Just Finished Reading: How Democracy Ends by David Runciman (FP: 2018) [224pp]
Thinking about the end of Democracy is almost as difficult as thinking about the end of Capitalism. Although Democracy has a long history, going way back to the ancient Greek city of Athens, in its recognisable modern form it’s only a few hundred years old or, if you take it as only valid under universal franchise, around 100 years old in most western nations. Clearly Democracy wasn’t the normal form of government for most of human history and there will, inevitably, be a time after Democracy just as there was a LONG time before it. But how exactly will Democracy end? That’s what this fascinating little book hopes to answer – or at least meaningfully speculate about.
The author essentially puts forward 4 scenarios where
Democracy fails in some fashion. The first is in a Coup. The author considers
the odds of any established democracy anywhere in the world falling to a coup
to be very low indeed. He even states that “No democracy has reverted to
military rule once GDP is greater than $8,000 per person”. I don’t know if
that’s true but it wouldn’t hugely surprise me. Coups can only be successful
when a population has little or no investment – in all its senses – in their
government or the structure of the state. It is difficult indeed even
conceiving of anywhere where democracy has set down roots that such a thing
could occur. The problem I can think of here is exactly how you define the
regimes across the world as democratic – Turkey? Egypt? Chile? – and exactly
how deeply the democratic impulse is. How easy is it, for example, to point to
a country and say “Well, they’re not really a democracy” or “Well, they haven’t
been a democracy LONG enough for it really to take hold”. As always it’s all
about where you draw the line. But generally speaking I’d say the author is
right. A modern coup in a democratic state is highly unlikely (and the results
are probably short lived before democracy comes back).
The second scenario is Catastrophe. When nasty substances
hit fans there can be little time or little incentive to vote on the response.
But, if history tells us anything is that people still vote in even the direst
times. After all we voted in BOTH World Wars, we’ve voted in global recessions
and global pandemics and I think it would take a LOT for elections to be
postponed or shelved for the length of any emergency. The only way that I think
something like that could happen would be after a truly MAJOR catastrophe –
like a nuclear war or large asteroid strike – in other words something that was
an existential threat. But even in those cases, as long as we survive as a
species or functioning society/civilisation, any suspension of the democratic
process would most probably be a temporary one. Again if people have any great
investment in a state they will inevitably want a say and an influence in how
that state is run and how it affects their lives. I doubt if a non-democratic
state could last long in these circumstances.
The third scenario is Technological Takeover. By this the
author doesn’t mean the advent of Terminator style machines eliminating the
electorate on mass but the subversion of electorates by the mega tech companies
like Facebook, Google and their cohorts. If people can be convinced to ‘express
themselves’ through Likes and re-tweets rather than actually voting for real
people who have actual real policies then democracy could be undermined to an
extent that people stop caring, stop bothering to vote or taking much interest
in politics outside their own particular micro-bubbles online. Flame wars and
Twitter storms might be an amusing way to pass time during a boring meeting but
democracy it isn’t. Until recently I would’ve said that this was a much more
likely outcome than the first two. But events, not just in the present US
election but across the world, have made me more confident that people just
won’t settle for a quick tweet or an Instagram post and feel like they’ve done
‘their part’ or even achieved anything. People are still willing and able to
put their phones down long enough to make some badly written signs and get out
there and protest. It’s even likely, I suggest, that technology can actually
strengthen and deepen democracies as we move beyond a simple candidate vote
every 4-5 years to secure local or national referendums on a whole host of
issues that can be tallied almost instantly – and publically – to test the
temperature of the larger electorate.
The last scenario is if Something Better comes along. Some,
like Nick Land, propose a kind of national corporation where ex-citizens become
little more than customers for products, services and anything else that is
presently provided for by government. We would, in effect, ‘vote’ by using our
choices and purchase power. Of course there is a real alternative to democracy
right now on the opposite side of the world – China. Could that be the future
just around the corner for the rest of us? Maybe. Pragmatic 21st
century Authoritarianism, like we are beginning to see in some unexpected
places, might be what enough people want without the burden of political
activity or conflict. Could we instead move towards as Epistocracy – a system
based on knowledge rather than citizenship? Or an Aristocracy – in the Greek
sense – a society run by ‘the best’ for the rest of us (how you choose ‘the
best’ is a whole other issue of course!). Certainly Liberal Democracy isn’t
necessarily part of the fabled ‘End of History’.
5 comments:
there's a fifth scenario, i'll bet, or maybe even a sixth. what if one corporation owns everything and then refuses to sell anything to itself and everyone starves to death. or if the planet heats up to 150 degrees and there's not enough ice to go around... (i'm only being partly facetious...)
I definitely think that Democracy - as we understand it - isn't going anywhere any time soon. No matter what happens in the US on Nov 3rd. Politics is essentially all about the allocation of scarce resources. If we ever get to the fabled 'Post-Scarcity' world then maybe Democracy, along with all other political systems, will simply be pointless and fade away..... We can but dream!
Those all sound like sudden, dramatic failures. My suspicion is that it's far easier for democracies to corrode into functional autocracies or oligarchies as the system itself becomes increasingly complex, subject to conflicts, etc. As burueacratic dysfunction increases, smaller subsets are given more independence either by authorization or the lack of effective oversight...and an on-paper democracy can thus become...not-a-democracy.
BTW, I thought the accepted answer to "How do democracies die" was "With thunderous applause". ;-)
I think there will always be a certain percentage of people who don't fall in line, who keep the ideas of freedom and choice alive, who care about their fellow man. Even if the climate caused civilization to collapse, eventually it would grow up again. But it is a good thought experiment to consider these issues.
@ Stephen: It's quite possible that Democracy might just fade away as a society or civilisation slowly turns its back on the idea until people literally don't know what you're talking about when you suggest they vote on something. It'd be a very strange world from our PoV though! My guess is that AI will slowly take up a lot of the burden so people don't see much point in voting/representing because the machines can always do it better.
I was going to put that Star Wars meme in the post but decided against it. The best part of an appalling bad movie I think!
@ Judy: I think the Democracy will be around - at least somewhere - for a LONG time yet! I can only see it disappearing completely when either no one cares or its become irrelevant. But we'll have to wait for the fabled 'post-scarcity' world for that to happen!
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