An Important Distinction: Democracy versus Republic
It is important to keep in mind the
difference between a Democracy and a Republic, as dissimilar forms of
government. Understanding the difference is essential to comprehension of the
fundamentals involved. It should be noted, in passing, that use of the word
Democracy as meaning merely the popular type of government--that is,
featuring genuinely free elections by the people periodically--is not helpful
in discussing, as here, the difference between alternative and dissimilar forms
of a popular government: a Democracy versus a Republic. This double meaning of
Democracy--a popular-type government in general, as well as a specific form
of popular government--needs to be made clear in any discussion, or writing,
regarding this subject, for the sake of sound understanding.
These two forms of government:
Democracy and Republic, are not only dissimilar but antithetical, reflecting
the sharp contrast between (a) The Majority Unlimited, in a Democracy, lacking
any legal safeguard of the rights of The Individual and The Minority, and (b)
The Majority Limited, in a Republic under a written Constitution safeguarding
the rights of The Individual and The Minority; as we shall now see.
A Democracy
The chief characteristic and distinguishing
feature of a Democracy is: Rule by Omnipotent Majority. In a Democracy, The
Individual, and any group of Individuals composing any Minority, have no
protection against the unlimited power of The Majority. It is a case of
Majority-over-Man.
This is true whether it be a Direct
Democracy, or a Representative Democracy. In the direct type, applicable only
to a small number of people as in the little city-states of ancient Greece, or
in a New England town-meeting, all of the electorate assemble to debate and
decide all government questions, and all decisions are reached by a majority
vote (of at least half-plus-one). Decisions of The Majority in a New England
town-meeting are, of course, subject to the Constitutions of the State and of
the United States which protect The Individual’s rights; so, in this case, The
Majority is not omnipotent and such a town-meeting is, therefore, not an
example of a true Direct Democracy. Under a Representative Democracy like
Britain’s parliamentary form of government, the people elect representatives to
the national legislature--the elective body there being the House of
Commons--and it functions by a similar vote of at least half-plus-one in making
all legislative decisions.
In both the Direct type and the
Representative type of Democracy, The Majority’s power is absolute and
unlimited; its decisions are unappealable under the legal system established to
give effect to this form of government. This opens the door to unlimited
Tyranny-by-Majority. This was what The Framers of the United States
Constitution meant in 1787, in debates in the Federal (framing) Convention,
when they condemned the "excesses of democracy" and abuses under any
Democracy of the unalienable rights of The Individual by The Majority. Examples
were provided in the immediate post-1776 years by the legislatures of some of
the States. In reaction against earlier royal tyranny, which had been exercised
through oppressions by royal governors and judges of the new State governments,
while the legislatures acted as if they were virtually omnipotent. There were
no effective State Constitutions to limit the legislatures because most State
governments were operating under mere Acts of their respective legislatures
which were mislabelled "Constitutions." Neither the governors not the
courts of the offending States were able to exercise any substantial and
effective restraining influence upon the legislatures in defense of The
Individual’s unalienable rights, when violated by legislative infringements.
(Connecticut and Rhode Island continued under their old Charters for many
years.) It was not until 1780 that the first genuine Republic through
constitutionally limited government, was adopted by Massachusetts--next New
Hampshire in 1784, other States later.
It was in this connection that Jefferson,
in his "Notes On The State of Virginia" written in 1781-1782,
protected against such excesses by the Virginia Legislature in the years
following the Declaration of Independence, saying: "An elective
despotism was not the government we fought for . . ." (Emphasis
Jefferson’s.) He also denounced the despotic concentration of power in the
Virginia Legislature, under the so-called "Constitution"--in reality
a mere Act of that body:
"All the powers of
government, legislative, executive, judiciary, result to the legislative body.
The concentrating these in the same hands is precisely the definition of
despotic government. It will be no alleviation that these powers will be
exercised by a plurality of hands, and not by a single one. 173 despots would
surely be as oppressive as one. Let those who doubt it turn their eyes on the
republic of Venice."
This topic--the danger to the people’s
liberties due to the turbulence of democracies and omnipotent, legislative
majority--is discussed in The Federalist, for example in numbers 10 and 48 by Madison (in the latter noting Jefferson’s
above-quoted comments).
The Framing Convention’s records prove that
by decrying the "excesses of democracy" The Framers were, of course,
not opposing a popular type of government for the United States; their whole
aim and effort was to create a sound system of this type. To contend to the
contrary is to falsify history. Such a falsification not only maligns the high
purpose and good character of The Framers but belittles the spirit of the truly
Free Man in America--the people at large of that period--who happily accepted
and lived with gratification under the Constitution as their own fundamental law
and under the Republic which it created, especially because they felt confident
for the first time of the security of their liberties thereby protected against
abuse by all possible violators, including The Majority momentarily in control
of government. The truth is that The Framers, by their protests against the
"excesses of democracy," were merely making clear their sound reasons
for preferring a Republic as the proper form of government. They well
knew, in light of history, that nothing but a Republic can provide the best
safeguards--in truth in the long run the only effective safeguards (if enforced
in practice)--for the people’s liberties which are inescapably victimized by
Democracy’s form and system of unlimited Government-over-Man featuring
The Majority Omnipotent. They also knew that the American people would not
consent to any form of government but that of a Republic. It is of special
interest to note that Jefferson, who had been in Paris as the American Minister
for several years, wrote Madison from there in March 1789 that:
"The tyranny of the
legislatures is the most formidable dread at present, and will be for long
years. That of the executive will come it’s turn, but it will be at a remote
period." (Text per original.)
Somewhat earlier, Madison had written
Jefferson about violation of the Bill of Rights by State legislatures, stating:
"Repeated violations of
those parchment barriers have been committed by overbearing majorities in every
State. In Virginia I have seen the bill of rights violated in every instance
where it has been opposed to a popular current."
It is correct to say that in any
Democracy--either a Direct or a Representative type--as a form of
government, there can be no legal system which protects The Individual or The
Minority (any or all minorities) against unlimited tyranny by The Majority. The
undependable sense of self-restraint of the persons making up The Majority at
any particular time offers, of course, no protection whatever. Such a form
of government is characterized by The Majority Omnipotent and Unlimited. This
is true, for example, of the Representative Democracy of Great Britain; because
unlimited government power is possessed by the House of Lords, under an Act of
Parliament of 1949--indeed, it has power to abolish anything and everything
governmental in Great Britain.
For a period of some centuries ago, some
English judges did argue that their decisions could restrain Parliament; but
this theory had to be abandoned because it was found to be untenable in the
light of sound political theory and governmental realities in a Representative
Democracy. Under this form of government, neither the courts not any
other part of the government can effectively challenge, much less block, any
action by The Majority in the legislative body, no matter how arbitrary,
tyrannous, or totalitarian they might become in practice. The parliamentary
system of Great Britain is a perfect example of Representative Democracy and of
the potential tyranny inherent in its system of Unlimited Rule by Omnipotent
Majority. This pertains only to the potential, to the theory, involved;
governmental practices there are irrelevant to this discussion.
Madison’s observations in The Federalist
number 10 are noteworthy at this point because they
highlight a grave error made through the centuries regarding Democracy as a form
of government. He commented as follows:
"Theoretic politicians,
who have patronized this species of government, have erroneously supposed, that
by reducing mankind to a perfect equality in their political rights, they
would, at the same time, be perfectly equalized and assimilated in their
possessions, their opinions, and their passions."
Democracy, as a form of government, is
utterly repugnant to--is the very antithesis of--the traditional American
system: that of a Republic, and its underlying philosophy, as expressed in
essence in the Declaration of Independence with primary emphasis upon the people’s
forming their government so as to permit them to possess only "just
powers" (limited powers) in order to make and keep secure the God-given,
unalienable rights of each and every Individual and therefore of all groups of
Individuals.
A Republic
A Republic, on the other hand, has a very
different purpose and an entirely different form, or system, of
government. Its purpose is to control The Majority strictly, as well as all
others among the people, primarily to protect The Individual’s God-given,
unalienable rights and therefore for the protection of the rights of The
Minority, of all minorities, and the liberties of people in general. The
definition of a Republic is: a constitutionally limited government of the
representative type, created by a written Constitution--adopted by the people
and changeable (from its original meaning) by them only by its amendment--with
its powers divided between three separate Branches: Executive, Legislative and
Judicial. Here the term "the people" means, of course, the electorate.
The people adopt the Constitution as their
fundamental law by utilizing a Constitutional Convention--especially chosen by
them for this express and sole purpose--to frame it for consideration and
approval by them either directly or by their representatives in a Ratifying
Convention, similarly chosen. Such a Constitutional Convention, for either
framing or ratification, is one of America’s greatest contributions, if not her
greatest contribution, to the mechanics of government--of self-government through
constitutionally limited government, comparable in importance to America’s
greatest contribution to the science of government: the formation and adoption
by the sovereign people of a written Constitution as the basis for
self-government. One of the earliest, if not the first, specific discussions of
this new American development (a Constitutional Convention) in the historical
records is an entry in June 1775 in John Adams’ "Autobiography"
commenting on the framing by a convention and ratification by the people as
follows:
"By conventions of
representatives, freely, fairly, and proportionately chosen . . . the
convention may send out their project of a constitution, to the people in their
several towns, counties, or districts, and the people may make the acceptance
of it their own act."
Yet the first proposal in 1778 of a
Constitution for Massachusetts was rejected for the reason, in part, as stated
in the "Essex Result" (the result, or report, of the Convention of
towns of Essex County), that it had been framed and proposed not by a specially
chosen convention but by members of the legislature who were involved in
general legislative duties, including those pertaining to the conduct of the
war.
The first genuine and soundly founded
Republic in all history was the one created by the first genuine Constitution,
which was adopted by the people of Massachusetts in 1780 after being framed for
their consideration by a specially chosen Constitutional Convention. (As
previously noted, the so-called "Constitutions" adopted by some
States in 1776 were mere Acts of Legislatures, not genuine Constitutions.) That
Constitutional Convention of Massachusetts was the first successful one ever
held in the world; although New Hampshire had earlier held one unsuccessfully -
it took several years and several successive conventions to produce the New
Hampshire Constitution of 1784. Next, in 1787-1788, the United States
Constitution was framed by the Federal Convention for the people’s
consideration and then ratified by the people of the several States through a
Ratifying Convention in each State specially chosen by them for this sole
purpose. Thereafter the other States gradually followed in general the
Massachusetts pattern of Constitution-making in adoption of genuine Constitutions;
but there was a delay of a number of years in this regard as to some of them,
several decades as to a few.
This system of Constitution-making, for the
purpose of establishing constitutionally limited government, is designed to put
into practice the principle of the Declaration of Independence: that the people
form their governments and grant to them only "just powers," limited
powers, in order primarily to secure (to make and keep secure) their God-given,
unalienable rights. The American philosophy and system of government thus bar
equally the "snob-rule" of a governing Elite and the
"mob-rule" of an Omnipotent Majority. This is designed, above all
else, to preclude the existence in America of any governmental power capable of
being misused so as to violate The Individual’s rights--to endanger the
people’s liberties.
With regard to the republican form of
government (that of a republic), Madison made an observation in The
Federalist (no. 55) which merits quoting here--as follows:
"As there is a degree of
depravity in mankind which requires a certain degree of circumspection and
distrust: So there are other qualities in human nature, which justify a certain
portion of esteem and confidence. Republican government (that of a
Republic) presupposes the existence of these qualities in a higher degree
than any other form. Were the pictures which have been drawn by the
political jealousy of some among us, faithful likenesses of the human character,
the inference would be that there is not sufficient virtue among men for self
government; and that nothing less than the chains of despotism can restrain
them from destroying and devouring one another." (Emphasis added.)
It is noteworthy here that the above
discussion, though brief, is sufficient to indicate the reasons why the label
"Republic" has been misapplied in other countries to other and
different forms of government throughout history. It has been greatly
misunderstood and widely misused--for example as long ago as the time of Plato,
when he wrote his celebrated volume, The Republic; in which he did not
discuss anything governmental even remotely resembling--having essential
characteristics of--a genuine Republic. Frequent reference is to be found, in
the writings of the period of the framing of the Constitution for instance, to
"the ancient republics," but in any such connection the term was used
loosely--by way of contrast to a monarchy or to a Direct Democracy--often using
the term in the sense merely of a system of Rule-by-Law featuring
Representative government; as indicated, for example, by John Adams in his
"Thoughts on Government" and by Madison in The Federalist
numbers 10 and 39. But this is an incomplete definition because
it can include a Representative Democracy, lacking a written Constitution
limiting The Majority.
From The American Ideal
of 1776: The Twelve Basic American Principles.
URL:
http://www.lexrex.com/enlightened/AmericanIdeal/aspects/demrep.html
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