Abstract
Introduction: Political leaders frequently violate social, political, and moral norms without facing meaningful consequences, particularly in polarized, identity-based communities. This phenomenon, commonly described as Teflon leadership, refers to leaders’ ability to maintain legitimacy and public support despite repeated transgressions. In contemporary populist politics, norm-breaking itself often functions as a strategic resource, signaling authenticity, challenging liberal-democratic conventions, and reinforcing in-group loyalty.
Methods: Building on interdisciplinary scholarship, this study develops an integrative conceptual framework that synthesizes insights from leadership studies, social identity theory, and research on moral judgment and political behavior. The analysis systematically connects these literatures to theorize the social and psychological mechanisms that enable leaders’ resilience in the face of moral and political violations.
Results: The article proposes a tripartite model of idiosyncrasy credit, transgression credit, and innovation credit to explain how followers grant conditional moral license to political leaders. These mechanisms are shown to potentially interact with deeper psychological processes, including populist attitudes, dark personality traits, identity-based authoritarianism, collective narcissism, identity uncertainty, and identity fusion, through which norm violations may be reframed as acts of loyalty, authenticity, or moral resistance.
Discussion: The resulting framework advances a set of conceptual propositions explaining how followers’ moral leniency and affective attachment sustain Teflon leadership in polarized democracies. By theorizing the moral and psychological foundations of leader immunity, the study contributes to theory-building. It outlines a future research agenda that calls for empirical work integrating individual-level psychological factors with the social dynamics of political polarization.
Keywords
Authoritarianism, dark personality traits, identity politics, norm violations, political scandals, populism, Teflon leadership