It’s ceaselessly mentioned – by means of FIFA President Gianni Infantino and plenty of others – that football is the “most democratic sport.” That sentiment is primarily based largely at the game’s world attraction and lengthy historical past of recognition throughout magnificence and racial strains.
However whether or not that axiom applies to the quadrennial International Cup event is a unique query.
On events up to now, authoritarian governments have used the event to spice up their regimes. Italian fascist chief Benito Mussolini did so when Italy hosted the 1934 International Cup, manipulating the video games and handpicking officers to spice up the probabilities for the house staff, who went on to overcome democratic Czechoslovakia within the ultimate. Likewise, in 1978, Argentina’s dictatorship used each the event’s webhosting and the nationwide staff’s victory to “sportswash” the brutal repression that had accompanied the army junta’s seizure of energy.
Fascist Italy hosted and received the second one International Cup in 1934.
Wikimedia Commons
In each and every of the ones notable circumstances, the staff of an authoritarian nation received the event. However as a political scientist and football fanatic, I used to be curious to peer how international locations in authoritarian as opposed to democratic international locations had fared within the International Cup over the years.
So within the run-up to this yr’s event, I regarded again in the course of the data of the 22 previous International Cups; I additionally solid an eye fixed over the expanded 48 international locations represented on the 2026 event.
For the International Cups between 1930 and 2018, I grew to become to Polity knowledge, which seems to be at how energy is focused within the political gadget. On a minus 10 to plus 10 scale, democracies are the ones with a Polity ranking of plus 6 and plus 10; autocracies have a minus 6 to minus 10; and anocracies – international locations which can be “partially free” — have a ranking of minus 5 to plus 5
Many students counsel the use of more than one datasets when inspecting regime sort. And for the International Cups from 1974 to 2026, I extensively utilized scores by means of the nonprofit Freedom Space, which produces an annual index of the state of civil and political rights in each and every nation on the earth. They measure international locations as loose, partially loose and no longer loose.
What the knowledge displays
Within the first few International Cup tournaments, loose international locations didn’t carry out specifically smartly.
From 1930-1962, there have been two authoritarian champions (Italy in 1934 and 1938), 3 anocratic winners (Uruguay in 1930 and 1950 and Brazil in 1962) and two democratic winners (West Germany in 1954 and a pre-dictatorship Brazil in 1958).
In the case of finalists, within the first 32 years, there have been six authoritarian international locations represented within the ultimate video games, 4 anocracies and a trifling 4 democracies.
However since 1966 — the primary International Cup assembly between two democracies, with England prevailing over West Germany — there were best two authoritarian winners: Brazil in 1970 and Argentina in 1978 – the final autocratic nation to win the event.

Argentina’s generals used the 1978 International Cup as a propaganda device.
Gilbert UZAN/Gamma-Rapho by means of Getty Pictures
The ten profitable international locations from 1982-2018 have all been democracies. Additional, all runners-up since 1962 were democracies, too.
Having a look at all the 1930-2018 duration, Polity knowledge displays that 71.4% of members in ultimate video games were democracies, with not up to 20% of finalists being autocratic international locations and 9.5% being anocracies.
When the use of the Freedom Space index, I discovered that loose states have made up 23 of the 26 ultimate recreation members from 1974 onward, or 88% of the entire, and 11 champions.
There’s best been one partially loose winner — Brazil in 1994 — and one no longer loose winner, Argentina in 1978.
How does this examine with international numbers of regime sort over the years? In 1930, the yr of the primary FIFA event, Polity knowledge displays that best 21.7% of the arena’s international locations had been democratic, with 44.6% being authoritarian and 33.7% deemed anocratic. By way of 1966, democracies fell to twenty.8%, whilst authoritarian international locations made up 40.8% of the arena. All the way through the 2018 International Cup, the arena’s international locations deemed to be democracies had risen to nearly 60, the use of Polity knowledge, whilst authoritarian states slipped to twelve%. The remainder are both anocratic or “transitioning.”
Democracy – a profitable method?
However what in regards to the 2026 International Cup members? Of the 48 international locations represented, 43.1% are “free” international locations, in step with Freedom Space. The “not free” team comprised 26.7% of all international locations. It is a close to reversal of 1974, the primary International Cup yr for which Freedom Space knowledge is to be had. Again then, loose international locations made up 27% of nations on the earth, whilst no longer loose international locations comprised 41.4% of worldwide’s international locations.
And democracies are tipped for luck in 2026. The highest 11 FIFA-ranked international locations are all “free.” For the highest 19 international locations, all however two — Morocco and Ecuador — are loose, and the ones two are ranked by means of Freedom Space as “partly free.” Of the lowest-ranked 11 international locations within the event, greater than part are unfree.
Countering the sportswashing
The information displays that democracies are overrepresented on the International Cup and in addition generally tend to do higher than authoritarian international locations – however does that topic? I’d argue “yes.”
At a time when autocratic international locations use game as a propaganda device, and FIFA apparently turns a blind eye to the human rights data of webhosting international locations, the truth that democracies generally tend to succeed at the pitch seems like a victory at no cost international locations.
LaGrange School undergraduates Jenna Pittman, Daniel Cody and Eli Rogers contributed to the analysis on which this newsletter is primarily based.