72 How
politics works
support, and remains in its legality unprejudiced by its violent origin (the shoot-outs
at Lexington, Massachusetts, in 1775 and the Bastille in Paris in 1789, where the
American and the French Revolutions started; the battles fought by national lib-
eration movements before a successful post-colonial state-building). The same holds
with respect to another major topic in state theory: even if the path-breaking revo-
lution or liberation war was
conducted by a narrow minority, the
constituent power
33
in the state does not lie with it, but with the generality of citizens as gathered in the
electorate or represented in a constituent assembly or parliament once they have
invested themselves in that power by election or referendum. In the same line of
thought, the excitement shown again in the new century by anti-democratic think-
ers of the right and the left for Carl Schmitt’s (1922) statement (in the first line)
‘sovereign is he who decides on the state of exception’ sounds necrophile, because
its root – Schmitt’s enthusiasm for Art. 48
of the Weimar Constitution, which in
the event of an emergency conferred quasi-dictatorial powers to the president of
the German Reich – vanished with the Third Reich in 1945.
34
Necrophile also
because in our era and among democratic polities the problem has ceased to exist: all
their constitutions provide for the state of emergency by non-dictatorial provisions,
which do not deprive the liberal-democratic sovereign, the people, of its inalienable
centrality – to pick up a notion astutely introduced by Schmitt, the
problem has been
‘neutralised’.
35
Also, at least in Western countries, political change has come about
since 1945 by elections or mass movements reflected in elections, as in France 1958,
and no longer by coups or revolutions – except in Greece’s military coup of 1967.
Positions holding that the (capitalist) state was not just born out of violence, but also
lives on hidden or open violence, and must be therefore delegitimised and violently
overthrown, fail to
see that a democratic regime, though obviously still containing
elements of socio-economic oppression and constraints, has realised the political
order requiring the least amount of institutional violence seen thus far in the polity –
an order that can be modified and has been often modified on a non-violent way. An
intuitive worldwide comparison with other regimes of the present or the recent past
(the ‘real socialism’ of Soviet brand) does not need to be detailed here.
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