However Americans just voted, they can be in absolutely no doubt that the 2024 election was the most important ever. That, after all, is what both candidates have ceaselessly been telling them. For Kamala Harris, this is “one of the most consequential elections of our lifetime”. Donald Trump would surely not disagree. “She’s a Marxist, communist, fascist, socialist,” he’s warned about his Democratic opponent. “We must stop her country-destroying liberal agenda once and for all.”
Of course, these frantic proclamations make sense electorally: what better way of rallying the troops than monstering the enemy? Nor are they entirely wrong — whatever your politics, it’s clear that Harris and Trump represent, from economics to citizenship, two vastly different visions of the nation. Yet whatever happens over the next few days, I’d nonetheless argue that these scrambling attempts to save Americans from themselves are missing the point. For amid the ceaseless howls about guns or abortion, what everyone ignores is that our very Constitution is rotting at the roots. Until we pull it out, and start again, our democracy will continue to wither.
Until recently, Americans on both sides of the aisle wallowed in US exceptionalism, the idea that we represented the greatest democracy in the history of the world. Like most national myths, that inevitably involved some fudging. Yes, American democracy excluded a lot of people in the early days. But so did every other representative political system. Sure, America had seen its fair share of demagogues, from Huey Long to Dubya. But in the immortal words of Martin Luther King, this was also the country where the right to protest was sacred.
Seen from this angle, all that hand-wringing about our democratic discontent can feel like an aberration — or even shamefully un-American. The irony here is that these fears ignore the anti-democratic strain that’s thrived in our politics since the founding. As far back as 1776, after all, John Adams argued against expanding the franchise in his native Massachusetts, warning that it would eventually “prostrate” all ranks to a single level. Heaven forbid, Adams added for good measure, that children or even women should get the chance to vote.
Nor was he alone. In Federalist 10, for instance, James Madison rejected a “pure democracy” — by which he meant direct rule by citizens, claiming that such societies become “spectacles of turbulence and contention”. Like Adams, moreover, Madison expressed particular reservations about the dangers comprehensive democracy could pose to property. “Those who hold and those who are without property,” he says, “have ever formed distinct interests in society.” Even Thomas Jefferson, arguably the most democratic of the Founding Fathers, remained confident that there was a “natural aristocracy” which the best kind of government selected for high office.
These ideas endured long after the early republic of frock coats and periwigs vanished into history. From the mid-1820s, for instance, Vice President John C. Calhoun worried that an abolitionist populous North might one day wield excessive political power over the slaveholding South. And though these fears were clearly partly motivated by grubby sociopolitical realities — a South Carolinian, Calhoun owned some 50 slaves himself — he equally couched his concerns in the high-minded constitutional principle. In his A Disquisition on Government, for instance, he warned against the dangers of an “absolute democracy” which holds that a mere “numerical majority” should rule. This, in turn, would facilitate an egalitarian push, whereby the majority would attempt to “force the front rank back to the rear, or attempt to push forward the rear into line with the front” through the “interposition of government”.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
Subscribe“ “common good need not justify itself before the bar of democracy” ”
….and haven’t our, modern day, rulers taken that to heart. Denouncing the ‘fash-ists’, all the while enacting, and behaving, more and more like the very people they deride.
The US system of government has its flaws, but so do most democracies. In much of Europe and Canada parties that receive less than 40% or even 30% of the popular vote coalitions with other parties to become the government. This way the governing party will have been against the choice of some 2/3 of the electorate.
By the same token though in PR at least a majority voted for at least one of the parties in government. Other countries also tend to have many more parties to choose from which splits the vote somewhat, you’ll rarely get any party winning much more than a third of the vote
Matt should sue whoever printed out his diploma for malpractice. He clearly was completely uneducated. America is a Constitutional Representative Republic. Matt, please GFY.
We are not, nor should we ever be, a democracy. Western Europe is allegedly democratic, yet its citizens wake up daily eith fewer and fewer rights. And just roll over and take it. Because the democratic government says their rights are a danger to democracy. Matt is a pathetic example of the difference between being educated and being wise.
What rights do Americans have that Britain for example doesn’t?
Granted you can buy a load of guns to shoot up the local school (something that isn’t really possible in Britain), but Brits on the other hand can be trusted to drink a pint at 18, buy their kids a kinder egg and cross the street without waiting to be told to do so without risking a fine
Umm… How about freedom of speech? We don’t have police showing up at people’s houses arresting them for mean tweets ‘misgendering’ people.
And, yeah – I like my second amendment rights, too.
I wouldn’t trade our first two amendments in the constitution for being able to drink at 18.
18? Pah!
Dunno about the kids these days, but many of us started at 16 (or even younger). We also, due to “getting it out of our system” tend to drink responsibly.
As for democracy, there will never be a ‘perfect’ system, and each has it’s merits and drawbacks. I’d say we’re all probably less democratic than say, 50 years ago, but the idea – mooted in these comments – that those of us in Western Europe “lie down and take it” is arrant nonsense. Here in the UK – the home of the Magna Carta – we lie down before no-one, whatever might be perceived elsewhere.
How did that strict gun legislation do for the young children knifed by a jihadi. How did those protests for the children’s murders go? As for guns being used to shoot up schools, yeah, that is tough. Like the jihad murderer most school shooters appear to have been well known to police, who arrived in minutes when seconds count. The vast majority of gun use in the US is on preventive measures to stop crime, not to commit crime.
The electoral system does seem a stupid way of counting votes.
If a state currently gets 20 electoral votes why not simply divide that State into 20 similarly populated areas (like the UK seats) and give each a vote, rather than giving all 20 to a party despite it possibly only winning 10 or 11 areas?