82 How politics works
the Tian An Men massacre, in the political upheaval in the countries of the former
Soviet bloc (1989–1991), in the Arab Springs and the Iranian Green Movement of
2011, and in the democratic movement in Burma down to the election of 2015 –
just to mention a few examples. In all these episodes, democracy is invoked less in
its proper meaning as system of government and rather as an emblem for things
such as the transparency of power or the rule of law that are not all strictly demo-
cratic in nature but originate from democracy’s
previous competitors, in particular
liberalism and constitutionalism. In the time of its eighteenth century resurrection,
2,100 years after it eclipsed, the very idea of democracy, elevating the people’s will
to the rank of the only and unlimited sovereign, was indeed perceived as dangerous
for the individual liberties that were being established against the absolute monarch.
The conjoining of liberal values with democratic rule came later in the late nine-
teenth century and was again put to a stress test in the mass democracies between
the two World Wars, a test failed in Italy and Germany. As we shall soon see, the
conjunction of liberal and democratic principles is after the Second World War an
accomplished fact in Western countries, and in our conventional
wisdom we often
call ‘democratic’ values or policies that rather stem from the liberal tradition.
In the modern version the core of the democratic idea is the
equal distribution of
political power as enshrined in the motto ‘one man, one vote’ – whose slightly sex-
ist formulation (it should rather read ‘one man or woman’ or ‘one citizen’) aptly
mirrors the time and the toil it took to extend universal suffrage to women, as
it happened to an extent between the World Wars and definitely after 1945. This
equality cannot be taken at face value because in order to do so several presupposi-
tions should be met that not always are: first, formal equality on the ballot does not
necessarily lead to equal power in government, because this operates not only along
the lines indicated by the voters, but also very much under the pressure of other,
non-democratic forces as well (high bureaucracy, big money, economic
and party
lobbies, the clergy or the military in weak democracies). This can hurt the promise
of
autonomy (to obey only commands and laws we have ourselves created by our
vote) that is implied in the principle establishing equal power for all and everybody.
Second, tied
de facto to formal voting equality is or used to be the mostly implicit
expectation of higher social equality, due to redistributive or welfare policies pur-
sued by the government. Empirical analysis disavows the expectation of this tie
(Przeworski 2010), and the impressive rise of inequality in democratic countries
since the 1980s puts, for the time being, a gravestone on it – though miracles (strat-
egies reversing the rise of inequality while keeping the economy going; strong lead-
erships) can still happen. The much welcomed transformation of advanced societies
into a ‘knowledge society’, has for the time being only added a new divide to the
income gap between layers of the population. It remains true that in a democracy
anti-poverty laws, fiscal benefits for low-income citizens and access to education
for all are more likely to be passed than in an autocracy, thanks
to parliamentary
battles, an attentive public opinion and social movements. Yet the disappointment
and resentment deriving from the gap between formal political equality and sub-
stantial, even rising social inequality can, over the long haul, push back the citizens’
Government and democracy
83
affection for the democratic regime, either by making them vote for strongly anti-
democratic or at least populist parties or give up participation in public life. The
peak reached by inequality in the middle of the Great Recession after 2008 seems
to be putting an end to the prevalence of post-materialist values (autonomy, self-
esteem, self-expression, sense of belonging) seen in the decades straddling the mil-
lennium divide and to shift attention again on jobs and salaries. Democracy as a
method or procedure of government cannot be separated in the citizens’ minds
from the substantive policies and results it leads to.
Before we leave Democracy One I will briefly break up my abstinence from
historical questions because I wish to clarify something that seems to me a popu-
lar misunderstanding concerning the theory of democracy, of
which Jean-Jacques
Rousseau is regarded as the modern founder. This is hard to reconcile with his con-
demnation of (direct) democracy as a system of government, in which the popu-
lace itself is supposed to manage the state affairs, blurring the distinction between
legislative and executive power (Rousseau 1762, Book III, §4). Only a people of
gods – Rousseau argues – could govern itself democratically. Equal participation is
due only in the founding act of the polity, consisting of the total alienation of eve-
rybody’s rights in its favour (Book I, §§6–7) – as it was already known to Hobbes
and Locke. This gives the people the power to legislate, but how the
volonté géné-
rale/general will expressed by the people creates laws remains undefined (Book II,
§§6–12). This is enough to deprive Rousseau of the crown of ‘father of democracy’,
which he would have himself certainly rejected. This
gives him back his honour
because otherwise, should his theory of the polity be mistaken for his theory of
government, the accusation of having founded a totalitarian version of democracy
would not be unjustified.
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