The
Heritage Network
Is
Our Government Still "Of the People"?
11/19/2013
Seven
score and 10 years ago today, Abraham Lincoln delivered the greatest
speech in American history. Standing on the bloodied battlefield of
Gettysburg, Lincoln urged the fractured nation to dedicate itself to
the “unfinished work” of the battle. In only 10 sentences—272
words in all—he made clear the far-reaching implications of the
Civil War: “that government of the people, by the people, for the
people shall not perish from the earth.”
It
took a long Civil War and hundreds of thousands of dead, but America
eventually rid itself of the scourge of slavery and the democratic
cause triumphed, thereby confirming Lincoln’s contention that
“ballots are the rightful, and peaceful, successors of bullets.”
The
challenge to democratic government, however, would not disappear. In
the late 19th century, the Progressive movement emerged in America.
The Progressives, like their liberal heirs today, had a paradoxical
relationship to democracy.
On
the one hand, they championed democratic reforms, like the
referendum, the ballot initiative, and the direct election of
Senators (liberals today favor the popular election of the
President).
On
the other hand, the Progressives—again like their liberal
heirs—harbored a deep-seated distrust of the unwashed masses.
“The
bulk of mankind is rigidly unphilosophical, and nowadays the bulk of
mankind votes,” Woodrow Wilson wrote. They “cling to guns or
religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them,” in President
Obama’s infamous formulation.
But
all hope is not lost, so long as we put our faith in the rule of
experts—the “hundreds who are wise,” in Wilson’s words. From
these enlightened few, Progressives would build the modern
administrative state: government of the elites, by the bureaucrats,
and for what they claim is best for the people. In short, government
over the people.
To
this day, liberalism continues to present itself as being all for the
people—it just doesn’t trust the people to know their own good.
People
must be told what to eat, which light bulbs to buy, and which health
insurance to purchase. And their will must be overturned when they
don’t vote “the right way,” as when they uphold the traditional
definition of marriage, for example.
Liberalism
has in effect redefined democracy along paternalistic lines:
enacting, through whatever means necessary, what the people would
vote for—if only they were enlightened enough to know what’s best
for them.
This,
of course, is not democracy. And it’s incompatible with what James
Madison in The Federalist called “that honorable determination
which animates every votary of freedom, to rest all our political
experiments on the capacity of mankind for self-government.”
Simply
claiming to be for the people does not make a government democratic.
As Lincoln taught us in his Gettysburg Address, it must also be of
and by these people.
Read
this and other articles at the Heritage Network
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