Britain’s Democratic Failure
Project Syndicate | 24 June 2016
CAMBRIDGE
– The real lunacy of the United Kingdom’s vote to leave the European Union was
not that British leaders dared to ask their populace to weigh the benefits of
membership against the immigration pressures it presents. Rather, it was the
absurdly low bar for exit, requiring only a simple majority. Given voter
turnout of 70%, this meant that the leave campaign won with only 36% of
eligible voters backing it.
This isn’t democracy; it is Russian roulette
for republics. A decision of enormous consequence – far greater even than
amending a country’s constitution (of course, the United Kingdom lacks a
written one) – has been made without any appropriate checks and balances.
Does the vote have to be repeated after a
year to be sure? No. Does a majority in Parliament have to support Brexit?
Apparently not. Did the UK’s population really know what they were voting on?
Absolutely not. Indeed, no one has any idea of the consequences, both for the
UK in the global trading system, or the effect on domestic political stability.
I am afraid it is not going to be a pretty picture.
Mind you, citizens of the West are blessed
to live in a time of peace: changing circumstances and priorities can be
addressed through democratic processes instead of foreign and civil wars. But
what, exactly, is a fair, democratic process for making irreversible,
nation-defining decisions? Is it really enough to get 52% to vote for breakup
on a rainy day?
In terms of durability and conviction of
preferences, most societies place greater hurdles in the way of a couple
seeking a divorce than Prime Minister David Cameron’s government did on the
decision to leave the EU. Brexiteers did not invent this game; there is ample
precedent, including Scotland in 2014 and Quebec in 1995. But, until now, the
gun’s cylinder never stopped on the bullet. Now that it has, it is time to
rethink the rules of the game.
The idea that somehow any decision reached
anytime by majority rule is necessarily “democratic” is a perversion of the
term. Modern democracies have evolved systems of checks and balances to protect
the interests of minorities and to avoid making uninformed decisions with
catastrophic consequences. The greater and more lasting the decision, the
higher the hurdles.
That’s why enacting, say, a constitutional
amendment generally requires clearing far higher hurdles than passing a
spending bill. Yet the current international standard for breaking up a country
is arguably less demanding than a vote for lowering the drinking age.
With Europe now facing the risk of a slew of
further breakup votes, an urgent question is whether there is a better way to
make these decisions. I polled several leading political scientists to see whether
there is any academic consensus; unfortunately, the short answer is no.
For one thing, the Brexit decision may have
looked simple on the ballot, but in truth no one knows what comes next after a
leave vote. What we do know is that, in practice, most countries require a
“supermajority” for nation-defining decisions, not a mere 51%. There is no
universal figure like 60%, but the general principle is that, at a bare
minimum, the majority ought to be demonstrably stable. A country should not be
making fundamental, irreversible changes based on a razor-thin minority that
might prevail only during a brief window of emotion. Even if the UK economy
does not fall into outright recession after this vote (the pound’s decline
might cushion the initial blow), there is every chance that the resulting
economic and political disorder will give some who voted to leave “buyers’
remorse.”
Since ancient times, philosophers have tried
to devise systems to try to balance the strengths of majority rule against the
need to ensure that informed parties get a larger say in critical decisions,
not to mention that minority voices are heard. In the Spartan assemblies of
ancient Greece, votes were cast by acclamation. People
could modulate their voice to reflect the intensity of their preferences, with
a presiding officer carefully listening and then declaring the outcome. It was
imperfect, but maybe better than what just happened in the UK.
By some accounts, Sparta’s sister state,
Athens, had implemented the purest historical example of democracy. All classes
were given equal votes (albeit only males). Ultimately, though, after some
catastrophic war decisions, Athenians saw a need to give more power to
independent bodies.
The UK vote has thrown Europe into turmoil.
A lot will depend on how the world reacts and how the UK government manages to
reconstitute itself. It is important to take stock not just of the outcome,
though, but of the process. Any action to redefine a long-standing arrangement
on a country’s borders ought to require a lot more than a simple majority in a
one-time vote. The current international norm of simple majority rule is, as we
have just seen, a formula for chaos.
What should the UK have done if the
question of EU membership had to be asked (which by the way, it didn’t)?
Surely, the hurdle should have been a lot higher; for example, Brexit should
have required, say, two popular votes spaced out over at least two years,
followed by a 60% vote in the House of Commons. If Brexit still prevailed, at
least we could know it was not just a one-time snapshot of a fragment of the
population.
Awl-wee, they did it the Hun Sen's way!!! See, world leaders do take example from PM Hun Sen how to get things done quickly. ("O")
ReplyDeleteWhat -- the Globalists Order is coming unravel for them now?
Or is it part of their scheme so they can have a pity-party of crying fowl play and is not so democratic what the Conservative did?
Or since the EU is bent on dividing the land of Israel for the Palestinian sake, God stepped in and divided the EU as a judgment on them for messing with God's prophetic plan concerning Israel?
Either ways -- democracy end is in sight! Satan's kingdom will crumble and world rulers will cry out to the mountains to fall on them to cover them from the wrath of the Mighty One of Israel.
God is not a Democrat
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