Democracy’s Critics – Jacobin magazine
The malevolent incompetence of the Trump White House packs a certain entertainment value, but it is also a distraction; a bumbling misdirection in a long confidence game. At stake, as historian Nancy MacLean underscores in her new book, Democracy in Chains, is not just political power, not just the final dismantling of the New Deal order, but the very future of our democracy.
Whatever the fate of Donald Trump and his cronies, the rule of the radical right in Congress, in statehouses, in the courts will remain largely unchecked. And with each electoral cycle or legislative session of that rule, the prospects for challenging it fade.
Democracy in Chains is a remarkable book. At its core is a startling archival discovery: the unsorted and unprocessed papers of the University of Virginia economist James McGill Buchanan. Buchanan was a quiet but central figure in the making of the modern right: indeed, in MacLeans account, Buchanan appears like a libertarian Zelig at each critical juncture in this history.
Educated at the University of Chicago, he takes up his first academic post at the University of Virginia as a fierce defender of segregation and states rights. Discouraged by both the progress of civil rights and Barry Goldwaters defeat in 1964, and wearing out his welcome at Virginia, he decamps to UCLA, only to be horrified by the diversity of the setting and the radicalism of the students. He retreats to Virginia Tech for a decade, before being lured to George Mason University on the eve of the Reagan Revolution.
At each stop, he builds a privately funded fiefdom designed to develop and disseminate the libertarian creed. At each setback, he doubles his resolve to put ideas into action. With each year, he grows wearier of democratic institutions and the tyranny of majority rule.
As an economist, Buchanan was instrumental in developing the moral vocabulary not only for a zealous veneration of property rights, but for a deep suspicion of affirmative state action. As a southerner, taking up his appointment at Virginia in the wake of the Brown v. Board of Education decision, he did not hesitate to champion states rights and massive resistance to integration as if these too were just abstractions of economy theory. As an academic, he was a fierce and reliable shill for corporate benefactors, most notably and generously Charles Koch who shared Buchanans blind faith in the market, his contempt for democracy, and his willingness to play the long game.
While this is a work of history, MacLeans overriding goal is to shed light on our current moment; to better understand the roots, arguments, goals, motives, and methods of the radical right. MacLean is interested in how we got here, but Democracy in Chains is really about what comes next for the Right and for the rest of us.
At the core of Buchanans worldview, and of those in his orbit ranging from self-congratulatory business titans like Charles Koch to Ayn Randaddled frat boys like Paul Ryan is a near-religious faith in the autonomy and infallibility of markets.
Buchanans singular professional contribution (for which he won the Nobel Prize in 1986) was the development of public choice economics a field whose largely untested insight was that markets never failed but that state interference in them almost always did. In this view, all were market actors, simply responding to incentives and maximizing selfish gain. Politicians did so to get elected. Civil servants did so to build bureaucratic empires. Citizens did so to garner state benefits. And the only way to pay for this was to extract more and more wealth from the real producers.
Imposing market expectations on public institutions, as Buchanan did with the state in The Calculus of Consent (1962) and with the university in Academia in Anarchy (1970), of course, distorts their very purpose and by questioning their efficiency erodes their legitimacy.
It is strangled logic to view the university as a setting in which student-consumers pay discounted prices for a service they do not value, faculty-producers lose all incentive with tenure, and taxpayer-investors are taken for a ride. But, more so today than in 1970, it is pretty effective politics. In the bargain, as MacLean laments, all other motives for private or public action compassion, fairness, solidarity, generosity, justice, and sustainability fall by the wayside.
This market fundamentalism, and the policies that flow from it, are essentially faith-based and either blind or indifferent to their own contradictions.
Here, MacLean echoes the recent work of the sociologists Margaret Somers and Fred Block, underscoring the many ways in which free markets are embedded in social relations. Ignoring this fact simply camouflages advantage and disguises the reliance and dependence of successful market actors on conditions (property rights, contract law, patent protection, worker suppression) secured by state action.
Market fundamentalism, as MacLean notes, is rooted less in the nations liberal traditions than in the illiberal institutions of slavery and Jim Crow.
The founding father of choice here is not Jefferson or Madison but John C. Calhoun a fierce defender of property rights (at a time when nearly half the population of Calhouns South Carolina were property), with a yen for repression and an abiding distrust of majority rule. Calhoun, who understood liberty as nothing more than the freedom to enjoy and exploit his property, was unfazed by any contradiction between constitutional democracy and chattel slavery.
Calhoun, of course, ended up on the wrong side of history. But his ideas lived on in both the nostalgia for the Confederacy that persisted in the New South and in the segregation and terror of the Jim Crow era. Here again, the preservation of liberty and poverty depended upon extreme inequality and fundamentally antidemocratic and racist strategies of rule.
This was the setting in which Buchanan found himself in 1956 libertarian credentials from UChicago in his back pocket, massive resistance to the Brown decision unfolding outside his new office at the University of Virginia.
Buchanan did not hesitate to align himself with white supremacist minority rule (represented by the political machine of Harry Byrd), and urged voucher-based privatization as the solution to the Virginia schools crisis. [E]very parent could cast his vote in the [educational] marketplace and have it count, Buchanan argued, fleshing out an argument that the Cato Insitute and Betsy DeVos would champion unchanged a generation later.
In some respects, Buchanan seemed either indifferent to the racial underpinnings of the Virginia schools issue or willing to cynically exploit the moment. Yet he championed not only school privatization, but massive resistance as well.
Like Calhoun before him, he saw the real threat as the advance of federal power and the enfranchisement of those without property. In these final hours of the massive resistance era, MacLean observes, can be found the seed of the ideas guiding todays attack on the public sector and robust democracy alike.
In the short run, in Virginia and in the nation, Buchanan and his ilk lost ground. But the bitter anxieties of massive resistance persisted most markedly in the gradual political realignment punctuated by the campaigns of Goldwater, Wallace, Nixon, and Reagan. Over this span, Buchanan helped transform a regional libertarian creed into a national counterrevolution.
By 2017, the post-racialist wisp of the Obama years has evaporated entirely, Congress is wagged by the overwhelmingly southern Freedom Caucus, and the counterrevolution is ably represented in the West Wing by the likes of Mike Pence and Jeff Sessions.
At the intersection of Buchanans market fundamentalism and his embrace of Jim Crow lies a fundamental reservation nakedly evident on todays radical right about equal political citizenship and majority rule. This stemmed in part, from Calhoun onward, from a conviction that the polity could be cleft between makers and takers, and that it was the takers who, by employing state power to tax wealth and income, were doing the exploiting.
Buchanans public choice economics dressed this up as an iron law of both human nature and democratic rule (a cynicism so toxic, MacLean suggests, that, if widely believed, it would eat like acid at the foundations of civic life). Politically, Buchanan and his allies looked to gird the advantage enjoyed by the makers (by removing the last constraints on campaign finance, for example) while muffling the votes and the voices of the rest of us.
The combination, of course, is the hallmark of neoliberalism, whose interest is not in rolling back the state but in employing state power toward particular ends, including the protection of wealth and property and the suppression and surveillance of the poor. For all its thin distaste of big government, Buchanans radical right betrays a healthy appetite for repression.
Calhoun exemplified this view, routinely denying the legitimacy of government power to act for the common good while using government power to suppress others. Buchanan himself offered no objections to Jim Crow rule in Harry Byrds Virginia, advocated harsh punishment of student radicals at UCLA and at Virginia Tech, and lent admiring counsel to the brutal Pinochet regime in Chile.
In turn, as MacLean writes, the radical right is less interested in fighting big government per se as in elevating that branch of government they can best control. Across this history, the Rights jurisdictional safe space is state government. This is evident, of course, in two centuries worth of states rights fulminations against the threat of federal intrusion. And it was evident as the federal promise of equal protection gradually extended by the jurisprudence of the civil rights era began to ebb.
In some areas (such as school integration) the law retreated. In some (such as education or housing or equal employment), the law was not enforced. And in some (such as social policy), devolution of funding and administration invited state-level discretion and inequality.
As importantly, and again echoing through our current politics, is the push to quash local authority. The oft-stated goal of shrinking government to its most local and tangible form is belied by the determination of Calhoun, Byrd, Buchanan, and the reactionary presence in statehouses today (best represented by ALEC and its offshoots) to preempt the initiative of states or counties to act on their own. The goal, quite starkly, is to stem majority rule by weakening those jurisdictions in which it is most easily exercised, and vesting power in those in which representation is most skewed and one-party rule increasingly common.
Devolution and preemption have given the Right an edge in the states, but, as MacLean argues in the closing chapters, such advantages are not enough. For the radical right, victory depends on two further strategies for evading majority rule.
The first, to put it bluntly, is to lie: what was needed to achieve their ends, as MacLean puts it, was to stop being honest with the public.
Over time, Buchanan and his allies tacitly admitted that they had no popular constituency; that the voting public even those who had supported Reagan and cheered the congressional Contract with America hesitated when they learned that freed markets would leave them with sole responsibility for their fates. The solution, first floated in the early debates over Social Security privatization and starkly evident in tortuous repeal of the Affordable Care Act, is to crab-walk around the issues, to claim that frontal assaults on popular social insurance programs areefforts to shore them up rather than destroy them.
The second, and more chilling, solution is to junk the rules entirely; to tilt an already unlevel playing field decisively and irrevocably against the popular will.
The American political system is already strewn with veto points and eagerly attentive to the demands and resources of the wealthy. But, for the Right, holding sway in the least responsive of all the leading democracies to what the people want and need is not enough; the goal is to make it all but impossible for government to respond to the will of the majority unless the very wealthiest Americans agree full with every measure. Calhoun would be proud.
Buchanan and his followers are coldly dismissive of democratic institutions and democratic principles. If American political institutions render market-oriented reforms too difficult to achieve, as Tyler Cowen (who succeeded Buchanan at the helm of George Masons Mercatus Center) argues, then perhaps these institutions should be changed.
Harry Byrds preoccupation with manipulating the rules for voting and representation lives on in ALECs efforts to strangle the franchise through vote suppression and redistricting. For all the ink spilt trying to figure out what combination of backlash, cynicism, or fetishism mobilized Trump voters, the real story is the disenfranchised and demobilized.
The Right is aggressively shackling the popular will on a number of fronts. Fiscal constraints, pioneered by Buchanan and others in Pinochets Chile and pressed in the United States by Grover Norquist and others, aim to starve the beast of resources and flexibility. Legal constraints, particularly the profusion of mandatory arbitration in consumer and employment contracts, aim to strip away recourse to the courts. And a combination of legal activism, expansive police powers, and preemption aim to defang any opposition or alternatives.
Democracy in Chains is a revelation, as politics and as history.
We know a lot about the rise of the Right in postwar America. We have plumbed its social history, calling attention to the singular importance of Southern resistance to civil rights; the ways in which the crabgrassroots politics of white resentment flourished in the suburbs of Atlanta, Milwaukee, and Orange County; and the peculiar amalgam of fundamentalism and libertarianism a strategic alliance of snake-oil vendors and conservative true believers, as Rick Perlstein puts it that mobilized, distracted, or conned its followers.
We have traced the contours and timing of the right turn, the business mobilization that stuttered through the postwar era before riding the turmoil of the 1970s to deal decisive blows against labor, against the economics and politics of growth, and against the entirepostwar social contract. And we have begun to unravel the predatory logic of neoliberalism, that toxic combination of free markets and unfree people.
We know a lot about the ways in which a winner-take-all society marked by rising inequality and insecurity is an essentially political project, created and sustained not by the retreat of policy but by policy choices. Economically and politically, the system is rigged, the rules rewritten to redistribute income upwards and ensure that it stays there. And we now have a pretty good grasp of the political infrastructure nationally and in the states that bankrolls, advances, and disguises this agenda.
Democracy in Chains assembles all of these fragments into a much more coherent, and much more frightening, whole.
It establishes the Jim Crow roots of the modern right, not just through the GOPs southern strategy but through shared doubts about the compatibility of property rights and democratic rule. It demonstrates that the lurch right in North Carolina, Wisconsin, Kansas, and Iowa representsnot some existential crisis of a forgotten working class but the triumph of a long push to use statehouses as laboratories for autocracy. It understands the postCitizens United wave of dark money as but the most recent chapter in a long history of corporate stealth and influence.
And it reminds us that, however incompetent the current White House and legislative leadership, they are winning handily.
See the article here:
Democracy's Critics - Jacobin magazine
- Five alarm fire for democracy: Dems, voting advocates voice outrage at FBI raid of Georgia elections office - Democracy Docket - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Democracy on ICE? The mood turns in America - The Economist - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- When Covering the News Becomes a Crime, Democracy Loses - GV Wire - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Readers Write: Democracy, the Second Amendment, ICE shooting videos - Star Tribune - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Deadly democracy: Lethal political violence in Brazil - Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime (GI-TOC) - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Making Democracy Interesting: Tips from TV, Podcasts, Science Fiction, and Online Creators - Ash Center - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- New GOP anti-voting bill may be the most dangerous attack on voting rights ever - Democracy Docket - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- KU will host a two-year series of seminars on democracy, academic freedom - Lawrence Journal-World - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Capacity-Building Program: Latinos, Media, and Democracy - The AI Edition 2026 - Digital Democracy Institute of the Americas (DDIA) - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- In major rebuke, federal judge blocks key parts of Trumps anti-voting order - Democracy Docket - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Political Influencers and Democracy in the Digital Age - - Center for Democracy and Technology - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- FBIs Fulton County raid may have been illegal, legal experts warn. But it definitely raises fears for 2026 - Democracy Docket - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Democracy In The Age Of Disinformation And Digital Capitalism OpEd - Eurasia Review - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Shoring up the Balkans: NATO infrastructure and a warning for democracy - New Eastern Europe - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Can The iPhone Save Our Democracy? - The Weekly Dish | Andrew Sullivan - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- The Long-Term Futures Work of Building a Better Democracy - Nonprofit Quarterly - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Common Faith with Rabbi Elliot Cosgrove: Amy Spitalnick on Jewish Safety, Democracy, and the Work of JCPA - Jewish Council for Public Affairs - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Lucy Lang on protecting the fabric of democracy as state inspector general - City & State New York - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Saving democracy isnt enoughwe need to upgrade it | PennLive letters - PennLive.com - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Mills unveils housing plan, pledges to defend democracy with everything I have - Mainebiz - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Philosophy, Academic Freedom and the Health of Democracy - seattlespectator.com - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Antisemitism, Unions, and the Fight for American Democracy Today - Jewish Council for Public Affairs - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Op-ed: To understand the future of EU democracy, look at how I got elected - The Parliament Magazine - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- UD Food and Culture Festival organizer: Food and humanities 'necessary for a thriving democracy' - WYSO - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Domestic Terrorism in Plain Sight: White Supremacy, State Violence, and the Assault on Democracy - CounterPunch.org - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Checks and Balances, Democracy, and the "Noble Dream" of Constitutionalism - democracyproject.org - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Parliamentary Assembly calls for young people to be equal partners in European democracy - Council of Europe - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- AI Armies That Never Sleep Are Faking Grassroots Movements, Threatening Democracy - Study Finds - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- [Column] American democracy is dying, and masked agents are killing it - - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- The history behind WAs Temple of Justice, a monument to democracy - The Seattle Times - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Can the private sector help safeguard democracy? The answer is yes - Devex - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Bill Clinton Issues Warning on American Democracy: Read in Full - Newsweek - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Federalism and Democracy - democracyproject.org - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- CDT Responds to Violence in Minnesota - - Center for Democracy and Technology - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Confusion Is Now a Political Strategy And Its Quietly Eroding American Democracy - The Fulcrum - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- ICE Out: Tens of Thousands March in Minnesota in General Strike Against Immigration Raids - Democracy Now! - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- This week at Democracy Docket: DOGE, True the Vote, and blackmailing Minnesota - Democracy Docket - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- We The People v Trump with Democracy Forward's Skye Perryman - Interfaith Alliance - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- The Russians Within Us: Between The Myth Of Foreign Infiltration And The Reality Of Internal Capture; Anatomy Of An Imperfect Democracy Romania (Part... - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- We dont have a functional democracy An Interview with Dr Eoin Lenihan, Part III - Hungarian Conservative - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Syria's future must be shaped by its people through democracy: Turkish parliament speaker - Anadolu Ajans - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Uganda: Democracy in Name Only - Global Issues.org - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Statement on Behalf of Business Leaders for Democracy on the Passing of Betsy Brenner - urbanmilwaukee.com - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Why the Pittsburgh Post-Gazettes closure exposes a growing threat to democracy - The Conversation - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Journey to American Democracy: The Battle of the Bulge - Letters from an American | Heather Cox Richardson - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Daily Herald opinion: Democracy in action: Training teens as election judges and encouraging them to vote is a vital mission - Daily Herald - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- AI and Democracy: Mapping the Intersections - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Beyond the Fog of War: Venezuelas Democracy is at Stake - Fair Observer - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- ICEs Deadly Force is a Threat to Our Democracy - American Constitution Society - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Opinion | The dark day democracy almost died - The Cap Times - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Trusting News organization to receive 2026 Brown Democracy Medal - Penn State University - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- This Is Our Hemisphere: Report from Colombia on Trumps Escalating Threats to the Region - Democracy Now! - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- S&Ds stand in solidarity with Iranians demanding freedom and democracy - Socialists and Democrats - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- After Trumps attack, we Venezuelans need to know what comes next authoritarianism or democracy | Jess Piero - The Guardian - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- 4 pivotal elections around the world that will pose a test to democracy in 2026 - The Conversation - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Appointed board for Indy schools threatens democracy | Opinion - IndyStar - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- PAs Abbas declares 2026 will be the year of Palestinian democracy - The Times of Israel - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Trump, Venezuela, and the threat to the 2026 elections - Democracy Docket - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- How new USPS rules put the right to vote at risk - Democracy Docket - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Senator Kim Demands We Find the Courage to Heal Our Country, Warns that Our Democracy is More Fragile than during the January 6 Insurrection Five... - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- How AI and misinformation are posing a threat to democracy in Yorkshire - BBC - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Democracy didnt break overnight2026 will reveal if Memphis lets it die - Tennessee Lookout - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Opinion | If Trump Doesnt Bring Democracy Into Venezuela, Hell Never Get Much Oil Out of It - The New York Times - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Commentary: Five long years since the assault on American Democracy The insurrection led by an incumbent President, and the wounding of our democracy... - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- RELEASE: Statement on the Anniversary of the January 6th Attack on the US Capitol from the Inclusive Democracy Caucus Co-Chairs - MN House of... - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Less than 1% of Epstein files have been released, DOJ admits - Democracy Docket - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Trump chose not to restore democracy in Venezuela, with the opposition's Nobel winner in hiding and much of the opposition in prison - Fortune - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Fair voting maps arent favors, theyre the foundation of democracy: op-ed - AL.com - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Democracy Begins with You: Preparing for the 2026 Elections - Miami's Community News - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- The Trump administration is building a national voter roll, former DOJ lawyers warn - Democracy Docket - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Local Venezuelans wrestle with what US taking Maduro means for democracy and socialism - GBH - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- GOP senators threaten to impeach judges who rule against Trump - Democracy Docket - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- In Miami-Dade, Republicans say democracy is coming to Venezuela but not immediately - News From The States - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Five years on from January 6th, Congress must protect against President Trumps attacks on democracy - Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in... - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Donald Trump's greed is a threat to American democracy - Wisconsin State Journal - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Peace and prosperity in Venezuela will come from democracy, not oil, writes Ricardo Hausmann - The Economist - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- January 6th Five Years On: Our Democracy Crisis Persists - Insider NJ - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Local democracy is strong, but rural Michigan communities are falling behind, new survey shows - Michigan Advance - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- The military is the last safeguard of democracy. Is Donald Trump bending it to his will? - The Conversation - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- What Must Be Done To Bring Back Venezuelas Democracy And Economy - Forbes - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]