Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

American Democracy Will Remain a Mirage Without a Dramatic Overhaul of the Political and Economic System – CADTM.org

Consider the following stark realizations about the condition of American democracy as evidence of the changing times:

The United States has been rated for a number of consecutive years by the Economist Intelligence Union as a flawed democracy.

Scores of highly respected mainstream scholars have analyzed massive amounts of data showing that public opinion counts very little in US policymaking (see, for example, Larry Bartels, Unequal Democracy: The Political Economy of the New Gilded Age; Princeton University Press, 2nd ed., 2016) to conclude that the American political system works essentially in a manner that actually subverts the will of the common people.

Others, like Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz, have argued that, because of rules set in the political system, the American economy is rigged to favor the rich, a view that is obviously wholeheartedly endorsed by Kishore Mahbubani, Distinguished Fellow from Asia Research Institute, at the National University of Singapore, when he declares that the US functions like a democracy but is actually a plutocracy.

And Timothy K. Kuhner, Professor of Law at the University of Auckland, has gone even further by arguing most convincingly in Kings Law Journal that the United States isnt only a plutocracy, but the only plutocracy in the world to be established by law.

To a large extent, of course, the structural flaws in the American political system have their origins in the many anti-democratic elements found in the Constitution. This is the view of eminent constitutional scholars such Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean and Distinguished Professor of Law at Berkeley Law School, and Sanford Levinson, W. St. John Garwood and W. St. John Garwood, Jr. Centennial Chair in Law at the University of Texas Law School, and author of Our Undemocratic Constitution (Oxford University Press, 2006).

Lets start with one of the basic principles of democracy which is one person, one vote. It is not applicable to the case of American democracy where US presidents are chosen by electors, not by popular vote. Hence the democratic anomaly of a candidate elected to become the 45th president of the United States after having lost the popular vote by a bigger margin than any other US president. Indeed, Donald Trump was elected president by trailing Hillary Clinton by nearly three million votes.The same thing happened in 2000, when Al Gore won nearly half a million more votes than George W. Bush, but it was Bush who won the presidency by being declared winner in the state of Florida by less than 540 votes.

In any other modern democratic system, such electoral outcomes would be imaginable only if democracy was crushed by some kind of a military coup with the aim of installing in power the preferred candidate of the ruling class.

To be sure, there is nothing in the Constitution that grants American voters the right to choose their president. When American voters go to the polls to vote for a presidential candidate, what they are essentially doing is casting a vote for their preferred partys nominated slate of electors.

The electoral college system is democracys ugliest anachronism. It was designed by the founding fathers in order to prevent the masses from choosing directly who will run the country, and its simply shocking that it still exists more than two hundred years later.

The existence of the electoral college system also helps to explain why voter turnout for the presidential elections in the worlds most outdated democratic model is consistently disturbingly low. More than 90 million eligible voters did not vote in the 2016 presidential election, in what was considered to be one of the most important elections in many generations because of the inflammatory and racist rhetoric of Donald Trump, and while there was a bigger turnout in 2020, the US is still incredibly low compared with other advanced democratic nations around the world when it comes to electoral participation, ranking 31st out of 35 developed countries in 2016, and 24th in 2020, respectively.

The existence of the two-party system (yet another democratic anomaly), and even the fact that elections are being held on a day when most people work, are also reasons for the low voter turnout in the US.

In addition, one could also argue that the reason why so many Americans are abstaining from voting, a cornerstone of democracy, is intrinsically related to the long-stemming pathologies of the American political culture, namely due to the manufacturing of a highly individualistic and consumer-driven society intended to promote conformism, ignorance and apathy about public affairs all while the rich and powerful control policymaking.

However, an even bigger democratic anomaly than the presence of the electoral college system revolves around US senate representation. A tiny state such as Wyoming, with barely 600,000 residents, has the same number of Senators on Capitol Hill as does California, with nearly 40 million residents. This translates, roughly, to Wyoming voters having 70 times more Senate representation than California voters. Moreover, since most of the smaller states have overwhelmingly white residents, it also means that whites have much larger representation in the Senate than Black and Hispanic Americans.

The undemocratic nature of Senate representation might not have been such a huge problem if its powers were similar to those of upper houses found in many other countries in the world, which tend to be overwhelmingly less than those of the lower houses. In the US, however, the Senate is far more powerful than the House of Representatives as it has virtually complete control over federal legislating and acts as the gatekeeper on treaties, cabinet approvals, and nominations to the Supreme Court.

Yet, perhaps an even bigger insult and injury to the body politic and the promotion of the common good in the U.S. is the privatization of democracy through the role of money in campaigns and elections. Campaign finance laws in the U.S. always posed at least an indirect threat to democracy by allowing private money to play a very prominent role in the financing of elections, but the 2010 Supreme Court ruling in Citizens United vs Federal Election Commission, which shifted even further the influence of dark money on politics by reversing whatever campaign finance restrictions were still in place and essentially declaring that corporations were effectively citizens and thus could spend unlimited funds on elections, robbed America of whatever hopes and aspirations it may have had of attaining a somewhat well-functioning democratic political system.

Taking everything into account, it is clear that, even though the United States remains a free and open society, conditions which have allowed greater exposure and by extension more public awareness of the structural flaws in the countrys political system, the progressive forces fighting for a democratic future have a truly herculean task ahead of them.

While changing the constitution, creating a multiparty system, and fighting the corrupting influence of money in politics are absolute necessities for democracy to functionjust as surely as a Green New Deal is an absolute must to protect the environment and save the planet the anti-democratic forces of this country are working even harder these days to destroy whatever is left of American democracy.

Republicans are bent on restricting voting rights as part of a concerted effort to change the rules in a way that they will impact on the demographic shifts favoring the Democrats. The campaign for restrictive voting legislation goes all the way back to the end of the 20th century, so what we are witnessing today is just a new wave of intensification to roll back decades of progress on voting rights.

The thoroughly anti-democratic and racist mindset of Republican Senators could not have been more glaringly revealed than with their recent use of a Jim Crow relicthe filibusterto block the most extensive voting rights bill in a generation. Now, activists are concentrating on eliminating the filibuster, which, naturally, should have no place in a normal democracy.

Yet, eliminating the filibuster while everything else stays the same in connection with the workings of the American political system and its institutions carries certain undeniable risks given that the most reactionary and outright proto-fascist forces in todays political universe are feverishly working on retaking powerfirst in the 2022 midterm elections, and then in 2024, in the presidential elections. As such, progressives should never lose sight of the importance of always maintaining a multi-level strategy for addressing and hopefully fixing the nations outdated political system and rigged economy.

Indeed, the American political system needs a dramatic overhaul due to its many structural flaws. Without one, American democracy will remain a mirage.

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American Democracy Will Remain a Mirage Without a Dramatic Overhaul of the Political and Economic System - CADTM.org

How Wyden’s River Democracy Act will help fight wildfires and climate change – American Rivers

Senior Director Wild and Scenic Rivers and Public Lands Policy

Even as much of Oregon has barely begun the recovery process from last years catastrophic wildfires, this years fire season has gotten off to an early and ominous start. The Pomina fire in drought-stricken Klamath County started in mid-April is yet another sign that wildfires all across the West are starting earlier, burning hotter across larger areas, and burning later into the year than ever before. As of writing this post, according to the Oregon Department of Forestry, 350 individual fires have already sparked across our state.

In a recent Instagram post, Oregon Senator Ron Wyden wrote, This fire season has the potential to be the most devastating in our nations history. The climate crisis is here, and were living it. The threats are so severe that Senator Wyden and fellow Oregon Senator Jeff Merkley have already sent a letter to federal agencies pressing them to ensure our state has the resources it needs to fight these fires and keep communities safe.

Help us make the world a better place by signing up for opportunities to take action for rivers, clean water and the lives that depend on them.

Thankfully, Oregons senators have already been at work crafting legislation to bolster wildland firefighting and resources. In February, Senators Wyden and Merkley introduced federal legislation the River Democracy Act that will more than triple Oregons Wild and Scenic river miles and in doing so also strengthen wildfire preparedness statewide. On June 23, the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources held a hearing on the bill, moving it one step closer to protecting more than 4,600 miles of Wild and Scenic rivers in Oregon.

The River Democracy Act provides for stronger wildfire risk assessment and planning for homes and businesses near Wild and Scenic rivers, greater inter-agency coordination in fighting wildfire including with Native American Tribes, and more federal resources to repair wildfire damage to infrastructure, drinking water quality, and watersheds. The bill also provides $30,000,000 annually for Wild and Scenic Rivers that provide drinking water for downstream communities or those that have been degraded by catastrophic wildfire.

Most of us associate Wild and Scenic River designations with protecting the natural, recreational, cultural and ecological values of these waters and we should. We should also understand the critical importance of national Wild and Scenic River designations as a tool to help us prepare and protect against an ever-increasing combined threat from catastrophic wildfire, warming climate, drought cycles and more people in harms way. Healthy, resilient rivers lead to healthy, resilient communities and the importance of these life-giving rivers only becomes more vital in the face of climate change and fire seasons like the one were looking at this year.

But you dont have to take my word for it. Over the next several weeks, well be sharing guest posts from people who have been and still are on the front lines.

Stay tuned and stay safe.

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How Wyden's River Democracy Act will help fight wildfires and climate change - American Rivers

LETTER: Attacks on voting rights threaten democracy | Letters To The Editor | newburyportnews.com – The Daily News of Newburyport

To the editor:

As we all know, if we listen to the commentators who support former President Donald Trump, the Democrats stole the 2020 election and President Joe Biden is not the legitimate president.

What you will not hear is exactly how this was done.

Having been a poll worker in New Hampshire watching the registration process, check-in procedure and private voting booths monitored by members of both political parties and independents, I cannot figure out how this was done.

The mail-in ballots come in two separate envelopes with the outer envelope establishing authenticity of name and address, and checked against voter rolls.

The legitimacy of the vote was challenged in multiple states and argued in front of 60 judges, many appointed by Trump. In each case, the judge asked for evidence, and none was provided.

It has become apparent that the Republican Party has morphed into a cult-like organization with no problem targeting our democracy itself.

This big lie perpetuated about the 2020 election is now being used as the foundation for new restrictive voting laws. Many ominously replace a secretary of state responsible for voting security with partisan legislatures.

Americans who ignore what is happening do so at their peril.

Our democracy can disappear overnight, leaving us with the question: How did this happen?

John Mosto

Salem, N.H.

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LETTER: Attacks on voting rights threaten democracy | Letters To The Editor | newburyportnews.com - The Daily News of Newburyport

Should India Be Included in Biden’s Democracy Alliance? – Bloomberg

U.S. President Joe Biden claims that he warned Russian leader Vladimir Putin at their meeting in Geneva last week that human rights is always going to be on the table when dealing with his administration. He also threatened Russia with devastating consequences if opposition activist Alexey Navalny were to die in a Russian prison.

Criticizing the assault on media freedoms and human rights in Russia and China has long been an American political reflex. Indeed, Bidens insistent rhetoric that democracy is in a global contest with autocracy marks him as one of the U.S. leaders intellectually conditioned by the Cold Wars simple oppositions.

However, a more severe and unfamiliar test for Bidens foreign policy looms: whether he will be equally keen to put human rights on the table with India, a key member of the democratic coalition he wants to rally.

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Critics of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi raised this thorny question even before Biden was inaugurated. They say that Indias slide into illiberalism should be called out no less than Turkeys or Hungarys.

Modis government and its supporters havent made things any easier for Biden with their continued campaign unprecedented in India against writers, journalists and intellectuals. Just last week, the government threatened to withdraw Twitter Inc.s liability protections for failing to comply with new social media guidelines.

Soon thereafter, police in the state of Uttar Pradesh, run by Modis Bharatiya Janata Party, registered a criminal complaint against Twitter and several journalists including a Washington Post columnist for reporting the claims made by a Muslim victim of mob violence.

Of course, there has long been a bipartisan consensus in Washington that India is a critical ally in its attempt to check Chinese influence in Asia. In overlooking the Modi governments excesses, Biden probably counts on support from a U.S. foreign policy establishment invested more in realpolitik than human rights.

Double standards similarly shadowed proclamations of human rights and democracy during the Cold War. Successive administrations from Eisenhower onwards collaborated with some atrocious regimes while claiming to defend the democratic free world against communist autocracy.

But the world was, and felt like, a very different place then, before the communications revolution that transformed how billions of people see themselves and their place in the world.

The U.S. enjoyed global hegemony for decades, cultural as well as geopolitical and military, and was usually able to impose its own interpretations of the events it shaped diplomatically and militarily.

The then-alternative global sources of information and analysis such as Pravda, Tass and Peoples Daily had none of the propagandistic elan and vigor of Russias RT and Chinas Global Times today, let alone Twitter and Facebook bubbles and WhatsApp groups. The U.S. political and economic system seemed superior even to many of its distant victims.

Post-Donald Trump, the U.S. now faces close and hostile examination of its domestic and foreign policies. It is struggling to renovate its tarnished image abroad, rebuilding in the ruins of broken treaties and commitments. It is also engaged, more crucially, in a battle for democracy at home, as one of its two major political parties seems intent on undermining voting rights and other democratic institutions.

Biden must also contend with a rising number of critics in his own party. Legislators on the left of the Democratic Party such as Pramila Jayapal and Ro Khanna have been vocal critics of Modi. Vice President Kamala Harris as well as Sen. Bernie Sanders spoke out against Modis crackdown on the Muslim-majority valley of Kashmir; they will find it difficult to remain silent if democratic norms are further eroded in India.

The U.S. foreign policy establishment would also find it hard to keep counterposing Indian democracy to Chinese authoritarianism if the state continues to go after writers and journalists especially those affiliated to American periodicals, universities and think tanks.

Biden seems weirdly oblivious to these fresh complexities as he echoes a Cold War rhetoric from the 1970s and 80s. The White House correspondent of the New York Times notedin him a stubborn optimism that critics say borders on worrisome naivete.

Such optimism is surely laudable, as is Bidens determination to keep human rights on the table. But he needs to combine it with principled realism, breaking free of obsolete geopolitical certainties just as boldly as he has overturned decades of economic dogma.

This means putting fundamental rights on the table everywhere, at home as well as abroad, with new friends such as India no less than old adversaries such as Russia and China.

Certainly, an old posture of American moral superiority will convince very few people. To some, it will indeed make the new administration seem worryingly naive to others, depressingly cynical.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:Pankaj Mishra at pmishra24@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:Nisid Hajari at nhajari@bloomberg.net

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.

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Should India Be Included in Biden's Democracy Alliance? - Bloomberg

Trump may have damaged democracy beyond repair; Missouri is embarrassing; and other top letters – STLtoday.com

I recently visited friends in St. Louis and sadly found it to be a much different place from when I graduated from Washington University Law School nearly 50 years ago. I still have great affection for St. Louis and read the Post-Dispatch regularly. However, I continue to see Missouris serious problems dominate the headlines.

St. Louis leads the nation in murders, Missouri leads the nation in coronavirus cases per capita. It ranks 49th in state aid to public schools and 50th in tobacco taxes. Centene threatens to leave and calls Missouris Medicaid decision an embarrassment. St. Louis has grown 0% in the last decade (as goes St. Louis, so goes Missouri). And a 35-year-veteran police chief in OFallon resigned over Missouris new gun law.

Yet, Missouri elected officials exacerbate the problems. They spend their time declaring federal gun laws invalid, banning abortions after eight weeks, overturning Medicaid expansion, eliminating the motorcycle helmet requirement law, reducing funding for public education, and trying (but failing) to create Rush Limbaugh Day.

And that doesnt even include Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitts spurious lawsuits against China, Google, Facebook, federal immigration policies, the Pennsylvania presidential election results, and St. Louis County over its pandemic public health orders. Missouri has become the laughing stock of the nation, but these are no laughing matters.

Stephen Fishman Laguna Beach, Calif.

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Trump may have damaged democracy beyond repair; Missouri is embarrassing; and other top letters - STLtoday.com