REAL-EXISTING DEMOCRACY AND ITS DISCONTENTS. Prof. Philippe Schmitter Emeritus Professor European University Institute, Florence

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REAL-EXISTING DEMOCRACY AND ITS DISCONTENTS Prof. Philippe Schmitter Emeritus Professor European University Institute, Florence

SOURCES

Endogenous Sources Replacement of individuals by permanent organizations political parties, interest associations, social movements as their effective citizens Professionalization of the role of politician (including those surrounding him or her). Convergence of party programs making it increasingly difficult to distinguish the classical difference between Left and Right. Spread of guardian institutions staffed by technocrats and deliberately chartered to be independent of the competitive political process. Emergence of multi-layered governance arrangements that confound the distinctions between national, sub-national and supra-national authority.

Exogenous Sources Individualization of work experience due to increased dominance of the service sector, smaller and smaller units of production, and ambiguous class relations within the units. Shift of center of accumulation within capitalism from industry to financial services. Globalization of systems of production, trade and consumption (with the consequent decline in capacity of national governments to regulate and re-distribute) New information and communication technologies that facilitate direct but virtual exchanges between citizens at little or no cost. Enhanced diffusion of knowledge about political experiences and outcomes across national borders

CONDITIONS The endogenous (political) sources combine to produce and reproduce mistrust in the politicians and institutions of RED. The exogenous (socio-economic) sources contribute to the spread of anomie in the population. The core hypothesis embedded in the Figure One sketch is that the peculiar intensity, persistence and potential threat of the present crisis of RED are rooted in the interaction between these two intermediate conditions. Mistrust alone would most likely result only in sporadic outbursts of resistance by citizens, usually in the form of reactions to revelations of scandalous malfeasance in office. Anomie alone only provides an incentive to withdraw passively from politics or to express personal dissatisfaction which, however, is incapable of motivating others due to his or her social isolation. Together, mistrust and anomie are capable of sustaining a movement of opposition that could threaten democracy as we have known it.

CAUSES Fortuna The collapse of the Soviet Empire The unprecedented absence of any plausible threat of revolution or alternative regime type The financial crash of 2008 and the ensuring Great Recession (following a lengthy period of persistent economic growth) The crisis of mass emigration triggered by declining living standards and increasing violence in the (non-democratic) countries of origin.

Virtù General increase in the level of education of the population Greater diffusion of knowledge about virtuous political experiences from country to country Emergence of trans-national, governmental and non-governmental, organizations promoting democracy, human rights and the rule of law The institutionalization of the academic discipline of political science and its global spread (????)

REFORMING REDESIGNING REDs Democracy has been there before and survived by redesigning its institutions. Three elements have combined to produce this outcome: (1) a collective agent that was willing to bear the costs of transformation; (2) an ideology that presented a credible alternative future regime; and (3) a convincing strategy for bringing about the transformation.

SYMPTOMS (1) 1. Increase in electoral abstention 2. Decline in party membership and identification 3. Rise in electoral volatility 4. Decline in voter support for traditional Left- Right centrist parties and rise in support for fringe parties. 5. Weakening role of parliaments and strengthening of executive authority

SYMPTOMS (2) 6. Decline in membership and support for classbased associations 7. Greater difficulty in forming and stabilizing governments 8. Increased direct intervention of business firms especially financial ones in the policy-making process 9. Finally, that catch-all symptom, populism the number and success of populist candidates and, eventually, their acquiring responsibility for forming governments.

PROSPECTS I used to think (and published) that the eventual outcome would be one of three types of reformed RED: pre-liberal, more liberal, or post-liberal or

Something else? The democratic dilemma between Responsiveness and Responsibility I. RESPONSIBLE POST-DEMOCRACY meritocracy de-politicization guardian institutions Governance arrangements i.e. CAPITALIST DEMOCRACY

II. «RESPONSIVE» POST-DEMOCRACY Media-ocracy Politicization beyond parties «amateur institutions» Executive privilege i.e. POPULIST DEMOCRACY III. A DIALECTICAL SYNTHESIS?

QUESTIONS NOT CONCLUSIONS