PROVIDENCE, 2.1.19
ALAN W. DOWD
The following is the first of a three-part series discussing the
erosion of liberal democracy and how this trend is affecting—and
affected by—both faith and foreign policy.
“Acceptance of democracy as the world’s dominant form of
government—and of an international system built on democratic ideals—is
under greater threat than at any point in the last 25 years,” Freedom
House concludes. Calling democracy “battered and weakened” around the world, Freedom House adds that 71 countries suffered declines in political rights and civil
liberties in the most recent measured year—“the 12th consecutive year of
decline in global freedom.” Equally worrisome, “states that a decade
ago seemed like promising success stories…are sliding into authoritarian
rule.”
This retreat of free government represents a challenge—and a
threat—to America. After all, America laid the groundwork for a liberal
international order founded on political and economic freedom—and
thrives in a world where free governments and free markets flourish.
With America promoting a liberal order, as Robert Kagan observes,
“the balance of power in the world has favored democratic governments.”
The alternative, Kagan warns, is a world where “great-power
autocracies” undermine democratic norms, where there are “fewer
democratic transitions and more autocrats hanging on to power,” where
free government is on the defensive. Welcome to 2019. How did we get
here, and how do we reverse this troubling trend?
Qualifiers
Before answering those questions, it’s important to spend a moment on
the connective tissue between our faith and our form of government.
To be sure, the Bible doesn’t use the phrase “representative
democracy.” However, there are references to representative-style bodies
in the Bible. Each of the Twelve Tribes of Israel was, in a sense, a
representative body. In Deuteronomy,
we learn that Moses—admitting he was “not able to bear you by myself”
given that the people of Israel had become “as numerous as the stars of
heaven”—told “all Israel” to “choose for your tribes wise,
understanding, and experienced men, and I will appoint them as your
heads.” Exodus 18 explains how these men served as “chiefs” over groupings of people—in
our parlance, governors and judges. “Any hard case they brought to
Moses, but any small matter they decided themselves.” In a similar way, Acts describes how “the twelve summoned the full number of the disciples”
and directed them to “pick out from among you” leaders to carry out
essential functions for the good of the entire community.
Equally important and relevant to our discussion, God has always put a
high value on individual choice and its close relative free will. In
Genesis, after all, he gave Adam and Eve a choice. Deuteronomy declares,
“I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose
life.” Likewise, Jesus explains that he knocks, but the choice is ours to answer.
In short, our God cares deeply about freedom. The story of God’s
people is one of freedom—freedom misused, lost, pursued, and regained.
In the beginning, freedom was the natural state of man. God wants us to
be free—free from the tyranny of Pharaoh, Haman, Caesar, Lenin, Hitler,
and Stalin, and free from the tyranny of sin. Thus, Jesus declares, “If
the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.” Paul writes, “Where the
Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty.” Peter counsels us to “live as
free people.”
Since representative democracy has proven to be the best guarantor of
freedom—individual, political, religious—over hundreds of years of
recorded history, it seems safe for us to connect it with those
references to freedom in scripture in order to make the case that
representative democracy is a biblically sound way to organize society.
As the Providencedeclaration on faith and foreign policy observes, “There is no perfect human
political system, but we believe the liberal order is the least flawed
of all presently available options and constitutes the best means for
accomplishing the ends for which government was ordained. Politically,
liberal order comprises accountable self-government, the rule of law,
civil liberties, and religious freedom.”
Representative democracy is not perfect. But what Churchill observed
in 1947 remains true today: “Many forms of government have been tried,
and will be tried in this world of sin and woe. No one pretends that
democracy is perfect or all-wise. Indeed, it has been said that
democracy is the worst form of government except for all those other
forms that have been tried from time to time.”
Another issue related to terminology: there’s an important
distinction to be made between a “democracy” and a “republic”—one that
has eroded over the centuries. As James Madison observed in Federalist
No. 14, the “confounding of a republic with a democracy” was common even
when the Founding Fathers midwifed the United States into existence.
“In a democracy,” Madison explained, “the people meet and exercise the
government in person; in a republic, they assemble and administer it by
their representatives and agents.” We Americans live in a democratic
republic, meaning that we elect representatives and entrust them to make
and execute laws on our behalf. But for good or ill, the term
“democracy” has evolved to enfold democratic republics and other
representative systems, and that is how “democracy” is used here.
There’s also an important distinction to be made between “democracy”
and “liberal democracy.” Democracies are characterized by elections in
which the majority (or plurality) of the people determines who governs.
Liberal democracies feature not only elections and majority rule, but
also minority rights, institutional limits on government power, the rule
of law, civil liberties, and civil society—that space where houses of
worship, charities, associations, and the like buffer the individual
from the state. In short, there’s an enormous difference between holding
an election every now and then, and nurturing a high-functioning
liberal democracy—differences we will discuss in this series.
Causes
Given those qualifiers, let’s look at some of the causes of democracy’s recent ebbtide.
Established democracies—especially liberal democracies—are today
facing internal challenges that have the effect of undermining their
legitimacy.
First, by promising in the post-World War II era to do increasingly
more for their citizens, established democracies have become responsible
for more—and are held responsible for more. This creates a problem.
After all, if government doesn’t try to do too much, how poorly it
functions is of little consequence. However, if government becomes the
deliverer of all manner of services and benefits—an “immense and
tutelary power which takes upon itself alone to secure [the people’s]
gratifications and to watch over their fate,” in Tocqueville’s words of
warning—then when it doesn’t deliver all the stuff it promises, people
blame their government and become dissatisfied with it. That’s happening
all across the West.
Second, today’s on-demand technologies streaming to us at light speed
condition us for instant answers, instant gratification, and instant
solutions. But representative democracies aren’t designed to deliver
instant solutions. In fact, America’s political system was designed for
the very opposite: a deliberate and deliberative system with built-in
checks and balances inside the federal government and across multiple
levels of government, that aims to prevent too-rapid change and instead
deliver incremental change. Adlai Stevenson was right when he observed
that representative democracy “depends upon giving ideas and principles
and policies a chance to fight it out.” Policies and politicians need
time to succeed or fail. Yet new technologies are rewiring us to have
shorter attention spans and shorter fuses, making us less patient with
everything—including government—than we used to be. This
technology-driven impatience, historian Neal Gabler argues, “creates
expectations that the political system cannot possibly meet.”
Do these trends put liberal democracies at a disadvantage vis-à-vis
illiberal democracies and autocracies? Perhaps. Those unique markers of
liberal democracy mentioned above—majority rule with minority rights,
limits on government power, rule of law, civil liberties, and civil
society—help to ensure freedom. However, they can be
inefficient—something illiberal democracies and autocracies are quick to
point out.
Illiberal democracies are characterized by strongmen who win
elections but then use their power to eliminate checks on their
authority. Unconstrained by the rule of law, such regimes drift into
what Tocqueville called “the despotism of the majority” and ultimately
authoritarian rule. Because they consolidate power and steer the state
to help their supporters, these regimes claim they are more efficient
and more effective. And because they use democratic means to undermine
democratic institutions, they are able to make such claims without being
challenged by the sort of dissent that’s a given in liberal
democracies.
This is the playbook we have seen in Russia under Vladimir Putin,
Venezuela under Hugo Chávez and Nicolás Maduro, the Philippines under
Rodrigo Duterte, Turkey under Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Along with China’s
business-suit autocracy, these regimes are offering an alternative that,
they promise, is more efficient and more durable than the messiness of
liberal democracy.
Liberal democracy’s answer—especially the American democracy’s
answer—has been found wanting, which we will discuss in part two of this
series.