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Against Elections
Against Elections
Against Elections
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Against Elections

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A small book with great weight and urgency to it, this is both a history of democracy and a clarion call for change.

"Without drastic adjustment, this system cannot last much longer," writes Van Reybrouck, regarded today as one of Europe's most astute thinkers. "If you look at the decline in voter turnout and party membership, and at the way politicians are held in contempt, if you look at how difficult it is to form governments, how little they can do and how harshly they are punished for it, if you look at how quickly populism, technocracy and anti-parliamentarianism are rising, if you look at how more and more citizens are longing for participation and how quickly that desire can tip over into frustration, then you realize we are up to our necks."
Not so very long ago, the great battles of democracy were fought for the right to vote. Now, Van Reybrouck writes, "it's all about the right to speak, but in essence it's the same battle, the battle for political emancipation and for democratic participation. We must decolonize democracy. We must democratize democracy."
As history, Van Reybrouck makes the compelling argument that modern democracy was designed as much to preserve the rights of the powerful and keep the masses in line, as to give the populace a voice. As change-agent, Against Elections makes the argument that there are forms of government, what he terms sortitive or deliberative democracy, that are beginning to be practiced around the world, and can be the remedy we seek. In Iceland, for example, deliberative democracy was used to write the new constitution. A group of people were chosen by lot, educated in the subject at hand, and then were able to decide what was best, arguably, far better than politicians would have.
A fascinating, and workable idea has led to a timely book to remind us that our system of government is a flexible instrument, one that the people have the power to change.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 17, 2018
ISBN9781609808112
Against Elections
Author

David Van Reybrouck

David Van Reybrouck is an award-winning author, acclaimed playwright, reporter, and poet who holds a doctorate from Leiden University. He has traveled extensively throughout Africa and has been actively involved in organizing literary workshops for young Congolese writers. He lives in Brussels.

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Rating: 3.93902447804878 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Thought-provoking but not yet practical

    I got this book after hearing MP Stella Creasy discuss citizen parliaments. Neither I nor the interviewer could understand what she was recommending and it sounded too strange. But this book made me reconsider as it explained the true problem is elective representative democracy. I had never thought that elections were the problem and that they were optional for democracy. This book reset my thoughts but I’m not yet sure what my actions are. Worth a read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very brave essay which calls our western practice of elections a system that suffers from 'democratic fatigue syndrome'. He wants to demolish the boundaries between the different existing meritocratic groups by reintroducing the system of drawing lots instead of drawing ballots like in the old 'elitist democracies' like Athens but also Venice or Florence.
    By doing so he clearly shows how far we have moved away with our form of so-called 'democracy' from real 'goverment by the people'.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Van Reybrouck verdient een medaille voor zijn strijdlust, zijn vasthoudendheid, zijn durf, maar ik ben het helemaal niet met hem eens. Zijn analyse van wat er misgaat in onze politiek is te negatief, te sloganesk, teveel in het vaarwater van de antipolitiek, al heeft hij natuurlijk gelijk dat er heel wat gebreken zijn. Zijn historische ontleding van hoe ons systeem van vertegenwoordiging door verkiezingen tot stand is gekomen en verkeerd gelopen is, is ronduit overtrokken: het lotingssysteem is altijd bijzonder marginaal gebleven in de geschiedenis (en daar waren goede redenen voor), en het is dus niet zo dat de aristocratie in de 18de eeuw een putsch heeft gepleegd tegen dat systeem en in de plaats het elitaire kiessysteem heeft opgedrongen; dit is de dingen op zijn kop zetten en een anachronistische kijk op de geschiedenis bieden. Zijn overzicht van de recente experimenten met burgerdemocratie is heel boeiend en biedt stof om te overdenken. Maar het loting-alternatief dat hij tenslotte formuleert (met maar liefst 6 nieuwe organen en dan alleen aan wetgevende kant) maakt meteen duidelijk hoe onhaalbaar dit is.
    Ik ben absoluut een voorstander van een meer participatief systeem (en misschien kan loting daarin een plaats krijgen), op alle niveaus van onze maatschappij (en we zijn trouwens al erg in die richting geëvolueerd). Maar het grote nadeel van loting is net het punt waar volgens Van Reybrouck de grote verdienste zit, namelijk legitimiteit: het hele systeem staat en valt met het vinden van gemotiveerde burgers die rationeel en tolerant zijn, en dat is niet evident; bovendien is de wervende kracht van het systeem zo goed als onbestaande, waardoor het draagvlak binnen de kortste keren verdwenen zal zijn (je kan het dus hooguit gebruiken voor beperkte thema's, gedurende een beperkte tijd).
    Neen, ik heb bewondering voor Van Reybrouck's aanhoudende, creatieve pogingen om ons politiek systeem (nog) beter te maken, want het getuigt van een grote betrokkenheid en bezorgdheid, maar op deze manier verkwist hij zijn energie.

Book preview

Against Elections - David Van Reybrouck

BY THE SAME AUTHOR

Congo: The Epic History of a People

DAVID VAN REYBROUCK

Against Elections

The Case for Democracy

introduction by

Kofi Annan

TRANSLATED BY

LIZ WATERS

Seven Stories Press

new york • oakland

Copyright © David Van Reybrouck 2016

English translation copyright © Liz Waters 2016

Introduction © 2018 by Kofi Annan

First published in 2016 by Bodley Head, an imprint of Vintage.

Vintage is part of the Penguin Random House group of companies.

First US publication April 2018 by Seven Stories Press.

All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means,

electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, writing or recording,

or through any other system for the storage or retrieval of information

without the written permission of the publisher.

Seven Stories Press

140 Watts Street

New York, NY 1001

www.sevenstories.com

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Van Reybrouck, David, author. | Annan, Kofi A. (Kofi Atta), author of

introduction. | Waters, Liz, translator.

Title: Against elections : the case for democracy / David Van Reybrouck ;

introduction by Kofi Annan ; translated by Liz Waters.

Other titles: Tegen verkiezingen. English

Description: First US edition | New York : Seven Stories Press, 2018. |

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Identifiers: LCCN 2017051901 (print) | LCCN 2018013706 (ebook) | ISBN

9781609808112 (Ebook) | ISBN 9781609808105 (hardcover : alk. paper)

Subjects: LCSH: Democracy--Philosophy. | Democracy--History. | Elections.

Classification: LCC JC423 (ebook) | LCC JC423 .R4532513 2018 (print) | DDC

321.8--dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017051901

The people of England deceive themselves when they fancy they are free; they are so, in fact, only during the election of Members of Parliament: for, as soon as a new one is elected, they are again in chains, and are nothing.

Jean-Jacques Rousseau,

The Social Contract (1762)

Contents

The Crisis of Democracy*

by Kofi Annan

Let me start by invoking the name of Aristotle, one of the most enduring thinkers Greece, and indeed the world, has ever produced. His very name means excellent insight, and he certainly left us quite a few, which continue to resonate more than 2,000 years after his death. Not least is Aristotle’s recognition that Man is, by nature, a political animal. Man is born, lives and dies as a member of a community and the affairs of that community are therefore his, and vice-versa. I am honoured to speak in his name and, as you will see, I believe many of his insights are as relevant today as they were in antiquity.

I have been a tireless defender of democracy all my life because I am convinced it is the political system most conducive to peace, sustainable development, the rule of law and the respect for human rights, the three pillars of any healthy and democratic society. As the UN Secretary General, I oversaw the creation of Democracy Day and the UN’s Democracy Fund, to support grassroots democracy around the world. Since leaving the UN, I have set up the Electoral Integrity Initiative with a group of concerned organizations and individuals who seek to promote the legitimacy of elections as a fundamental pillar of democratic practice. The Kofi Annan Foundation and its partners have just held regional conferences in Latin American and Southeast Asia, which highlighted the challenges democracy faces in those regions, but also peoples’ commitment to its ideals.

We have to admit that democracy is experiencing a crisis of confidence. Not only does it face increasingly assertive opponents, but growing numbers of its beneficiaries either take it for granted, or else doubt its merits. Much has been made of reports by Larry Diamond, of the Economist Intelligence Unit and Freedom House, that democratic freedoms have been in retreat for eleven straight years in many parts of the world, with the emergence of an increasing number of elected authoritarians. But even in democracy’s historic heartlands, we are witnessing a shift in the perceptions and practice of democracy evidenced by ever lower levels of voter participation, falling membership of political parties and declining trust in politicians and institutions. According to Pew, less than a fifth of the American population trust their federal government to do the right thing most of the time. It used to be three fourths in 1958. The U.S. Congress, for its part, has a 69% negative rating. This is based on the perception that democracy isn’t delivering. Governments appear powerless in the face of such challenges as the Euro crisis, the migration crisis, or the debt crisis.

Elections have become almost universal since the end of the Cold War. Yet in many countries where elections are held, freedom and democracy are actually in retreat. Intended as mechanisms for the peaceful arbitration of political rivalries, they frequently become flashpoints for political violence. At the core of these paradoxes are elections without integrity. All too often, elections serve merely to give autocratic regimes a veneer of legitimacy. But elections without integrity cannot provide the winners with legitimacy, the losers with security and the public with confidence in their leaders and institutions. This makes polities fragile as it encourages disgruntled groups to find other, less constructive, channels for the expression of their discontent.

This has set the scene for the resurgence of populism—charismatic individuals or fake prophets promising simplistic solutions to people’s grievances through radical policies that dismiss institutions and laws as either irrelevant or inconvenient.

What are the factors driving these challenges to democracy? I see at least three.

First, growing inequality within countries. The uneven benefits of globalization are dividing societies into winners and losers on an unprecedented scale. Global markets are creating billionaires, whilst the incomes of the middle and working classes in developed countries have stagnated and their livelihoods are becoming ever more vulnerable to technological change and global competition. Compounding inequality, increasingly integrated financial markets have allowed globalization’s footloose winners to park their profits in tax havens, while the tax burden on the middle class continues to rise. Aristotle himself stressed the importance of the middle class for the sustainability of democracy. When wealth is too concentrated, the polity becomes vulnerable to oligarchy. If there are too many poor, the polity can degenerate into populism, disorder and the confiscation of private property. The middle class is the backbone of a democracy and Aristotle advocated that it should always far outnumber both the poor and the rich. The threat to the middle class is therefore a threat to our political systems themselves.

Second, governments are looking increasingly powerless in the face of the imperatives of the global economy and the ever-growing web of regional and global agreements they have entered into. In Greece, for example, the inability of Syriza to overturn the EU’s austerity policies despite the party’s popular mandate to do so no doubt created a sense of disillusionment. I think that the management of the 2008 Great Recession has increased suspicions that democratic governments have been captured by special interests. Whilst the US government was spending trillions in bailing out the big banks, for example, millions of American families lost their homes. In Greece, there is a widespread perception that the EU prioritized the protection of the big European banks’ balance sheets over the protection of the Greek population, whose incomes fell by about a third. We are not here to debate the economic arguments of the decisions that were made, but I think the political price of those priorities was high.

Finally, there is a crisis of effectiveness. Democratic government is compared unfavorably with the concurrent success of authoritarian regimes, which seem to enjoy record rates of growth. Whilst the US government’s plans to overhaul its infrastructure have been stuck in Congress for almost a decade, China has built the Three Gorges Dam and thousands of miles of new railways and roads. People—especially in developing countries that are struggling to overcome poverty and low growth—look at these achievements and wonder whether democratic governance, at least in its Western incarnation, really delivers.

These are all real and serious problems that we cannot dismiss, lest the populists of both left and right continue to gain ground. Be that as it may, we need to put these concerns into historical perspective. The setbacks of the last decade have to be set against remarkable gains since the end of the Second World War, when there were only twelve fully-fledged democracies. Today there are 117, and elections, however flawed, have become almost universal, illustrating the power of legitimacy they offer. We should not forget that liberal democracy almost died in the 1930s, but the liberal democracies eventually defeated Nazism, Fascism and Communism. Democracy is therefore arguably the most successful political system the world has ever seen. Polls show that most people around the world aspire to more freedom, more rule of law, more accountability and more say in politics. In short, democracy remains a universal aspiration.

Why? Because it actually delivers. Of the twenty countries with the highest levels of human development as measured by the UN’s human development index, nineteen are liberal democracies. Among the top forty, thirty-six are liberal democracies. And even the citizens of poorer democracies live, on average, nine years longer than citizens of poor autocracies, because they have better access to health and education. Democracies are also less vulnerable to famines and conflicts. Most importantly, however, as my friend Amartya Sen has cogently argued, freedom itself is development. Subordination to the caprices of other human beings, rather than to the law, is a source of despair to the human soul.

I am skeptical about the sustainability of authoritarian growth. In most cases, both historically and globally, those regimes become fragile when growth slows or ends, because they have no other sources of legitimacy. So rather than looking for alternatives to liberal democracy, we should instead seek to reform our systems through concrete measures in at least three areas.

First, we need to make our democracies more effective. Much of the debate in our democracies turns on the politics of redistribution and public spending, but not enough on effectiveness. We are trying to solve today’s problems with yesterday’s solutions. We must harness new technologies and management techniques to overhaul the administration of the state to make our democracies less bureaucratic and more responsive to families and individuals, especially those who cannot afford high-priced lawyers and lobbyists.

Second, we need to tackle inequality, both economic and political. As I have said, increasing inequality is one of the drivers of resentment, especially since economic inequality leads to political inequalities as well, as several studies have confirmed. There is a growing perception that the priorities of the extremely wealthy take precedence over the wellbeing of the middle class thanks to campaign contributions and lobbying. At the other end of the spectrum, the poor and minorities are, or at least feel, excluded from the political system. Governments must respond by redistributing fairly the benefits of globalization by restricting tax avoidance and evasion schemes, and most importantly, discouraging tax havens. Fortunately, democracy is one of the only systems in which the concerns of the majority can overturn the interests of the wealthy if the majority harnesses the mechanisms at their disposal. But this demands more participation, not less.

This means that we need to make our democracies more inclusive. This requires bold and innovative reforms to bring in the young, the poor and minorities into the political system. An interesting idea put forward by one of your speakers this week, Mr. David Van Reybrouck, would be to reintroduce the ancient Greek practice of selecting parliaments by lot instead of election. In other words, parliamentarians would no longer be nominated by political parties, but chosen at random for a limited term, in the way many jury systems work. This would prevent the formation of self-serving and self-perpetuating political classes disconnected from their electorates.

Third and finally, we need to champion democracy. The victory over Nazism, fascism and Communism were also ideological struggles that were won on the battlefield of ideas as well. Yet many of the tools of that battle have been abandoned or are underfunded today. Democracy’s enemies are spending billions to undermine it, both in practice and through misinformation. In a world of alternative facts, who do we believe? We know that armies of state-financed trolls are creating AstroTurf movements to sow the seeds of mistrust and disunity to weaken our democracies. We must not let them win by abdication. Democracies have to reclaim the lost ground by defending and promoting liberal ideas, just as they did against democracy’s past ideological enemies.

Athenian democracy illustrates that practice never meets the ideal–women could not vote and slavery was common practice. Moreover, ancient Athenian democracy was sometimes hijacked by oligarchies, reminding us that democracy is vulnerable. We should remember that democracy is always a work in progress. But a system created thousands of years ago continues to inspire democrats throughout the world today. We must cherish, reform and defend democracy, or else it may be lost for future generations. As another great democrat who drew inspiration from ancient Athens, Thomas Jefferson,

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