Are elections the ultimate in democracy?

July 14, 1993
Issue 

By Brian Martin

The belief that electoral politics is the same as democracy is deep seated. It is held by people across the political spectrum.

To be sure, there is much dissatisfaction with electioneering. Politicians are sold like breakfast cereals; personalities dominate over issues; attention to the supposed whims of swinging voters takes precedence over wider issues.

Furthermore, it probably doesn't matter too much who is elected, since the programs of the major parties are so similar. In any case, much policy is made and implemented by government bureaucrats who are not up for election.

The solution to such problems is usually seen as electoral politics with a new content: better candidates, new parties, fairer procedures, a better-educated electorate. The major problem is seen, not as the electoral system itself, but as the people who are elected and the policies they implement.

Is there any alternative? We have all been taught that representative democracy is the best political system available. Perhaps it is time to question that postulate.

Of course, many on the left want to abolish private ownership of capital. But how are decisions to be made in a democratic socialist society? Parliamentary democracy? Workplace councils? It's hard to know, since there has been so little discussion of systems of decision-making suitable for a socialist society that is not run by party elites.

In many social movement groups, such as feminist and environmental groups, consensus decision-making has been developed to a fine art. But using consensus techniques in larger groups, involving tens of thousands of people or more, is a daunting prospect even for the advocates of this approach.

There needs to be much more discussion of participatory alternatives to representative democracy — alternatives that can coordinate activity in a large and complex society with strong differences of opinion.

John Burnheim has proposed a comprehensive alternative in his book Is Democracy Possible? Burnheim proposes to get rid of politicians and governments altogether and replace them with decision-making groups of randomly selected citizens.

Random selection has a long history as a democratic technique. It was used by the ancient Greeks and is used today for selecting jurors.

Burnheim introduces some variations on the jury system. Most importantly, he proposes that there be a whole network of groups, each one dealing with a particular policy area in a local area, sport, industry and waste disposal. This would be quite different from the present system in which politicians are expected to make decisions on all possible issues.

Burnheim suggests that group members be chosen randomly only from volunteers for that group. In this way, education policy in different regions, for example, would be decided by different groups of citizens chosen randomly from those who specifically nominated for that group.

The random selection principle could easily be designed to give a representative cross-section of the population, such as equal numbers of women and men, proportional numbers of minority groups, etc.

An advantage of this system is that political wheeling and dealing would be reduced. Lobbyists would have a harder time applying pressure to decision-makers, especially as terms of office would be strictly limited.

But would randomly selected citizens do a good job? Some cynics might suggest that they could hardly do worse than present politicians. Fortunately, there is evidence available. For over a decade, two independent teams of researchers have been studying the possibility of policy making by randomly selected groups of citizens.

One team, based at the University of Wuppertal, Germany, has used "planning cells" to look at energy policy, town planning and information technology. The other studies have been done at the Jefferson Center in Minneapolis, USA, using what they call "policy juries" to examine issues such as water pollution from agricultural run-off.

The randomly selected citizens on the planning cells and policy juries hear testimony from experts and advocates of different views, and then spend their few days together making a collective judgment on the issue at hand. The results are encouraging. The group members quickly become very knowledgeable about the issues, take their tasks very seriously and, when more than one group is used, arrive at fairly consistent results. Furthermore, the group members become committed to the decision-making process.

Back in Australia, Canberra-based researchers Fred and Merrelyn Emery have done pioneering work on random selection and democracy, especially in its application in industry. It has long been known that productivity and job satisfaction can be increased by greater worker participation. Random selection is one way to do this.

Burnheim decided that his alternative is so different from representative democracy that he calls it by a different name: demarchy. It involves a dramatic shift in thinking. And long before it can be implemented on a wide scale, it requires much more development and experimentation.

One objection often made against participatory democracy is that everyone can't be an expert on every issue, hence everyone can't participate in an informed way. Demarchy overcomes this individuals can, if they wish, become knowledgeable about a few subjects and nominate for the relevant groups. They can then rely on others, as we presently do, to make sensible decisions on other issues.

As well, the usual processes of public debate, protest and mobilisation of opinion could continue. Randomly selected individuals, unlike elected politicians, can claim no mandate for their positions. This, along with strictly limited terms of office and restriction to a single area of policy, means that the corruptions of power would be greatly limited.

Perhaps there is no ideal way to organise society, but certainly the present system is not the ultimate — even if progressive parties were elected to government. The challenge for a society is to be more than a static democracy, but to continually be in the process of democratising itself.

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