Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

US democracy’s unaddressed flaws undermine Biden’s stand as democracy’s defender but Trump keeps favoring … – The Conversation United States

President Joe Biden argues that democracy is on the ballot in the 2024 election.

We believe there are potential threats to U.S. democracy posed by the choices voters make in this election. But the benefits of American democracy have for centuries been unequally available, and any discussion of the current threats needs to happen against that background.

One of us is a political scientist who focuses on civic engagement; the other is a former voting rights lawyer. At Tufts Universitys Tisch College of Civic Life, we both lead nonpartisan efforts to educate college students and other people about their roles in democracy.

For us, Bidens talk of democracy is a useful starting point for a broader conversation about U.S. democracy and the 2024 election.

On Jan. 5, 2024, the president delivered a speech in Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, titled Defending the Sacred Cause of American Democracy.

As a candidate for reelection at the early stages of a political campaign, the president argued that he and his fellow Democratic candidates are in favor of democracy. Former President Donald Trump and his supporters in the U.S. Congress, said Biden, are against it.

In this speech and other statements, Biden makes the following case: Trump supported or even incited the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, and he refuses to denounce political violence. Trump floats ideas for his second presidential term that include invoking the Insurrection Act, which authorizes the president to deploy the military inside the United States.

In contrast, Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris argue that they respect the Constitution, recognize their limited power and limited importance as leaders within a constitutional order and support freedom of speech. They maintain, in Bidens words, that political violence is never, ever acceptable in the United States.

The basic facts in Bidens speech appear accurate: Trumps own statements support some of Bidens claims.

If elected again, Trump is reportedly considering deploying the Insurrection Act against civilian protests. He has expressed open admiration for foreign authoritarian leaders, most recently Hungarys Viktor Orban. He encouraged his supporters to guard the vote and to watch those votes in certain cities, which some interpret as threatening and potentially intimidating to election workers.

Trump has threatened to prosecute his political opponents, claiming in October 2023 that since he was being prosecuted during the Biden administration, that provided justification for him to do the same.

This is third-world-country stuff, arrest your opponent, Trump said during a New Hampshire campaign visit. And that means I can do that, too.

Bidens own record, however, undermines some of his claims to be fully committed to democracy.

The Biden-Harris administration has been accused by human rights advocates and even Democratic senators of a double standard: championing democracy while maintaining close ties with authoritarian leaders, including the Saudis.

At the very least, Biden has continued a historic pattern of U.S. engagement across the globe that prioritizes security over human rights and liberal democracy. His administration is widely criticized for its support of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus conduct of the war in Gaza and its disastrous humanitarian consequences.

At home, despite a major expansion of the governments role in the economy, the Biden administration has not done anything significant to make federal policymaking more democratic or participatory.

Its helpful to step back from the daily campaign and its heightened rhetoric and consider how Bidens assertion holds up in light of general research and evidence about democracy in the U.S. That analysis reveals a more complex picture of threats to democracy, some of which are specific to the upcoming election. Others have existed for some time.

In their 2020 book Four Threats: The Recurring Crises of American Democracy, political scientists Suzanne Mettler and Robert C. Lieberman argue that democracies in general suffer when any of four trends occur: intense partisan polarization, efforts to exclude some people from the electorate, economic inequality and unilateral exercises of power by the executive branch.

Mettler and Lieberman show that each of these trends has been rising in the U.S. for several decades. Applying their framework, wed note that both Biden and Trump used a comparable number of executive orders 127 and 137, respectively in their first three years to bypass a reluctant Congress and enact policies unilaterally. The Biden administration has been credibly accused of stretching executive power in areas such as student loan forgiveness.

These long-term trends mean that neither Trump nor Biden is mainly responsible for causing them. Biden criticized all four of these threats in his Jan. 5 speech, however, whereas Trump often endorses political polarization and limitless executive power and has challenged the validity of votes cast in urban and suburban areas with significant minority populations. This difference lends support to Bidens argument.

Notable in Bidens campaign rhetoric about democracy is his alarm about political violence. In any democracy, violence is a threat because, among other things, it intimidates people and makes participation dangerous. In the U.S., political violence has always been associated with attempts to deny democratic rights. It is often racialized and targeted at the most vulnerable communities.

By its very nature, the system of slavery required extreme violence, political repression and the denial of democratic rights to enslaved black people. Though rarely recognized as such in history books, it could be characterized as a racially targeted police state coexisting within a liberal democracy for whites only.

Governance under slavery included organized vigilante violence, repression of dissent, violent clashes and rebellions, harsh suppression, broad prosecution of dissidents, and systematic passage of restrictive laws or renewed enforcement of existing measures when resistance emerged.

Desmond S. King and Rogers M. Smith in Still a House Divided catalog some of these patterns. Even after slavery and the post-Civil War period known as Reconstruction, political violence frequently in response to Black political mobilization or the exercise of basic rights helped maintain what was known as Jim Crow rule.

Two major instances among many stand out: the 1898 Wilmington coup, when white supremacists overthrew the democratically elected biracial city government, and the destruction of a citys vibrant Black business district and community in the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921.

Violence as a threat to democracy is by no means new, but the U.S. may be entering a new violent chapter.

While we do not have extensive historical data, the rate of political violence seems high now, and there are indications of dangerous trends. For example, in 2023, the U.S. Capitol Police investigated more than 8,000 threats against members of Congress, a substantial increase over 2022. The number of serious threats against federal judges has increased each year since 2019 and is 2.5 times higher now than five years ago.

Citing data collected by Nathan P. Kalmoe, Lilliana Mason and Bright Line Watch, democracy scholar Rachel Kleinfeld shows that the percentage of both Democrats and Republicans who believe that violence is sometimes justified to achieve their political goals has more than doubled since 2017, although this remains a minority view in both parties.

From 2020 to 2023, the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project cataloged 1,080 demonstrations in the United States that the organization labels violent along with more than 50 times as many nonviolent demonstrations plus 157 cases of excessive force against demonstrators and 22 armed clashes. This data establishes a baseline for tracking the phenomenon in the near future.

From our perspective, nonviolent protests are expressions of a vibrant democracy that deserve protection. There may be room to debate some of the protests labeled violent. However, the sheer number of demonstrations that the project labels violent more than 1,000 in four years is concerning to us.

The Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol may prove to be an example of a period of political unrest. Trump is deeply implicated in the violence. Biden is decrying it but not necessarily proposing any response other than to vote against Trump.

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US democracy's unaddressed flaws undermine Biden's stand as democracy's defender but Trump keeps favoring ... - The Conversation United States

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Social media is making kids sad and its bad news for democracy – The Guardian

Social media is making kids sad and its bad news for democracy  The Guardian

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Social media is making kids sad and its bad news for democracy - The Guardian

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Opinion | The One Idea That Could Save American Democracy – The New York Times

These days, we often hear that democracy is on the ballot. And theres a truth to that: Winning elections is critical, especially as liberal and progressive forces try to fend off radical right-wing movements. But the democratic crisis that our society faces will not be solved by voting alone. We need to do more than defeat Donald Trump and his allies we need to make cultivating solidarity a national priority.

For years, solidaritys strongest associations have been with the left and the labor movement a term invoked at protests and on picket lines. But its roots are much deeper, and its potential implications far more profound, than we typically assume. Though we rarely speak about it as such, solidarity is a concept as fundamental to democracy as its better-known cousins: equality, freedom and justice. Solidarity is simultaneously a bond that holds society together and a force that propels it forward. After all, when people feel connected, they are more willing to work together, to share resources and to have one anothers backs. Solidarity weaves us into a larger and more resilient we through the precious and powerful sense that even though we are different, our lives and our fates are connected.

We have both spent years working as organizers and activists. If our experience has taught us anything, it is that a sense of connection and mutualism is rarely spontaneous. It must be nurtured and sustained. Without robust and effective organizations and institutions to cultivate and maintain solidarity, it weakens and democracy falters. We become more atomized and isolated, suspicious and susceptible to misinformation, more disengaged and cynical, and easily pitted against one another.

Democracys opponents know this. Thats why they invest huge amounts of energy and resources to sabotage transformative, democratic solidarity and to nurture exclusionary and reactionary forms of group identity. Enraged at a decade of social movements and the long-overdue revival of organized labor, right-wing strategists and their corporate backers have redoubled their efforts to divide and conquer the American public, inflaming group resentments in order to restore traditional social hierarchies and ensure that plutocrats maintain their hold on wealth and power. In white papers, stump speeches and podcasts, conservative ideologues have laid out their vision for capturing the state and using it as a tool to remake our country in their image.

If we do not prioritize solidarity, this dangerous and anti-democratic project will succeed. Far more than just a slogan or hashtag, solidarity can orient us toward a future worth fighting for, providing the basis of a credible and galvanizing plan for democratic renewal. Instead of the 20th-century ideal of a welfare state, we should try to imagine a solidarity state.

We urgently need a countervision of what government can and should be, and how public resources and infrastructure can be deployed to foster social connection and repair the social fabric so that democracy can have a chance not just to limp along, but to flourish. Solidarity, here, is both a goal worth reaching toward and the method of building the power to achieve it. It is both means and ends, the forging of social bonds so that we can become strong enough to shift policy together.

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Opinion | The One Idea That Could Save American Democracy - The New York Times

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Democracy Teetering in African Countries Once Ruled by France – The New York Times

In Senegal, the president tried to cancel an election. In Niger, a military coup dtat toppled an elected president, who eight months later is still imprisoned in the presidential palace. In Chad, the leading opposition politician was killed in a shootout with security forces. And in Tunisia, once the only democratic success story of the Arab Spring rebellions, the president is steering the state toward increasing autocracy.

Democracy is in trouble in former French colonies in Africa. And the two ways it is being subverted by the elected officials entrusted with upholding it, or by coup plotters overthrowing governments are manifestations of the same malaise, according to some experts.

After they won independence from France in the 1960s, nascent states modeled their constitutions on Frances, concentrating power in presidents hands. And France maintained a web of business and political ties with its former colonies a system known as Franafrique often propping up corrupt governments. These are among the reasons analysts cite for the democratic crisis in these countries.

While a majority of Africans polled still say they prefer democracy to other forms of government, support for it is declining in Africa, while approval of military rule is on the rise it has doubled since 2000. That shift is happening much faster in former French colonies than in former British ones, according to Boniface Dulani, the director of surveys for Afrobarometer, a nonpartisan research organization.

People have been disillusioned with democracy, he said.

The ground has been primed for military takeovers. Eight of the nine successful coups in Africa since 2020 have been in former French colonies the only exception is Sudan, a former British colony. Former French colonies have been champions of coups as well as champions of a hollow pretense at constitutional order and democracy, said Ndongo Samba Sylla, coauthor of a new book on France and its former African colonies.

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The Third Summit for Democracy – Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan

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March 20, 2024

From March 18 to 20 (Japan time), the third Summit for Democracy was hosted by the Republic of Korea, and Mr. KISHIDA Fumio, Prime Minister of Japan, participated in the Leaders Plenary held in online format on March 20. The summary is as follows.

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The Third Summit for Democracy - Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan

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