In these politically turbulent times, the ”illusion of democracy is fading worldwide” as one pundit wrote recently. There is a growing sense, in the West, that democracy is not working well, but there is not yet a full and clear recognition of that fact.
Michel Maffesoli, honorary professor at the Sorbonne in Paris, has been saying already for
several years, that “the end of the democratic ideal is manifesting itself”. Signs
of this can be seen in the problematic elections that have taken place in his native France and other Western countries.
The “ideal” or “illusion” of democracy comes from widespread misconceptions about this political system, despite clear misgivings from the most illustrious political thinkers of the past. The most important misconceptions about democracy are that elected representatives are generally loyal and disinterested, and that the electorate is generally informed and rational with regard to politics.
David Hume wrote in his famous Essays (1777)
that democracy cannot be “representative” because all societies are “governed
by the few”. Sociologist Robert Michels then defined, in his ground-breaking work
on political parties (1911), what he called the “iron law of oligarchy”, methodically
showing that all mature organizations, without exception, become oligarchic;
i.e. ruled by
minorities.
For the early democratic movements of the 19th
century, representative democracy was generally not perceived as truly
democratic; the Athenian model was the ideal. As Robert Michels noted, it was
only when the practical impossibilities of direct democracy on a large scale
became evident, that the concept of political representation gained legitimacy.
Over time, this concept became synonymous with “democracy”.
Montesquieu considered in The Spirit of the Laws (1739),
that the main justification for the representative system is not only that the average
person does not have the time or the interest to engage in political life, but
that he is incompetent to do so. Tocqueville warned in Democracy in America
(1835), that one of the potential threats to democracy is that people can
become so absorbed by the pursuit of economic opportunities that they lose
interest in politics.
Indeed, the majority does not have the interest
and the motivation to get deeply involved in politics. Voters implicitly understand that their vote
is just a small drop in an ocean of ballots and will by itself make no difference
in the election outcome. They also lack the time and the capability of thinking rationally about politics, as
political theorist James Burnham summarized in his essential work, The Machiavellians
(1943):
“The inability of the masses to function
scientifically in politics rests primarily on the following factors: the huge
size of the mass group, which makes it too unwieldy for the use of scientific
techniques; the ignorance, on the part of the masses, of the methods of
administration and rule; the necessity, for the masses, of spending most of
their energies on the bare making of a living, which leaves little energy or
time for gaining more knowledge about politics or carrying out practical
political tasks; the lack, in most people, of a sufficient degree of those
psychological qualities—ambition, ruthlessness, and so on—that are
prerequisites for active political life.”
Though these insights about political representation have
long been known, they have been suppressed in order to maintain the illusion of
majority rule. “Democracy” has such a positive connotation in the Western value
system, that it is understandably difficult for most people to accept that they
do not “rule” in any meaningful sense. This reality is all the more difficult
to grasp since some policies from the ruling minority do, and even must, consider
majority public opinion to some extent. If pressed, most people would nevertheless
admit that though they have elected “representatives”, they actually have no say
over e.g., foreign, monetary, and trade policy, even though these areas impact their
lives greatly.
The Inherent Instability of All Political Systems
Though the illusion of democracy is slowly fading in the
West, is it not so much because of a realization of the truths presented above.
Rather, it is because representative democracy, like all political systems, is inherently
unstable. It has long been known that conditions constantly change, to
paraphrase Heraclitus, but it is
not widely understood that political systems are ill-suited for this basic reality.
Though democracy might sometimes seem to work well, the never-ending economic,
social, demographic, and technical changes to society make such impressions short-lived.
Regardless of the political system, the power balance
at any given time between state and society and between the ruling minority and
the ruled majority is constantly disrupted by such changing conditions. The
seemingly inexorable increase in state interventionism
has a negative impact on wealth creation and private property, forcing
socialization and leading to a rise in political tensions. When the state becomes
more bureaucratic it fails to keep up with a changing society, and thereby destabilizes
the power balance. Further, political tensions also arise if the ruling minority
pushes a political
agenda that disregards or even antagonizes the majority.
Democracy, in particular, is subject to constant swings
of political tensions due to its inherent lack of fairness: the losing side of an
election (more than half, in plurality systems) is not represented. As Gustave de
Molinari wrote,
democracy “insists that the decisions of the majority must become law, and that
the minority is obliged to submit to it, even if it is contrary to its most
deeply rooted convictions and injures its most precious interests.” Voting phenomena
like Duverger’s Law
and Arrow’s paradox tend
to soften Molinari’s stark description, but by distorting election results they
hardly make them more representative or more fair.
When the state’s size and power is limited (i.e. statist
interventionism in society is weak), the state’s record as defender of property
rights would naturally be considered more important than whether or not the
majority is democratically represented. Conversely, when the state’s power is
extensive (i.e. the state is strongly interventionist), whether at a national
or supranational level, the majority surely has high expectations from democracy
since the direction of society hangs, grotesquely, on the decisions of its executive
and legislatives branches.
A Necessary Reduction of State Power
It is possible then to conclude that a limitation of state power is necessary in order to
reduce political tensions in society and to introduce much-needed stability,
regardless of whether or not the political system is considered “democratic”. This requires a decentralization of decision-making
and a reduction of the role of the state, by strengthening the free market and
individual rights. The result would be a freer society, able to adapt more naturally
and harmoniously to the changing conditions. Thus, what is needed is “more freedom”
rather than “more democracy”.
Unfortunately,
the illusion of democracy has
led the majorities in the West to conflate democracy with freedom. This is a
significant mistake because democracy is no guarantee for freedom, even
if majority rule were possible. On the contrary; when concessions to the
majority have been made, such as welfare spending through fiscal redistribution,
these have had deleterious effects on society and reduced economic freedom. As Tocqueville
said; “I dearly love liberty and respect for rights, but not democracy”.
Considering the misconceptions about political
representation that have been presented here, it is high time to fully smash the
illusion of democracy in the West and substitute freedom for democracy as the
highest political goal to attain and to protect.
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