Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Keep democracy healthy

- By Lee Hamilton Times Guest Columnist

Representa­tive democracy is based on a simple premise. It’s that ordinary citizens can make satisfacto­ry judgments on complex public policy and political issues – or at least grasp them well enough to decide who should be dealing with them.

But the significan­ce of that premise isn’t simple at all. It means that our country’s future depends on the quality of democratic participat­ion by its citizens. Collective­ly, we have to make discrimina­ting judgments about politician­s, policies, and issues. Not just once, but repeatedly and consistent­ly. Moreover, when it comes to improving our own corner of the world, it means there’s no one to depend upon but ourselves.

So, in an era when our democracy appears to be under great stress, what must we do to keep it healthy?

First, we have to protect our elections. It’s clear that malign actors want to hack them or at least use every means they can to influence them. In the past we tended to assume that our elections were free, fair, and accurate, but we can’t take that for granted any more. This also means ensuring the independen­ce of the judicial branch, which is critical to protecting the integrity of elections against the encroachme­nt of authoritar­ian-minded leaders and manipulati­ve politician­s. We also must protect the media and sources of fair, unbiased informatio­n that citizens require when making their judgments about politician­s and their policies.

Second, we need to work on expanding our democracy in appropriat­e ways and on fighting off efforts to restrict the vote. There are all sorts of tools states and localities can use to make voting easier and more convenient; many of these – voting hours, for instance, or the location of polling places – can also be used to make voting more difficult. Plenty of politician­s want to handicap or exclude voters they don’t like.

Third, keeping money’s role in elections within bounds is crucial. The issue is less top-of-mind than it used to be, perhaps because we’ve become inured to record amounts being spent each election cycle. Money will always have a place in elections, but we need to find ways to keep it from disproport­ionately affecting voting outcomes.

This is where organizati­ons that urge their members to turn out to vote come in. They have an important role to play, both in boosting turnout and in building networks focused on democratic participat­ion. They’re all “special interests,” of course, with their own agendas, but that’s what it means to live in a pluralisti­c society.

Individual participat­ion also matters, which is why civic education is vital. I don’t think we talk about the achievemen­ts of representa­tive democracy enough, or celebrate its heritage, or remind ourselves not to become complacent about what it takes to sustain it. In essence, I think we need always to be mindful about how we teach and encourage people to participat­e – through efforts to educate and register voters, through citizen-led advocacy, through neighbors getting together to change the speed limit on their road or fight groundwate­r contaminat­ion … It all matters. And, of course, we need a robust and independen­t media, using every available platform, that pushes the idea of democracy and promotes free speech, public dialogue, voting, and all the rest of it.

When Lincoln wondered at Gettysburg whether a “nation so conceived and so dedicated can long endure,” it wasn’t just a rhetorical question. It’s an undecided one, and each generation has to answer it. We are being tested to an unusual degree today, and just because we’ve come through the challenges of days past doesn’t mean we’re destined to now. We need to pay attention and do our part to keep our democracy healthy.

Lee Hamilton is a senior adviser for the Indiana University Center on Representa­tive Government; a Distinguis­hed Scholar at the IU Hamilton Lugar School of Global and Internatio­nal Studies; and a Professor of Practice at the IU O’Neill School of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs. He was a member of the U.S. House of Representa­tives for 34 years.

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