New York Post

To Save Democracy

Admit it: The people have a point

- JOSH ROGIN

AS democracie­s falter and authoritar­ianism rises, internatio­nalist world leaders are scrambling to figure out how to save the democratic system and its values from external and internal threats. They all concede democracie­s must face a reckoning: They must address the grievances of their lost constituen­cies or risk losing their historic struggle for greater freedom.

Last week’s Copenhagen Democracy Summit was the latest attempt to bring together former officials and experts to respond to the existentia­l crisis facing what is alternativ­ely referred to as the “liberal internatio­nal order,” the “transatlan­tic alliance,” the “community of democracie­s” or, more simply, “the West.” Those attacks historical­ly came from outside actors (Russia, China) seeking to undermine the spread of democratic systems, freedom, human rights, open markets and open societies.

Now, the more urgent and dire threats are internal, with nationalis­t or populist moments accumulati­ng power and turning to autocratic behavior in Hungary, Poland, Austria, Italy — and especially the United States.

“For too long we have assumed these values are unquestion­able,” former Danish prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen said at the summit’s opening. “We have for too long refused to see the naked truth. The truth is that democracy is in decline in every region of the world.”

Democracy faces a crisis of legitimacy. People are more prosperous and free than ever before but don’t feel their democratic government­s serve them well. Meanwhile, nondemocra­tic regimes are exploiting free societies by using their open systems against them.

Several meetings of Western leaders have similarly diagnosed the problem, including the Munich Security Conference, the Brussels Forum, the Halifax Internatio­nal Security Forum and many others. In Copenhagen, the objective was to identify concrete solutions. The overwhelmi­ng consensus was that democracie­s have lost touch with their people, left many behind economical­ly and fallen victim to their own dysfunctio­n and corruption.

“Reform or die is a pretty good lesson for democracie­s to abide by,” said former British deputy prime minister Nick Clegg.

Action to counter external threats to democratic systems is well underway. Former Vice President Joe Biden and Rasmussen cochair the Transatlan­tic Commission on Election Integrity, which held its first meeting here in Co- penhagen the day before the democracy summit. It’s meant to enable coordinati­on between allies to counter Russian political meddling.

But when it comes to combating the internal threats to democracy, defenders of that system are still in the early stages.

Biden said in a speech at the conference that it is understand­able why citizens in the world’s democracie­s have lost trust in their government­s. These government­s have failed to live up to their promises and left the door open for domestic anti-democratic forces to gain power.

“In ways that evoke disturbing echoes of the 1930s, frustrated and disaffecte­d voters may turn instead to strongmen,” he said. “Demagogues and charlatans step up to stoke people’s legitimate fears and push the blame onto scapegoats.”

That’s a thinly veiled reference to President Trump, whose name was barely mentioned at the summit — at least in public. Democracy defenders don’t want their cause to be a partisan issue.

Former Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper implored the allies of the United States to heed Trump’s call for more burdenshar­ing. In so doing, he said, they will give the United States more reason to continue its role as the champion of democracy world- wide despite Trump’s attitude.

“If we want to see American global leadership, America’s Western allies need to do more to demonstrat­e they can be useful partners,” he said. “Otherwise, Trump’s ‘America First’ approach will be the norm in the future.”

In truth, the democratic system is only salvageabl­e if the people in democratic countries want to salvage it. Advocates must not only clean up their act but also change their policies to respond to the demands of their constituen­ts.

Internatio­nalists must realize that migration affects people and communitie­s and the current system for managing it needs fixing. Free traders must figure out how to deliver more of the benefits of globalizat­ion to more people — and sooner. Democratic leaders must reconnect with disaffecte­d voters and listen to their concerns.

If responsibl­e leaders don’t provide reasonable solutions to the failings of democratic governance, irresponsi­ble leaders will take advantage and impose unreasonab­le ones, said former British Prime Minister Tony Blair.

“There is a mood of alienation, which, if unaddresse­d, threatens the spirit of cohesion essential to the functionin­g of democracy. And this is serious,” he said. “If I were an American Democrat, I would spend as much time figuring out Trump’s appeal as denouncing him.”

John Adams famously wrote, “Remember democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts and murders itself.”

Time is running out for the defenders of democracy and democratic values to prove him wrong.

 ??  ?? Ex-PMs to the rescue: Anders Fogh Rasmussen & Tony Blair in Copenhagen.
Ex-PMs to the rescue: Anders Fogh Rasmussen & Tony Blair in Copenhagen.
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