Yesterday, 15th September, was apparently the UN’s World Democracy Day, though if any of our media mentioned it I didn’t notice.
The post 1945 new world order seems to have assumed that democracy is the preferred flavour of the future and leading democracies, including the UK and the US, have taken the view that all we need to do is establish elections for the governments of countries, by force if necessary, and, behold, a democracy has been created.
But there’s more to it than that.
Yes, governments need to be chosen by” the people,” but the elections need to be free and fair, and in addition there needs to be a whole infrastructure to include:
The rule of law
Fair (and prompt!) trials for infringements of the law
Independent judges
Separate law making and executive powers
Free and balanced information
Freedom of speech
Freedom to assemble and promote or protest about a point of view
Respect for minorities
A measure of equality.
For most of my life both the UK and the US have gradually moved towards the ideal in the above categories, but, alarmingly, for the past decade, both countries have moved in the opposite directions, both to rig or discredit the judiciary (openly biased appointments in the US, “enemies of the people” in the UK),curb the right to vote (gerrymandering in the US, unequal ID requirements in the UK) . . . . .and lots more.
But to my mind the most serious problem is the lack of access to balanced and accurate information. That is why I have included a “measure of equality” in the list above. Some people have so much wealth that they can distort the availability of information. Elton Musk’s address by video-link to the right wing demonstration in London over the weekend is only the latest, and not necessarily the most blatant, example. And the advent of artificial intelligence will probably make it even more difficult to discern what is true and what isn’t.
How else can we explain the absurdities that electorates have been persuaded to believe, or, if not believe, at least to vote for - the £350m per week for the NHS in the UK’s Brexit Referendum, that tariffs in the US will bring back jobs the Rust Belt, that the UK can have Scandinavian-quality public services without paying the taxes to finance them?
Why do the charlatans, (Johnson, Trump, Farage, to name but three) flourish?
The answer is partly by possessing effective communication skills, which all three of the above have in spades and poor Sir Keir Starmer lacks (and Sir Ed Davey compensates for by doing silly things).
But more generally we need to know who is financing their distortions.
To restore and imporve our democracy I believe we need to:
Diversify the ownership of the media:
State clearly who owns each organ
Require the owner(s) to pay taxes in the county the medium operates
Forbid multi or cross-media ownership.
Require public broadcasters, when quoting think-tanks and similar sources, to report who owns them or what particular interest they represent
Operate the same rules of identification on the internet and social media as operate in the press (name and address supplied if there is some valid reason not to give it)
Strictly limit the size of individual or corporate donations to political parties.
Apart from restoring the second choice vote in the elections for mayors and crime commissioners and requiring an over-all majority, there is as yet little interest by our present Labour government in any of the above. Rather the reverse.
That is why we need Liberals in government.