It all started in Philadelphia. In the hot summer of 1787, a small group of
men did something never tried before.
They drafted a plan for a new political system, a popular
government to replace the British system of royal rule. The 39 state delegates planned
that the people would rule their large country through their elected representatives
– a chief executive and a legislature.
To prevent any president or Congress from assuming royal
powers, the Framers of the Constitution set up a system of checks and balances
and required frequent elections. The
result is the American republic.
Protection of the people’s sovereign power relied on
respecting the values ensuring that government power would be exercised within
constitutional limits and that individual rights would have to be respected by
government. This became the concept
called “liberal democracy.”
The American idea was so new and untested that the system
was labeled an “experiment.” Its purpose
was to find out if one-man rule could be replaced by representative democracy with
power exercised by federal and state governments, but with the people having the
final say.
The Framers intentionally designed an inefficient system,
making hasty decisions and one-man rule more difficult. That inefficiency gave people the chance to
exercise more careful control. This American
system would replace the efficiency of a king who made all the decisions.
Liberal democracy worked in the U.S., though not
perfectly. Still, its example led to its
adoption in countries as diverse as Poland and Australia. It took hold throughout Europe after the
failure of Hitler’s dictatorial rule in Nazi Germany and the fall of Communism. Any surviving kings or queens became mere
figureheads.
But the American idea has recently come under serious
challenge. Its intentional inefficiency,
meant to protect the people, has failed to produce results that some, perhaps only
a minority of the people, want. They are
willing to accept some one-man rule to get what they want.
Tired of the cumbersome operation of representative
democracy, some people demand change.
And change can mean accepting more authoritarian rule.
Take Hungary. After
the fall of Communism there, the country installed a democratic system. But when Victor Orban was elected to be head
of the government, he openly declared his country an “illiberal state.” The people would vote, but would give up many
of their rights to him.
Much the same has happened in Turkey, Poland, Venezuela and
the Philippines. Italy and Austria have
begun to lean in that direction. The
tide of history seems to be running against the American experiment. Popular control is giving way to elected
leaders who impose their personal rule.
Is this turn toward the “illiberal state” taking place in
America itself? There’s little doubt
that some Americans want change to restore a drastically limited government. Or they may simply be fed up with the
intentional inefficiency of democracy.
Government accomplishes little in their view. A strong president can act.
President Trump, like the leaders of illiberal countries,
appears to believe that his personal views should rule. His belief may be based less on a
well-developed political agenda and more on his confidence in his own ability
to make the best deals and decisions through his claimed superior skills and
based on his surprising electoral mandate.
While he is a Republican and members of the loyal GOP
support him, he is not advancing traditional policies of his party, like free trade
or opposition to Russia. Instead, his
personal policy views, often changing, dominate.
Experienced career officials are written off as being part
of the “deep state.” Major federal government posts are left unfilled. Agency heads are unimportant when the White
House, under direct presidential control, is meant to be all the government the
country needs.
Even in a small like Maine, the same move away from a
democratic republic has been taking place.
The Maine system of government is similar to the federal system, but the
people themselves may also pass laws by their direct vote. This direct democracy is a hallmark of
popular control.
But Gov. LePage forces his personal views on public issues to
prevail over the vote of the people, who are supposed have the final word. Mainers voted for Medicaid expansion, but he gained
embarrassing national attention for the state when he said he’d go to jail rather
than allow it to happen.
Is the American experiment losing out to one-man rule? The answer may be far more important to the
future of the U.S. and other democracies than the resolution of today’s policy battles.