that the individual will not vote for thac candidate's opponent (VOTING
INTENTION AND THE COMPLEXITY OF POLITICAL IMAGES: A PILOT STUDY LARRY
POWELL, Psychological Reports, 1977, 40, 243-246)
Among romanians, it seems that the intention is formed as a consequence of trend of the
moment, which is mostly determined by the influence of the social structure in which the voters
live / perform their activity (Lucian Sclean Mircea Munteanu -THE FORMATION OF
VOTING INTENTION IN MULTIETHNIC COMMUNITIES, The 7th International Days of
Statistics and Economics, Prague, September 19-21, 2013).

Also, it is quite obvious that romanians voting turnout are not the same for every elections in
part. Romanians seem to be more attached to the local elections, in which they see a personal
benefit. The percentage here is 50-70% (INSCOP, 2012). The second most important scrutiny for
romanians is the presidential one. The presidential elections that took place in December 2014
has reached a surprisingly high level, with around 64% (http://www.idea.int/vt/countryview.cfm?
CountryCode=RO) .

The turnout for the Parliament is almost 42%, and the one for EU

Parliament, even lower, with no more than 33%.

Potrebbero piacerti anche