{"id":4258,"date":"2026-03-18T17:15:10","date_gmt":"2026-03-18T17:15:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/?p=4258"},"modified":"2026-03-18T17:15:10","modified_gmt":"2026-03-18T17:15:10","slug":"how-to-fix-democracy-out-with-the-politicians","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/?p=4258","title":{"rendered":"How to Fix Democracy? Out With the Politicians!"},"content":{"rendered":"<p> <br \/>\n<br \/><\/p>\n<div data-nosnippet=\"\">\n<p>It\u2019s no secret that democracy is in trouble. Studies show that a growing number of countries are less free, and polls suggest ordinary citizens are losing faith in their governments. What can be done to fix this? Conventional wisdom often points to piecemeal reforms on campaign finance, for example, or on better educating voters and taking steps to increase turnout on election days.<\/p>\n<p>H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Landemore once subscribed to those theories, too, but no longer. The Yale scholar has come to believe that it\u2019s not democracy but electoral politics that is the problem. And the answer isn\u2019t some sort of Band-Aid but to get rid of elections altogether. It\u2019s a radical idea, to be sure, and Landemore accepts as much in her new book, <em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.penguinrandomhouse.com\/books\/730879\/politics-without-politicians-by-helene-landemore\/\">Politics Without Politicians<\/a><\/em>. I invited her on FP Live to interrogate her ideas further. Subscribers can watch the full discussion on the video box atop this page or on the FP Live podcast. What follows here is a lightly edited and condensed transcript.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Ravi Agrawal:<\/strong> You say that electoral politics is beyond repair but that democracy is not. Explain that.<\/p>\n<p><strong>H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Landemore:<\/strong> Maybe because I\u2019m a theorist, I have the luxury of taking a step back, philosophically, historically, and looking at the bigger picture. And my sense is that the ideal of democracy, our aspiration to people\u2019s power, is still very much alive and very much in people\u2019s hearts. But the implementation\u2014electoral democracy\u2014is failing us over and over again. And I think, at this point, it\u2019s time to ask the tough questions, like: Do we still need politicians? They may have performed a valuable role in the 18th century, when the conditions and the levels of education were lower, when technologies didn\u2019t connect us so closely. But now they might be causing more problems than they solve.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> You\u2019ve been a scholar in this area for so long, and there was a time when you entertained ideas to fix specific elements of electoral democracy, such as campaign finance reform. What\u2019s made you give up on all of those discussions and debates?<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> Elections are an oligarchic selection mechanism. It means that they will systematically, not accidentally, oversample the wealthy, the connected, the already powerful in society. They will sample from the top of the distribution. So they won\u2019t distribute power equally, which would be a democratic way of selecting representatives, when everybody has an equal chance of accessing the center of power. The only way to get an equal distribution of power is through random selection. One person, one lottery ticket. Any deviation from that basic selection mechanism will generate inequalities.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> So let\u2019s move to your alternative to elections. The idea at the heart of your new book and also your previous one, <em><a href=\"https:\/\/press.princeton.edu\/books\/hardcover\/9780691181998\/open-democracy?srsltid=AfmBOorYE07-V1n-oruYnfTF7vUjlaQVZcr0gfWk3vtp4ji3q8L4gYJn\">Open Democracy<\/a><\/em>, is citizens\u2019 assemblies. Tell us what they are and how they work.<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> Citizens\u2019 assemblies are large groups of ordinary citizens, picked at random from the source population and brought together for a sustained period of time\u2014several weekends typically, over many months\u2014to deliberate about issues that are controversial or difficult, like abortion, climate justice, urban planning, what to do with nuclear plants, questions of gender equality, marriage equality, biodiversity, electoral reform, you name it. They\u2019ve been done around the world. We have close to a thousand cases of various sizes, mostly at the local level. But they\u2019re really able to address a number of issues and bring together people from opposite ends of the political spectrum, all ages, all backgrounds, and get them to talk to each other and learn together and eventually agree and make recommendations to the politicians who commission such assemblies.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> How does an ordinary citizen who\u2019s taking time out from their regular life get up to speed on a complex issue that they don\u2019t know anything about? Who helps them? And then how do they reach consensus?<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> There\u2019s a very important role that experts play in these assemblies. The first phase of a citizens\u2019 assembly typically is about learning. But it\u2019s not learning as if they\u2019re students who are going to be taught by experts. They\u2019re going to teach each other and learn on the basis of expert debates, expert presentations. The idea is really as if they\u2019re the ones on top and the experts are on tap, helping them learn, helping them educate themselves and each other about a particular topic. Sometimes they will question expert frameworks. Sometimes they will ask another expert to come in and testify. And they will debate among themselves how convincing the evidence is, how convincing their arguments are, etc. By the end of the process, they themselves become a different kind of expert. For example, at the Citizens\u2019 Convention on Climate, which I observed in France in 2019 and 2020, by the end I was completely lost. The level of the conversation was above me.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> Tell us a bit more about that, actually, because that\u2019s one of the most famous examples of a citizens\u2019 assembly. How did it come about?<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> In 2018, President Emmanuel Macron decided to pass a fuel tax in the name of environmental concerns, maybe to fill a hole in the budget, who knows. But the result was catastrophic. It caused a massive rebellion from the so-called \u201cyellow vests,\u201d people who live in the suburbs, who are lower-middle-class, who need their cars to go to work. Typically, they do not have electric vehicles, do not have access to public transportation, and felt unjustly punished by this fuel tax. So they rebelled. They occupied roundabouts, they demonstrated on highways, and then they went all the way to Paris and demonstrated on the Champs-\u00c9lys\u00e9es and burned things down. It got really ugly, and Macron ran out of options.<\/p>\n<p>So we did what he called a great national debate that lasted two months, during which everybody got a chance to say what they wanted to say, either on an internet platform or in locally organized meetings or also in the context of 18 randomly selected assemblies, organized at the regional level. That latter experiment went so well that Macron said, \u201cI will organize a citizens\u2019 assembly at the national level, with 150 randomly selected French citizens, whom I will bring to the I\u00e9na Palace in Paris for nine months and eight weekends, and you\u2019ll have to come up with a better solution than my fuel tax to the problem of climate change.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> And these people were being paid for it, of course.<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> These people were being paid around 84 euros per day, I believe, which was around 2,500 euros for the whole thing. So a full month of work for a lot of people. He just told them, \u201cIf you think you can beat the politicians, then show me a better answer than a carbon tax,\u201d which is, by the way, the recommendation that all the experts who came to the assembly made, over and over again.<\/p>\n<p>Interestingly, the citizens decided not to follow this recommendation. Among the 149 proposals that came out of the convention after nine months, there was no carbon tax. They said that they understood it was a good idea to have a price signal, but they thought that to do that only at the French level, at the level of the nation, was self-defeating and that it only made sense in the European Union if all the other countries did it too. In the meantime, they didn\u2019t want to punish the working class, basically. They didn\u2019t want to punish the yellow vests, and they thought there were 149 other options. What really struck me is that by the end, the experts themselves were kind of in agreement. Not all of them, to be fair, but many of them were like, \u201cYou know what, actually, there are all these other levers we could use before we turn to the carbon tax, and maybe indeed it\u2019s better to do it at the EU level anyway.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> In the book, you also describe a deliberative forum in Quezon City in the Philippines. What happened there?<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> This is less my area of specialty. Nicole Curato, who\u2019s a colleague in the United Kingdom now, studied assemblies in the Philippines that bring together victims of drug lords and the families of the people who sold the drugs and engaged in violence. You can imagine the intensity of these meetings. There are a lot of deaths that people are mourning. There\u2019s a lot of accusations flying back and forth. And somehow, even in that context, even on something so polarizing and divisive, with so much acrimony and resentment, through deliberation, people came to the conclusion that a lot of what happened is due to structural issues about poverty, about lack of options for young men, about spirals of violence and gangs that don\u2019t really give you a choice. And so they forgave each other. The victims forgave the families of the perpetrators; the families of the perpetrators asked for forgiveness. It was apparently a very moving and intense sort of process.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ve seen a version of that, maybe less intense because it\u2019s not about life and death as much, in the context of the French citizens\u2019 assemblies, where the same sort of reconciliation happened between people who disagreed profoundly. For example, the second assembly I observed\u2014and in that case also co-governed\u2014was on end-of-life issues. Whether or not, given the aging population of France, we should consider liberalizing the law and allowing for forms of assisted dying or even euthanasia. This touches on so many issues, including religious issues, issues of conscience and philosophy of life, etc. You had a big division in the group between those who were in favor, those who were against, and it\u2019s not clear that they changed their minds on either side, fundamentally.<\/p>\n<p>But somehow, by the end, the report was voted with over 90 percent support. That was a report that contained a recommendation to liberalize the law and allow some forms of assisted dying, some form of euthanasia. But half of it was about palliative care, recommending that the government invest massively in units where people are taken care of when they\u2019re close to the end because if they feel reassured and their pain is alleviated, they won\u2019t be tempted by the more radical solutions. It was such a successful process that I remember in the last session, one of the representatives of the minority\u2014a woman who\u2019s very Catholic and by principle opposed to liberalizing the law\u2014she said publicly, \u201cI want to thank the 76 percent in favor of liberalizing the law for giving us, the minority, 50 percent of the final report and 50 percent the speaking time.\u201d It means that in this context, the minority was not bulldozed over, was not ignored, was actually listened to very carefully, felt respected, felt that their views were taken into account, that their recommendation about palliative care was really influential. And so they could reconcile themselves with a report that in the end made a recommendation that they still disagree with.<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s a beautiful version of democracy. In electoral democracy, we have this idea that if this time, this side wins, then next time we will have our revenge or we will have our turn. It\u2019s beautiful because it saves us from violence. But it\u2019s not that beautiful because it\u2019s based on a winner-take-all approach, whereby when you win, you win and you just ignore the losers. In this deliberative context, it\u2019s very different.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> When you used the word \u201creconciliation,\u201d I was reminded of truth and reconciliation and the processes that postwar societies sometimes go through. Is there a world in which we can incorporate some of these ideas and techniques for people to be heard without just getting rid of elections? In other words, why completely transform the system instead of taking the best parts from all of it?<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> That\u2019s a very deep question. I understand politics without politicians in two ways. One is the radical, more theoretical way, whereby I try to imagine what it would look like to have a completely nonelectoral democracy. It\u2019s really important to have a clear picture of what the pros and cons of such a vision would be. Second, there\u2019s a more modest, reformist, practical vision of politics without politicians, which is simply about carving out spaces in the current system for ordinary citizens. It\u2019s not that we get rid of politicians altogether\u2014it\u2019s that we create a space where they\u2019re not there and it\u2019s just about us ordinary citizens talking to each other, making friends with each other, and coming up with a vision that we then transfer to the politicians, and hopefully that would be influential and shape their own process.<\/p>\n<p>That said, there\u2019s a big question: How do you insert this space, this assembly, this house of the people\u2014working-class people, nurses, gardeners, Uber drivers? This assembly would look very different from elected assemblies, where it\u2019s a lot of lawyers, doctors, and people who\u2019ve made a job of politics after many years. Let\u2019s say we go this reformist route. What\u2019s the relationship between the two logics, the two legitimacies? One is based on the logic and legitimacy that elections convey. Your vote gives you a certain legitimacy. The other type of legitimacy is based on equality. We all got into that assembly because we were randomly selected, and the legitimacy comes from true democratic equality.<\/p>\n<p>The problem is that we don\u2019t have a clear idea of how the relationship would evolve over time. Maybe it would be stable. My colleagues John Gastil and the late Erik Olin Wright proposed a model of a legislature by law that would act as a sort of veto player for elected assemblies, which would prevent the worst decisions\u2014maybe tariffs would have been vetoed or something like that. Or you could imagine reversing the rules, and now the big-picture vision for the country comes no longer from parties but from this central assembly, and at the periphery, you have this second assembly that is in charge of implementing the vision.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m not entirely sure how that would work\u2014that\u2019s why it\u2019s much easier to picture the simple model. One trajectory you could imagine is that ultimately, the citizens\u2019 assembly would displace the electoral assembly, simply because it would produce better proposals. It would better track the preferences of the majorities and diagnose the problems. So what would happen to elected assemblies over time would be the sort of displacement that happened to the House of Lords.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> But that is the best-case scenario, right? Critics of your idea would ask how ordinary citizens can make painful decisions. For example, you mentioned tariffs earlier, but tariffs, as we know, are a tax on people. It\u2019s hard to imagine that regular people would vote for more taxes on themselves. It\u2019s hard to imagine that regular people would make a decision that is in a hypothetical national interest rather than a local interest\u2014for people who live far away from them or look different than they do, at personal cost. How would a citizens\u2019 assembly grapple with those kinds of issues?<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> They do already, in a way\u2014not many of them, it\u2019s true, because we tend to take away the painful economic trade-offs. I admit that there\u2019s been a flaw in the implementation so far. But one example is a recommendation that was pushed by the members of the citizens\u2019 assembly on climate, who wanted to implement a program of global housing renovations across France in which everyone would be forced under a penalty of not being able to sell their house or their apartment, or even rent it, until they renovated their lodging to make it energy-efficient because it\u2019s one of the main sources of greenhouse gas emissions in France.<\/p>\n<p>I thought this was a coercive measure with a painful cost and that it would never be supported by the larger public. But it turns out that the assembly recommended it, even though it was a bit punitive for property owners. Many of the people in the assembly owned buildings or houses or apartments and pushed back. But in the end, they seemed convinced, given the arguments from the experts, that they could get along with that solution, even at personal cost to themselves and people like them. Unfortunately, this set of recommendations did not go to a referendum. But we know from polls that 74 percent of the French supported most of the recommendations and that one in particular. That was a big shock for me. They were ready to make that economic sacrifice to a degree.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> Let me ask you a more extreme version of the question I just asked. Let\u2019s say a country is at war. Countries that are at war, for national security reasons, suspend elections. Ukraine, for instance. Many countries around the world have seen people power, at its core, as a weakness that needs to be hidden away when a country is truly in crisis\u2014especially of a national security kind or one that deals with another aggressive power that might not be a democracy. How does your model account for those kinds of issues? Aren\u2019t these the very moments when you need politicians the most\u2014someone who is a good speaker and can inspire people who are in need of inspiration, who can lead in a moment of real crisis?<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> It\u2019s a very good question. In my book, I do not address that question because the model is meant for so-called \u201cnormal politics\u201d in times of peace. For moments of crisis, you would probably have to rely on the same emergency measures that you have in the current system. You would have to devolve some decision power, temporarily, to an executive. But I don\u2019t know that the executive in my model would have to be an elected executive; it could be an appointed executive that is chosen by the citizens\u2019 assembly from a list of people who have shown that they\u2019re remarkable statesmen.<\/p>\n<p>I do think there\u2019s still room for statesmen and stateswomen in my model\u2014it\u2019s just that they don\u2019t necessarily get identified through elections. Even inside these citizens\u2019 assemblies, you see certain types of people emerge as natural leaders. They always exist, and they\u2019re respected and socially elevated within these assemblies to the extent that they serve the group. But the minute they start acting like politicians, trying to hog the microphone in plenaries or rush to the journalist at the end of the meeting to speak on behalf of the whole group and trying to get the perks of power, they lose authority and legitimacy in the group.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m sure this is not fully answering your question, and there are a lot of holes in my theory because we\u2019re still at the beginning of this attempt to reinvent democracy along more inclusive lines. But I don\u2019t think that this would necessarily be a slam-dunk argument against it. Again, look back at ancient Athens. They did have people leading them into battle, like Pericles, who actually was elected in that case. But he was elected as a military strategist, not a decision-maker about the common good. When it came to deciding whether to go to war, it was not Pericles who decided. He could talk in the assembly, certainly, and perhaps he had a very large influence. But he was not the one making that call in the end because who was going to die in those wars? Regular Athenians\u2014the peasants, farmers, and blacksmiths. So they were asked, do you want to go to Sicily or not? Do you want to risk your life and risk not coming back? So they were the ones making those decisions.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> Can you make a distinction between the collaborative process you\u2019re describing and a referendum? You said earlier that informed decisions need to be made. My mind immediately goes to the Brexit referendum, which the people voted for. But by all accounts, the evidence now shows this was not good for the U.K. economy. Can\u2019t ordinary citizens often make incredibly bad decisions as well?<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> Absolutely, and so did the Greeks. They put Socrates to death; they\u2019ll carry that stain forever. This is always a counterargument, an objection to direct democracy and mass referenda. But you have to look at it in a systemic way, and the evidence from studies of referenda in the United States (especially at the state level), in Switzerland, and other places where they are routinely run is pretty good, actually. It gets people what they want. It\u2019s not markedly more anti-minority than nondirect ways of making decisions.<\/p>\n<p>If democracy is anything, it\u2019s moments of mass decision-making. I focus a lot on citizens\u2019 assemblies because I\u2019m concerned about a more democratic form of representation. But I cannot imagine getting rid entirely of moments of mass voting. Even a citizens\u2019 assembly could get things wrong. So, if they\u2019re not sure, they could put their decision or their bundle of decisions to a referendum. In terms of the Brexit example, I\u2019m not sure this was the wrong decision. I\u2019m 55 percent sure it was the wrong decision, but in the grand scheme of things, it was an expression of popular sovereignty. It was a sobering moment for elites. It was the reclaiming of something against, in part, the European Union, which had grown too unwieldy, bureaucratic, and neoliberal for its own sake. So maybe it did at least some good to have that moment of, well, actually, it\u2019s not working. We\u2019re out. I understand it\u2019s bad for the U.K. economy, but is it bad for democracy? These terms are not interchangeable.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> The spirit of this whole discussion so far has been one of experimentation. You openly admit the ideas you\u2019re presenting are radical, yet they are being experimented on around the world. Despite the radicalness of these suggestions, I think you are, deep down, also pragmatic about what could work and what would be taken on board by politicians. How feasible do you think it is that countries would adopt more of your recommendations? It\u2019s very hard for me to imagine that politicians will ever give up power and get rid of themselves.<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> First, I have to say that it\u2019s not just my proposal. I\u2019m not alone; I\u2019m surrounded by an army of people at this point. They call themselves Kleroterion, Sortitionist, advocates for a lot-based democracy\u2014there are different names. My colleagues, Alex Guerrero; Gastil and Wright, whom I mentioned; Brett Hennig\u2014there are many people out there who are pushing these ideas in various formats with different visions, and I think it\u2019s making a difference.<\/p>\n<p>As we speak, I\u2019m planning a citizens\u2019 assembly in Connecticut for the summer. We\u2019ve raised enough money, and we\u2019ve got the support of politicians, believe it or not\u2014the comptroller of the state of Connecticut. So it\u2019s actually not true that politicians will never give up power. As a class, it might be very hard, but you can find individuals who are visionaries and understand that it\u2019s potentially, at least in the short term, to their benefit to exchange a little bit of power for greater legitimacy. They can outsource some of their decisions to a group of randomly selected citizens, and in exchange, they gain credibility and legitimacy in the eyes of their own constituents, which stabilizes their power. It soothes the anger that many people feel, makes them feel heard; it\u2019s a solution to populism, in a way.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, the danger is that it can be instrumentalized by politicians. This can easily turn into what people call \u201cparticipation-washing.\u201d But it can also unsettle the status quo. It can open the <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Overton_window\">Overton window<\/a>. Historically, it\u2019s very unpredictable what will happen, but there are changes that can happen overnight, almost, if the conditions are ripe. So I just want to give people the tools to understand what\u2019s possible.<\/p>\n<p>You\u2019re right: Nothing changes until politicians feel as if they\u2019re stuck. That was true in Ireland\u2014they didn\u2019t know how to address the question of marriage equality, so they gave the hot potato to a citizens\u2019 assembly. That was true in France\u2014without the yellow vests protests, you do not have the first citizens\u2019 assembly at the national level in France. That was true in Iceland, which had to collapse financially in 2008 for the very innovative process of crowdsourcing the constitution to happen. It\u2019s true pretty much anywhere.<\/p>\n<p>But politicians are smart. They observe what\u2019s happening, and they may say, maybe we don\u2019t have to wait for an enormous crisis to hit to anticipate and build the dams that Machiavelli said you should build to be safe from black swans. So I\u2019m hoping this is what\u2019s going to happen, that we\u2019re going to run the assembly and help solve a crisis in Connecticut, which is that there\u2019s not enough money to fund local public services\u2014towns are very unequal in their ability to provide those services to their people, and elected politicians cannot solve this problem because no one wins an election by promising more taxes. This is something that the citizens will have to debate among themselves. How many sacrifices are we ready to make? Can we share tax revenue across town lines? Do we want to invent new sources of revenues and property taxes, which is the only source of revenue at the local level in Connecticut?<\/p>\n<p>You asked me if citizens can accept economic costs. I think they can, but you need to give them an opportunity to think, to weigh the pros and cons themselves, and to develop enough of a bond with others that they can feel solidarity. Because as long as there are others you can demonize and assume to be lazy or unworthy, it\u2019s very easy to remain selfish. But if you meet them and you realize they\u2019re just like you and they have issues and didn\u2019t do anything to deserve the situation they\u2019re in, it very much changes your empathy level and your capacity to want to do something for the common good.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> In the book, you cite a William Buckley line where he says he would sooner be governed by the first 2,000 people in the Boston telephone directory than by the 2,000 members of the faculty of Harvard University. It strikes me that that kind of thinking is what we would hear from populists on the far right or the far left. Donald Trump would call it \u201cdrain the swamp.\u201d How is any of that different from what you\u2019re saying?<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> That\u2019s a very good question. The diagnostic is not that different. I\u2019ll be transparent about that. I do think that there\u2019s a questioning of the influence of elites in the system that I share with the populists, you might say. But the answer is quite radically different because the populists typically say, \u201cI\u2019m the answer. I alone can save you. I alone can represent the people. I alone can drain the swamp. Vote for me.\u201d That\u2019s not what I\u2019m saying. I\u2019m saying the solution is all of us together, and if we can\u2019t do it all at once, then a subset of us that will be randomly selected and frequently rotated so that unlike what happens with the populist solution, there\u2019s no risk of a concentration of power into the hands of one dangerous lunatic, which is always a danger with populist solutions.<\/p>\n<p>I think populists are popular because they diagnose the problem more or less accurately. The system is too elitist. It\u2019s too responsive to the preferences of the affluent and not enough to the preferences of the working class and the people I call \u201cthe shy\u201d in the book. But that doesn\u2019t mean their solutions are good. They will make the problems worse, and they will potentially make us veer from very imperfect oligarchy to fascism or authoritarianism. So my solution is actually not populist. It\u2019s democratic in the radical sense, a return to people\u2019s power.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> I have to address one irony that almost everyone who\u2019s watching or listening is going to point out: You are a professor at Yale, and therefore, it\u2019s very easy to call you the elite. Let me say the same about myself: I\u2019ve rapidly, despite my best attempts, become a card-carrying member of the foreign-policy establishment. So there\u2019s a certain irony in the two of us having this discussion about how democracy has become too centered on the elites rather than the people, as it were.<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> Absolutely. That\u2019s why in the book I have a few pages devoted to my biography, my own personal trajectory from a child of a middle-class family in Normandy to being a professor at an Ivy League. I think I\u2019m an elite, absolutely. I have elite tastes. I have elite acquaintances. I was just in Davos [for the World Economic Forum]. This is as elite as it gets at this point.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> Me too. That\u2019s where we last met.<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> But I would say that because of my particular trajectory and a history of failure and a story of not quite measuring up to the expectations of the elite system I was supposed to be shaped by, I\u2019ve come to question a lot of assumptions about who should govern. I\u2019ve come to question a lot of the teaching and education I\u2019ve received. I\u2019ve come to question the authorities that I was brought up to revere and be differential toward.<\/p>\n<p>And I have to say, the more I climb in the system\u2014including when I reach places like Davos\u2014the less impressed I am and the more convinced I become that there\u2019s no reason to defer, no reason to think people at the top know that much better than ordinary citizens, if the latter were given the time and opportunity to consider the questions and policy issues that are currently decided on their behalf by these elites. I think they would have common sense. They would have the capacity to see through the trade-offs and the difficulties and to make enlightened judgments.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RA:<\/strong> I have no doubt that ordinary citizens are wise beyond our imagination, or beyond conventional wisdom, and we should trust them. But I have one small quibble: Not all politicians are bad. Many of them go into their line of work trying to do good, thinking about problems in the right ways. Many of them work very hard. Similarly at Davos\u2014a place often seen as an elite cabal, which it is\u2014one often runs into do-gooders and people who are genuinely trying to move the needle in a way that they define as better for humanity. So it\u2019s a little bit more nuanced than good or bad when it comes to politicians, or even elite cabals, such as the universities that we\u2019ve both been to.<\/p>\n<p><strong>HL:<\/strong> Absolutely. In the book, I try not to go the conspiratorial route of saying, \u201cThey\u2019re all evil. They\u2019re all ill-intentioned. And it\u2019s all the corruption from top to bottom.\u201d Absolutely not, and I don\u2019t pursue ad hominem attacks toward anyone. It\u2019s really a problem about the selection process and the resulting group of professional politicians as a whole, not any individuals in particular.<\/p>\n<p>I believe that even if politicians were as well-intentioned as we could imagine, even if there were no corruption whatsoever, even if you imagined the ideal version of electoral democracy, you would still run into the problems I diagnosed, which is an over-representation of a certain type of people that you can define through socioeconomic characteristics but also age. They\u2019re overwhelmingly older than the people they represent. They are type A. They are bold. They are not shy. They\u2019re not wallflowers. I think it\u2019s a problem. It\u2019s a problem for the way they perceive the world.<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<p><br \/>\n<br \/><a href=\"https:\/\/foreignpolicy.com\/2026\/03\/18\/democracy-politics-without-politicians\/\">Source link <\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>It\u2019s no secret that democracy is in trouble. Studies show that a growing number of countries are less free, and polls suggest ordinary citizens are losing faith in their governments. What can be done to fix this? Conventional wisdom often points to piecemeal reforms on campaign finance, for example, or on better educating voters and [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":4259,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[10],"tags":[],"class_list":{"0":"post-4258","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-politcical-news"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4258","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=4258"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4258\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/4259"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=4258"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=4258"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/firearmupgrades.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=4258"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}