Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

It’s an Attack on Democracy – Slate Magazine

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi at the Capitol on Friday in Washington.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

Last week, President Trumps White House took a significant but little noticed action. At meetings with top officials for various government departments this spring, Uttam Dhillon, a White House lawyer, told agencies not to cooperate with [any oversight] requests from Democrats, reported Politico. This is the formalization of an ongoing practice of sidelining such requestswhich were often responded to in previous administrationsamid Republican fear that any evidence could be used against the president. As Politico reports oversight letters requesting information from agencies have gone unanswered since January.

Jamelle Bouie isSlates chief political correspondent.

Whats more, the White House Office of Legal Counsel holds that no minority lawmakerincluding ranking members of a given committeecan be granted information without the approval of the chairperson. As long as Republicans hold both chambers of Congress, in other words, they can lock Democrats out of any meaningful oversight authority. Maryland Rep. Elijah Cummings, ranking member on the House Oversight Committee, calls this the latest in a series of abuses by the Trump administration to operate in a shroud of secrecy, a move that overturns long-standing norms and practices raising the standard for congressional inquiry to an almost unreachable high. Yes, previous administrations, Democrat and Republican, have ignored or slow-walked oversight requests from opposition lawmakers. But this blanket rejection is a major escalation of partisan combat in governance, an outright statement that Democrats have no prerogatives a Republican administration is bound to even acknowledge.

Its an attack on democracy. Members of Congress represent the people, and refusal to provide them with the information they want or need as a matter of policy is saying that were going to shut down half of Congress, Rep. Jerrold Nadler of New York told Slate. To systematically say were not going to give people the time of day to half the members of Congress just because theyre the wrong political party, thats smacking the American people in the nose. Its saying how dare you elect Democrats; we dont approve of what you did.

More broadly, White House rejection of opposition oversight is in keeping with actions from congressional Republicans, as well as Republicans at the state level. Americas two-party democracy only works if both sides see each other as legitimate actors with the right to wield power should they win it. The Democratic Party, as evidenced by the rapid and normal transfer of power from President Obama to President Trump, still holds that principle. But increasingly, it seems the GOP does not.

From Congress and the White House to the state and local level, Republicans have embraced a style of politics that treats opponents as presumptively illegitimate, using all and any means to hinder their ability to govern. On the other side, when Republicans hold power, a growing number reject constraints on their ability to act, attacking inconvenient norms and tilting the playing field in their favor. With the modern Republican Party, weve moved from ordinary partisan competitioneven partisan hardballto something ominous and illiberal.

The political roots of this extend back to Richard Nixons silent majority and found a modern expression in the 1994 Republican revolution and the often-extreme response to the presidency of Bill Clinton. But the previous apotheosis of this politics was in the reaction to Barack Obama. Yes, opposition parties oppose, and theres no crime in maximizing ones advantage or leverage over an opponent. And many of the moves and tactics in question had been used before, albeit rarely, by Democrats. What makes Republican behavior under Obama noteworthy, however, was the unprecedented intensity, ferocity, and uniformity.

From the outset, Republican lawmakers formed an almost undivided front against the Obama administration. After 2011, when Republicans gained a House majority, they began a strategy of legislative brinkmanshiphostage takingthreatening catastrophic outcomes to extract extreme concessions from Obama. The underlying premise was always clear: Obama was not a legitimate president, and if he would not voluntarily bend to conservatives will, they would force him to do so.

Equally disturbing was the drive toward a kind of nullification, blocking qualified nomineeseven after acknowledging their competence and integrityto prevent implementation of duly signed laws. Republicans filibustered nominees for both the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, not out of any dispute with the nominees, but because they opposed the agencies themselves. The problem is obvious: Lawmakers are obligated to carry out laws. It is one thing to condemn a law or run against it; its something differentand novelto attempt to sabotage it for ideological and partisan gain.

Most significant was the blockade of the Supreme Court seat left by the late Antonin Scalia. For more than a year, Republicans refused to accept or hear then-President Obamas nominee for the court, Merrick Garland.

This unbending strategy of obstruction, demonization, and near-nullification was echoed in the partys overall rhetoric toward Obama.

Any Republican who voted for Garland risked a massive backlash from a conservative base who saw the Supreme Court fight in stark, almost apocalyptic terms. There would be no hearing and no vote. Led by Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Senate Republicans ignored the presidents nomination, essentially treating it as illegitimate.

Had Hillary Clinton won the presidency, this may have continued. [I]f Hillary Clinton becomes president, I am going to do everything I can do to make sure four years from now, we still got an opening on the Supreme Court, said North Carolina Sen. Richard Burr just before the election. Of course, that didnt happen. Trump was elected president, and Republicans quickly cleared the way for his Supreme Court nominee, Neil Gorsuch, killing the judicial filibuster to preclude Democratic opposition.

This unbending strategy of obstruction, demonization, and near-nullification was echoed in the partys overall rhetoric toward Obama. Both Republican politicians and right-wing media routinely cast Obama as a fundamental threat to American democracy. He was destroying our economic system as we currently know it; his economic plan was Stalin without the bloodshed; he was driving the nation off the cliff to oblivion; he was even enslaving the nations children. When Donald Trump emerged to cast doubt on his origins and birthplacequestioning his legitimacy with racist innuendoRepublicans normalized the charge, with a number of candidates expressing their doubts during the 2010 midterm elections.

Obama was the focal point for attacks on the legitimacy of Democratic governance for the simple reason that he was presidentalthough one cant discount the significance of racial backlash either. But this goes beyond him.

Since 2010, and exploding after 2013, when the Supreme Court struck down key portions of the Voting Rights Act, Republicans across the country have embarked on a comprehensive project of gerrymandering and aggressive voter suppression, slashing access and raising new barriers to voting. Theyve been neither shy nor demure about their aims. Now we have photo ID, and I think photo ID will make quite a difference as well, said Wisconsin Rep. Glenn Grothman on the eve of the 2016 election, when asked about Hillary Clintons chances of winning the state. (Trump won.) Four years earlier, in Pennsylvania, Republican lawmakers bragged that a new strict identification law would deliver the state for Mitt Romney. (He lost there, but four years later Trump won.) Republicans in states like Florida and North Carolina, likewise, have openly said that their voter ID laws are meant to smooth the path for GOP candidates. The North Carolina law was especially egregious, an effort that targeted black voters with surgical precision, according to a federal court.

In addition to voter suppression, North Carolina also saw an effort to all but nullify the results of an election, full stop. Following the surprise victory of Democrat Roy Cooper in the race for governor, the Republican-led legislature held an emergency session where it stripped the office of much of its authority, just a few years after those same Republicans expanded its power and influence under a GOP governor. Republicans eliminated executive appointments, removed the governors power to appoint trustees to the university system and the state board of education, and reformed state election boards to protect Republican efforts to restrict the vote.

One can read these measures as crude attempts to win partisan advantagehardball political tactics taken too far. But they cannot be viewed outside the long history of efforts to curtail voting among black Americans and other more marginal groups. These are also in line with a long strain in American thought that has cast suspicion on the political claims of women and nonwhites, groups held as dependent and thus unsuited to self-governance.

The founders of the country were preoccupied with what they called republican virtue. In their view, a democratic society couldnt function without a virtuous citizenry, with virtue defined by ones economic independence. Landowners and self-sufficient farmers were imbued with the qualities for republican self-governance. Women, enslaved people, and anyone without an obvious stake in societylike immigrants and industrial workerswere not.

For as much as we have expanded our notions of citizenshipof who counts and who can governthose ideas are still embedded in our political culture. They found expression after the Civil War, when opponents of black voting rights argued that the experience of slavery rendered black Americans unable to participate in the process of self-government. They found expression at the beginning of the 20th century, when a new Ku Klux Klan established itself on a white supremacy and patriarchy informed by that republican tradition and its suspicion of the dependent and propertyless. We even see it now, albeit in less extreme form; Romneys 47 percent and Paul Ryans makers and takers remarks during the 2012 campaign both reflected the belief that theres something illegitimate in the claims of people who rely on explicit aid from the state.

Supercharging these strains of thought are the homogenous demographics of the Republican Party itself. It is the political home of the large majority of white Americans, especially in the South, where it dominates. In turn, it has absorbed that regions legacy of reaction, including a radical theory of democracyarticulated by South Carolinas John C. Calhounthat placed sovereignty in political minorities, and which sanctioned nullification as the proper response to governments that overstep their bounds or infringe on the liberty of the powerful to exert force for the powerless.

Whether or not Republican politicians articulate these views and ideas, its clear that their actions are informed by them. It takes few conceptual leaps to move from classical republican thought to the idea that, because of their membership, some political parties are more legitimate than others; to move from Calhoun to the reactionary ethos that demands the restoration of an imagined America under an idealized Constitution.

In the Trump era, the drive to delegitimize opponents has only grown stronger, driven in large part by the president himself. In his short tenure as chief executive, Trump has attacked federal judges for challenging his travel ban; portrayed protesters as tools of shadowy conspirators; and continued his crusade against the news media, denouncing it as fake and even calling it the enemy of the people. Far from defending journalists, more ordinary Republicans have joined in, taking a blind eye to attacks on reporterssometimes literallyeven building political strategy around anti-journalist sentiment, stoking and embracing anti-media sentiment to show Republicans voters that they, just like the president, are battling a biased press corps out to destroy them.

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Republicans treated the mid-term elections of 2010 as an electoral coup that put them in a position to gerrymander legislative and congressional districts, suppress Democratic votes, politicize state courts -- and when all that failed -- to steal elections in... More...

In their book Its Even Worse Than It Looks: How the American Constitutional System Collided With the New Politics of Extremism, scholars Thomas Mann and Norman Ornstein wrote that the Republican Party has become an insurgent outlier ideologically extreme; contemptuous of the inherited social and economic policy regime; scornful of compromise; unpersuaded by conventional understanding of facts, evidence, and science; and dismissive of the legitimacy of its political opposition.

That was published in 2012. Since then, the GOP has gotten worse. The Republican Party is even more scornful of its opposition, and even less willing to concede their legitimacy. It is even more contemptuous of shared governancecrafting vast, consequential legislation in complete secrecyand increasingly hostile to those who vote and march against it. None of this is to say the Democratic Party is faultless. But its problemsmost prominently its myopia, muddled message, and hidebound thinkingare typical. Theyre normal. The GOP doesnt have problems, it has pathologies. And they are not normal.

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It's an Attack on Democracy - Slate Magazine

Democracy faces enemy within – Fairfield Daily Republic

Were past the point of shifting blame. We know who gave us the presidency of Donald Trump, and it wasnt Hillary Clinton or Jill Stein or James Comey.

The culprit was democracy.

Even if you defend democracy on the grounds that Trump lost the popular vote, its still a lame argument. After all, what kind of sensible political system generates 63 million votes for a thuggish incompetent to become its supreme leader?

Democracy was rarely an exercise in smooth sailing. Now, this.

The choice of Mr. Trump, a man so signally lacking in the virtues, abilities, knowledge and experience to be expected of a president, has further damaged the attractions of the democratic system, wrote an exceedingly glum Martin Wolf in the Financial Times this week. The soft power of democracy is not what it was. It has produced Mr. Trump as leader of the worlds most important country. It is not an advertisement.

Wolf isnt wrong, of course. If General Electric had gone bonkers and installed Trump as CEO, the smart money wouldve deserted the company, fearing for its future. Yet whats to stop Trump from doing far more damage as president?

In an interview with Vox, political scientist Larry Bartels said:

History clearly demonstrates that democracies need parties to organize and simplify the political world. But parties dont make the fundamental problems of democratic control disappear; they just submerge them more or less successfully. When professional politicians are reasonably enlightened and skillful and the rules and political culture let them do their job, democracy will usually work pretty well. When not, not.

Democracy is not working pretty well in the U.S. Still, while there may be no reason to grant Trump himself patience, the democratic system itself has earned some.

Shashi Tharoor, a longtime United Nations official who is now a member of the Indian parliament, wrote in an email:

Every system of government produces uneven results: There have been wise monarchs and feckless ones, capable benign dictators and incompetent ruthless ones, brilliant statesmen in democracies and people who owed their leadership positions to luck (the weakness of the alternatives) or merely inoffensiveness (the least unacceptable candidate). . . .

The strength of democracies is that because their leadership emerges from the will of the public as a whole, the system has a way of accommodating to them and very often, blunting their worst mistakes. Undemocratic systems have nowhere else to turn, and no established way of making the turn. So however flawed individual leaders may be, the self-correcting mechanisms built into democracy limit how much damage they can do.

The nations intelligence bureaucracies and news media are already shaking the foundation of the Trump presidency, leak by damaging leak. Courts are constraining some of the White Houses baser impulses. Democratic and civil society opposition is fierce, and has been joined by a small but intellectually potent cohort of principled conservatives. Inflection points, from the scheduled testimony next week of former FBI director James Comey to the midterm elections in 2018, present opportunities to educate the public and strengthen resistance. Whether anything can induce Trumps Republican enablers to abandon him is unknown.

If democracy produces a renewed commitment to democracy, Harvard historian Jill Lepore said in an email, democracy is working.

In his book The Confidence Trap, political scientist David Runciman pointed to the 1970s as an era in which democracy seemed to be marching haplessly toward failure, yet turned out to be gaining strength. In an interview with me last year he said:

Apparently the Chinese leadership is enjoying watching Trumps rise, because it seems to confirm all their suspicions of democracy: Its hucksterism plus stupidity. But in 1974 the Soviet leadership thought Watergate showed that democracy was finished. How could it survive such a scandal?

It survived, of course, and even thrived, eventually grinding down the Soviet Union. A similar emergence from the Trumpian ashes is possible. But it is not assured. Wolf is correct to worry that democracy everywhere is undermined by Trump anywhere. Yet with profound exceptions, democracy has been very good both to Americans and the world. Both may yet rally to the cause.

Francis Wilkinson writes editorials on politics and U.S. domestic policy for Bloomberg View.

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Democracy faces enemy within - Fairfield Daily Republic

Al Green: ‘This is about the democracy ‘ – Washington Post


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Al Green: 'This is about the democracy '
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June 7, 2017 2:47 PM EDT - Rep. Al Green (D-Tex.) says President Trump has obstructed justice and calls to draft articles of impeachment. (Reuters). June 7, 2017 2:47 PM EDT - Rep. Al Green (D-Tex.) says President Trump has obstructed justice and calls ...

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Al Green: 'This is about the democracy ' - Washington Post

‘This Is the Only Way to Restore Democracy in Brazil’ – FAIR

Janine Jackson interviewed Maria Luisa Mendona about Brazils presidential crisis for theJune 2, 2017, episodeof CounterSpin. This is a lightly edited transcript.

1. CounterSpin170602Mendonca - fair.org

2. MP3 Link

Janine Jackson: When Brazils elected president Dilma Rousseff was ousted last year by political opponents in what many called a parliamentary coupas she was impeached, ostensibly for corruption, after being cleared by a special prosecutorsome US media presented the fight as the people versus the president. Politicians know how to read society pretty well, and they can sense that the people want her out, a think tank source was quoted in the New York Times. The deep unpopularity and evident corruption of Rousseffs opponents, including current President Michel Temerrecently highlighted with smoking-gun tape recordingsnow have the Times suggesting that Brazils problems have to do with it being a turmoil-prone nation.

Maria Luisa Mendona: If you dismantle basic services, that is not good for the economy. But, of course, this is the mantra that mainstream media use.

Were joined now by Maria Luisa Mendona. Shes coordinator of the Network for Social Justice and Human Rights in Brazil, and director of the Feminist Alliance for Rights at the Center for Womens Global Leadership at Rutgers University. She joins us now by phone from New Jersey. Welcome back to CounterSpin, Maria Luisa Mendona.

Maria Luisa Mendona: Thank you very much.

JJ: Well, maybe its too simple to say, but the latest scandal, involving tapes of Temer and former Sen. Aecio Neves talking about bribes with the head of the food empire JBSthey lend credence to what many said, that one of the real purposes of impeachment was to stop investigation into just those sorts of actions.

MLM: Yes, because there were actually no charges of corruption against President Dilma. They accused her of using a practice in dealing with the federal budget that was a very common practice, used by all presidents before her, so they had to come up with an excuse to impeach her, and thats why we called this a parliamentary coup.

And the main reasons for the impeachment were, first of all, to stop investigations of corruption; now we have the most corrupt politicians in power, that are facing very serious accusations of corruption. And also to implement austerity measures, cuts in social programs, dismantling the pension system, labor laws. Those changes were rejected by voters, so the only way for them to implement those measures was to impeach President Dilma and establish an illegitimate government, and this is what we have now in Brazil.

JJ: Well, let me read you this from just over a week ago, May 19, the New York Times Simon Romero:

Just a few days ago, Brazil seemed to be turning a corner. The stock market was soaring. Bankers were cheering. The nations cutthroat lawmakers were lining up to curb spending. Inflation had been tamed.

Brazil, it appeared, was finally on the mend.

Then, in a matter of hours, it all started falling apart.

So cheering bankers and cutting spending is Brazil being on the mend, in this view, and its only evidence of corruption, when that spoils it, that then we have instability. Youre saying quite the opposite of that, that in fact it was these austerity measures that have been driving public protests.

MLM: Yes, exactly. I dont understand why not giving job security and dismantling the pension system, retirement plansI dont understand how that would create a more stable society. And even for the economy, if you dismantle basic services, that is not good for the economy. But, of course, this is the mantra that mainstream media use, and we hear this over and over again.

JJ: Yes, a more recent piece talked about how the Brazilian economy has not responded as vigorously to Mr. Temers proposed austerity measures as his supporters had hoped. Well, yes, I guess thats one way of putting it.

So a number of things have driven protests, but then, the government response to protests has been especially repressive, has it not?

MLM: Yes. We have seen severe repression. And just about a week ago, there was a large demonstration in the capital, Brasilia, and Temer actually called the army forces to occupy the city. And several people were hurt, there were shots with rubber bullets, but also one person was shot by the police. And also, in the countryside, there have been dozens of killings of peasants, and just also last week, there was a massacre in the state of Par in the Amazon, and ten peasants were killed. So we have been seeing increasing repression in the countryside and also in urban areas.

JJ: Lets talk about going forward. US media outlets tell a pretty crude story about Brazil, in a way. Its, you know, they had this previously corrupt or malfeasant government, and now the new ones corrupt too; its as though theres just a cultural tendency toward chaos. And it tends to skip right over what kind of progress people are asking for. The protests that were seeing right now are not just anti-Temer; theyre really pro-democracy protests.

MLM: Yes, exactly. People are demanding direct elections, and theyre also demanding Temer to stop those measures that would undermine workers rights, basic rights. Those are the main demands.

And its very important for people to know that, because of media manipulation in Brazil, the majority of people, they dont really understand the reasons for the impeachment. There were no accusations of corruption against President Dilma, they couldnt find any case against her. So they used something that was very technical, that most people didnt understand. It was a mechanism that she was delaying payments from the federal budget to public banks in order to subsidize interest rates for low-income housing and for agriculture. And those types of mechanisms have been used for decades in all previous governments.

But most people dont even understand the reason for the impeachment, and of course, the mainstream media, also, they dont talk about this. So the idea is that there was this scandal in Brazil, and the only reason for the economy to improve was to get rid of President Dilma. So that was the message that Brazilian society was targeted with, there was this message saying that the only way to improve the country was to have a change in government. And that, of course, is undermining democracy, because millions of people voted for her. She was elected and re-elected. So even if we dont agree with her policies, we cannot just impeach a president because we dont agree with her policies. You need to have a specific crime that would justify the impeachment. Thats why we call this a parliamentary coup.

JJ: Well, let me just ask you, finally, is there concern that even if Temer steps down or is removed, that what might happen next might be something other than direct elections?

MLM: Yes, exactly. So one possibility is that the Brazilian congress would choose the next president, but two-thirds of congressmembers have also been facing corruption charges. So thats why we have been seeing large demonstrations asking for direct elections. I think this is the only way to restore democracy in Brazil.

JJ: Weve been speaking with Maria Luisa Mendona of the Network for Social Justice and Human Rights in Brazil, and the Feminist Alliance for Rights at the Center for Womens Global Leadership at Rutgers University. Maria Luisa Mendona, thank you so much for joining us this week on CounterSpin.

MLM: Thank you very much.

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'This Is the Only Way to Restore Democracy in Brazil' - FAIR

Don’t be fooled by the UK election: There’s nothing democratic about Brexit – Washington Post

By Mai'a K. Davis Cross By Mai'a K. Davis Cross June 7 at 9:15 AM

Maia K. Davis Cross is the Edward W. Brooke professor of political science at Northeastern University. She is also a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations and author of The Politics of Crisis in Europe.

It may seem that the June 8 general election in the United Kingdom puts Britains exit from the European Union on solid democratic ground. In fact, however, this is only the latest stage in a deeply problematic saga that has been anything but democratic.

Beyond the fact that former prime minister David Cameron promised a Brexit vote only as a desperate measure to stay in power in 2015, relying on a popular referendum as the sole determinant of the U.K.s status in the E.U. was a bad course of action.

Political scientists have long acknowledged that referendums are a poor gauge of voters actual preferences. Electorates are especially vulnerable to manipulation when complex issues are reduced into a simple yes or no question. Results often come down to which side has more money and persuasive marketing. This was certainly true in the case of the Brexit vote. The Leave side mischaracterized and even lied about the nature of the E.U. and the U.K.s role in it. And we now know that the same company that used personal data to individualize propaganda and fake news in President Trumps campaign Cambridge Analytica was paid to work for the Leave side.

The undemocratic nature of the process goes even deeper. First, there is no legal precedent in the U.K. system for making major, constitutional decisions in this way. With no single, written constitution, British governance since the 17th century has been based firmly in the supremacy of Parliament. Although Parliament did authorize the 2015 European Union Referendum Act, nothing in either the act or U.K. law stipulated that the referendum would be binding. Despite this, the referendum was used to circumvent Parliament, and it took a lawsuit for the Supreme Court to finally grant members of Parliament the right to vote on invoking Article 50. But by then, it was more than seven months after the fact, and it had become politically impossible for Parliament to vote against the already questionable referendum results.

Second, there was the simple 50 percent threshold. It is hard to imagine any other country in the E.U. using such a low-bar decision for such a high-stakes question. For example, the French Constitution states that France is in the E.U., and the Italian Constitution forbids abolishing international treaties with a popular vote. They would have to actually change their constitutions no easy feat before a vote on membership could even take place, and their constitutional courts would still be able to block it.

Finally, British Prime Minister Theresa May who only inherited her position from Cameron has been on shaky ground in her pursuit of a hard Brexit. The simplistic language of the referendum said nothing about the nature of the withdrawal. May did not even support the Leave campaign before the vote. Now she repeatedly echoes the pro-Brexit United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) in speeches even though that far-right party has all but evaporated. Since triggering Article 50, May has continued to sideline Scotland and Northern Ireland, both of which voted to remain. And she is still only willing to pay lip service to Parliament, giving it an up-or-down vote only on the final text of the withdrawal agreement a vote she has vowed to ignore if it doesnt go her way.

Since May was never publicly elected as prime minister, her surprise call for a general election might seem to allow for some kind of democratic mandate. After all, Brexit is the most significant change in the U.K.s global role since the end of its empire. But Mays motives are best explained by the numbers: Data experts thought that she had a better chance to win now than in two years.

And yet, like Camerons gamble on Brexit, the snap election is backfiring. The dramatic loss of support that May has already experienced, especially in the face of a weak opponent, makes her approach even less legitimate. The only way to start reducing Britains democratic deficit would be for her party to lose. A coalition of Labour and the Liberal Democrats, for instance, would bring Parliament back into the process, and this would bode much better for British democracy as Brexit plays out.

The E.U., by contrast, has been remarkably fair in dealing with Brexit all along. From Camerons first announcement, E.U. leaders were willing to work with the British, giving ground on core issues such as immigration and exemption from the principle of an ever closer Union. When that didnt work, the E.U. then made it clear that it would negotiate its side by taking into account both member-state and E.U. citizens preferences and embracing democratic deliberation and transparency in the terms of the withdrawal agreement.

Indeed, the democratic deficit will only deepen when the U.K. actually leaves the E.U. Despite Brexit, the British will always need to work closely with the E.U. But when they no longer have a vote in E.U. governance and cannot even sit at the decision-making table in Brussels, they will truly experience what it feels like to follow rules that they do not make. Brexit may have been envisioned as a means of restoring democracy and sovereignty to the British people, but that is far from what is actually happening.

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Don't be fooled by the UK election: There's nothing democratic about Brexit - Washington Post