Democratization and Europeanization research in East-Central Europe is well established and rigorous. These phenomena can be observed in Slovakia, a Central European country that has followed a specific democratic development trajectory, including the experience of authoritarian and totalitarian rule during the 20th century. Since joining the European Union, Slovakia has faced ongoing challenges to its rule of law and democratic standards from national populist and Euroskeptic actors and parties. Academic research is needed on how relevant parties in Slovakia approach reverse Europeanization, also known as de-Europeanization. The article assesses the degree of de-Europeanization present in relevant Slovak political parties during the 2023 parliamentary elections, as reflected in their election manifestos by capturing the state of political parties’ positions on the scale of the proposed Index of de-Europeanization. A set of eight policy areas was compiled using a content analysis method, and a quantitative method (Index of De-Europeanization) was used to measure the degree of de-Europeanization of each party. The ID values show that Progresívne Slovensko is the most Europeanized political party, while Republika is the most de-Europeanized. The results indicate consistency between parties’ manifestos, image, and rhetoric.
Mihálik et al. (Tue,) studied this question.