In a democracy, the political word serves as a basis for reconciling a society's various conflicts, and is disseminated throughout space to facilitate the exchange of opinions. While its form requires mastery of rhetoric and linguistics, as well as political science, psychology, sociology and theology, its context remains highly contextualized.Political discourse is not like any other discourse. The reason is simple: the essential aim of political discourse is to win approval in the form of mass media propaganda. The aim is to create the conditions to install an ideology (collective representation) concerning the change or maintenance of a human reality at a given moment, or of a certain form of power and organization of the city.Political discourse, sometimes referred to as political rhetoric, has existed since the fourth century. It is the study of the language used by political figures, either to debate among themselves or to address the public.