Penticton Herald

What happened to democracy?

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Democracy is in retreat around the world. In Venezuela it has collapsed into the authoritar­ian regime of President Nicolas Maduro who's grabbing even more power for himself after last weekend's farcical election.

In Turkey, it has been hijacked by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan who's silenced the press, crushed opposition and jailed 50,000 people on the pretext of dealing with a failed coup.

The Philippine­s transition­ed from dictatorsh­ip to democracy in the 1980s only to succumb to a new tyrant — President Rodrigo Duterte — who threatens to bomb Indigenous Filipino schools for allegedly turning out communists. And this is just the start of the list. In its latest Democracy Index, The Economist Intelligen­ce Unit, a sister to the Economist newspaper, declared 2016 "a year of global democratic recession."

Of the 165 independen­t states it investigat­ed, 72 experience­d a decline in democracy.

While half the world's population lives in some kind of a democracy, only 4.5 per cent of people inhabit a “full democracy,” the index said.

Sadly, Americans no longer belong in that most desirable category.

Their country was downgraded to a "flawed democracy," not because they elected Donald Trump — he's just a symptom of their problems — but because Americans are so disengaged from a political system they no longer trust.

As nations became more prosperous, educated and technologi­cally interconne­cted, their citizens would increasing­ly be free to elect leaders who would govern according to — not above — the rule of law. Or so the theory went.

But Russia's foray into democracy dead-ended in the autocratic Vladimir Putin. Many thought that after China embraced free market capitalism, it would open its arms to democracy.

Not only has that not happened, China rejects Western concepts of human rights and freedoms as the products of an alien culture.

China's economic miracle, one that has lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty, has also shown that economic growth need not depend on democracy.

Whatever reservatio­ns Canadians have about their government­s, they should be proud the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit ranked their country as the world's sixth most functional democracy.

We need to spread the word: Democracy is precious.

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