Just Finished Reading: How Democracies Die – What History Reveals About Our Future by Steven Levitsky & Daniel Ziblatt (FP: 2018) [231pp]
As usual I picked this book up at least a year or more ago (when it came out in paperback) and it has been languishing in a pile ever since. Now seemed a particularly apposite time to pick it up (along with the following 2 books) and read it.
Despite everything happening on both sides of ‘the pond’ I’m
not one of those believers who think that Democracy itself is under any existential
threat nor would I even go so far as to say that it is under crisis. This is
clear, I think, from the amount of engagement – both appropriate and even
inappropriate that’s happening presently with protest marches and much else
besides. I felt that Democracy was far more in danger from the seemingly inexorable
disengagement of a bored and uninterested electorate. You can say many things
about the present state of our Democracies in both the UK and US but you cannot
say that they are boring, uninteresting or that people are generally disengaged
– quite the opposite in fact!
This book was written as a reaction to the election of
Donald Trump that shocked and dismayed so many people on the ‘Left’ of US
politics. The authors – both professors at Harvard – wanted to understand how
such a thing could happen and what it meant for the future of American
democracy. Not only did they look for external examples of failed or failing
Democracies – Pinochet’s Chile and Erdogan’s Turkey – but, rather inevitably,
Italy in the 1920’s and Germany in the 1930’s. They also looked at the historic
examples of both France and Britain in the 1930’s who managed to fight off any
drift into authoritarian or totalitarian regimes there. But their main focus
was the growing erosion and subsequent failure of the American electoral system
to first allow the rise of someone like Trump – and as they point out there had
often been someone like Trump on the fringes of the Republican Party in
particular (with figures like Coughlin, Long, McCarthy and Wallace regularly
winning 30-40% support) – and then actively supporting them within the Party to
the necessary exclusion of moderates and the dismantling of any idea of a ‘broad
church’ approach. The prevention of previous authoritarian demagogues rising to
the top and getting their names on nomination tickets was deeply undemocratic
and generally took place during discussions between the Party grandees in smoke
filled rooms, in private, away from the Press and the electorate – the Party
Machine. As the 1960’s moved into the 1970’s this process became less and less
acceptable and less and less palatable to the public. Ironically, the authors
observed, an increase in democracy has actually put Democracy in peril.
The authors make it very clear that Trump is not an aberration
and is far from unprecedented. What is new is that the Republican Party in
general supported him as much as they did to get him elected. Trump could never
become President on his own as many Independent candidates have found out to
their (dollar) cost. The Party Machine got him elected so even if he leaves office
next January the ‘age of Trump’ style politicians – or even Presidents - may
not be over.
7 comments:
there are lots of idiots in this country... actually, tho, i think a lot of it can be attributed to the failure to educate people even tho 30-40% of them are probably uneducable...
I have said all along during the Trump times that this sort of thing has always been boiling beneath the surface. I think big business was in the back rooms with the machine rather more than has been usual, though it has always been somewhat the case. But yes, we are not strangers to demagoguery here. We do suffer from short memories.
@ Mudpuddle: I think that *actual* stupid people are quite rare. Education is the thing though - not just general education (which I think is regrettably poor in many places) but political education too - which I think they should teach in school as a core subject. Overall I think people should be taught, from a very early age, about reasoning and working out what information is valid and how to spot a bad or fake argument. That alone would make our politics so much better and would force politicians to be much more truthful about what they're doing.
@ Judy: I'd be the first to admit that my knowledge of American politics is scant to say the least. But it does seem that Trump has been a LONG time coming. It does continue to surprise me though at how he got elected (I mean isn't about time you guys ditched the Electoral College?) and how many people support him in the name of Liberty - which Trump clearly doesn't understand the meaning of.
America will only fail when and if it abandons the Constitution, and the Republic that Constitution protects, for a "democracy" that has been shown since the time of Plato and Aristotle to be an unstable form of government. That road leads to tyranny.
@ James: The future of Democracy (if it has any) will be covered in the next book review [grin]
I do agree that this has been a long time coming - though I wish it would not have happened at all. The part that is the most disgusting of all is how they've supported him so wildly. I have already voted and so have so many of my friends. Biden is not our candidate but we have to get trump out of office and right now that is the only viable way forward. We will not survive another four years. I am not being dramatic, I truly believe life will drastically change for the even worse for so many if he gets a second term.
And don't even get me started on the Electoral College. It was supposed to prevent idiots like trump getting elected and completely failed.
@ Sarah: I think Biden is too old but I'd still vote for him. *Anyone* other than Trump basically. I think if/when Trump goes in Nov/Jan it'll take 10 years to fix the damage he's caused. If he wins in Nov it'll take 25 years to fix the damage he'll cause in the next 4 years. The global ramifications to a Trump win just aren't worth thinking about!!
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