Great idea, but my skepticism about it happening is significant. 

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of Centroids
Sent: Thursday, April 22, 2021 8:44 PM
To: Centroids Discussions <[email protected]>
Subject: [RC] Give Political Power to Ordinary People | Dissent Magazine

 

Sortition is potentially even more powerful than ranked-choice voting!





dogma asserts that we only have two choices: either we get rule by 
unaccountable technocrats, or we get the conspiracy theorizing and 
indiscriminate mistrust of all expertise peddled by the populist right. 
Oversight juries reject this false choice. Instead, they model a healthier 
relationship between experts and ordinary people, in which both have a crucial 
role to play.

 

Give Political Power to Ordinary People | Dissent Magazine
https://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/give-political-power-to-ordinary-people-sortition
(via Instapaper <http://www.instapaper.com/> )

  _____  


Give Political Power to Ordinary People 


Give Political Power to Ordinary People 


To fight elite capture of the state, it’s time to consider sortition, or the 
assignment of political power through lotteries.

and Samuel Bagg <https://www.dissentmagazine.org/author/samuel-bagg>  &squarf; 
July 19, 2019   
<https://www.dissentmagazine.org/wp-content/files_mf/1563485846demosfeature.jpg>
 A stele depicting the crowning of the Demos 

In response to the mounting public anger about inequality and the climate 
crisis in the United States, the left has seized the initiative, proposing 
higher taxes on the rich to fund transformative government programs like 
Medicare for All and the Green New Deal. But parallel concerns about the 
domination of government institutions by unaccountable technocrats and wealthy 
elites—a danger that could derail all those plans—have so far failed to 
generate a similar stream of ambitious proposals.

A strong, radically democratic vision for the left must combine advocacy of 
growing state power with demands for more effective citizen oversight and 
participation. The left needs more than good policy. It needs serious, creative 
proposals for how to drain the swamp.

Our broken campaign finance system is a longstanding target of progressive ire. 
And as Republican state legislatures have made increasingly aggressive moves to 
entrench minority rule, many people are beginning to see a broader defense of 
democratic integrity as a crucial part of any left agenda. Yet most of the 
attention of reformers has been limited to the electoral process—perhaps 
because we tend to assume that getting “our people” into office will solve the 
problem.

It won’t. Elite capture of the state extends far beyond the influence of large 
donors on elections. Ever since the original New Deal gave birth to the modern 
administrative state, powerful private interests have sought to make it work in 
their favor. They have often been successful, influencing everything from state 
and federal legislative agendas to international treaties and arcane regulatory 
rulings. As a result, corporations—and the plutocrats who run them—are often 
able to neutralize or coopt the very agencies designed to keep them in check.

Sometimes, this results in highly publicized disasters like the Deepwater 
Horizon oil spill or the 2008 financial crisis, both of which were widely 
blamed on regulators in thrall to the industries they were tasked with 
overseeing. In the wake of crashes involving the Boeing 737 Max aircraft, more 
recently, critics noted that the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) had 
actually outsourced its responsibility to perform safety evaluations to none 
other than Boeing itself.

More often, however, the effects of capture are less spectacular, taking the 
form of U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) guidelines that advantage large 
industrial farms, or Federal Communications Commission (FCC) rulings that 
privilege the interests of telecom giants over their customers. Even when 
rulemaking is not obviously captured by any particular corporate or industry 
interest, an isolated technocratic elite is bound to become removed from the 
concerns of ordinary people.

We cannot expect to avert the dangers of capture and corruption simply by 
hiring smarter experts or electing fresh-faced representatives with noble 
intentions. A changing of the guard is not enough. Truly transformative reforms 
must be motivated by a robustly democratic vision, in which ordinary citizens 
are empowered to hold government officials accountable and break 
self-perpetuating cycles of capture. And one promising way to move toward that 
goal is sortition, or the assignment of political power through lotteries.

The use of randomly selected citizen councils to protect fragile institutions 
of self-government dates back to classical Greece and medieval Italy. There are 
promising recent precedents from Canada and Ireland as well. And as the limits 
of electoral representation become more apparent, interest in lottery-based 
alternatives is growing 
<https://www.versobooks.com/books/2969-legislature-by-lot>  rapidly among 
political theorists. So far, though, sortition has received virtually no 
extended treatment in mainstream U.S. political discourse. That needs to change.


Americans already have a familiar, traditional model of sortition in the trial 
jury system. Every day, courts across the country use lotteries to generate a 
pool of potential jurors, who are then sorted—admittedly through 
less-than-random methods—into panels that judge fellow citizens. 

Randomly selected juries reflect all the shortcomings of the people who serve 
on them. Their principal advantage, however, is that they are resistant to 
certain forms of manipulation. Because ordinary citizens selected more or less 
at random have nothing at stake in the outcome of most trials, their judgment 
can be trusted to be relatively impartial. And because their participation is 
limited to a particular case, they are relatively immune to outside influence. 
They do not become entrenched in their positions, so they are not susceptible 
to the kinds of distorting incentives facing career politicians, government 
officials, and judges.

Those same advantages would apply outside the courtroom. Popular election and 
meritocratic appointment have distinct advantages as methods of distributing 
political office, but they are also inevitably subject to influence by those 
with concentrated power through lobbying, campaign contributions, career 
incentives, and a host of subtler means. By contrast, councils consisting of 
randomly selected citizens would be more resistant to these pressures. 
Oversight juries empowered to scrutinize important government decisions could 
therefore exert a meaningful check on the power of wealth in a wide range of 
contexts.

This is what sets sortition apart from more familiar technocratic fixes to the 
problems of capture. The random selection process inserts a blind break that 
interrupts all of the normal channels of influence. It ensures that 
participants are mostly ordinary people without strong pre-existing loyalties. 
And it gives real decision-making power to members of marginalized groups that 
are normally excluded from politics.

What would this look like in practice? Consider the merger approval process, 
which is opaque to the vast majority of us but generates intense lobbying 
pressure from corporate actors with billions of dollars on the line. According 
to Tim Wu and other legal scholars, this regulatory process has succumbed 
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/06/07/opinion/google-facebook-mergers-acquisitions-antitrust.html>
  to capture and corruption for decades, permitting the rise of monopolistic 
corporations like Google and Facebook.

To grapple with this problem, an incoming Democratic Congress might demand that 
whenever the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) decides to approve a merger deal 
worth more than $1 billion, it has to submit that decision to a citizen 
oversight jury. The jury would hear cases for both sides—just like a trial 
jury—and then choose to approve the merger, reject it outright, or send it back 
to the FTC for further review. The process would invite public scrutiny on 
decisions that affect the lives of millions.

Other state and federal agencies would also benefit from the regular scrutiny 
of a citizen jury. Imagine democratic participation in the rules that permit 
the use of complex financial instruments like derivatives, oversight over 
defense contracts, or scrutiny over Federal Reserve rulings. The idea is not 
that ordinary citizens know better than experts or have the ability to channel 
some pure Will of the People. Rather, their role would be to force policymakers 
to demonstrate to a plausibly neutral audience how their decisions benefit 
ordinary people.

In that vein, citizen oversight juries could also be powerful tools for 
improving election regulations at the state level, reining in the excesses of 
gerrymandering and helping to prevent situations like the debacle in Georgia 
last November, when a gubernatorial candidate was tasked with overseeing his 
own election. Especially now that federal courts are forbidden from doing so, 
citizen oversight juries should wield veto power over districting decisions. 
More generally, they should review election policy and scrutinize interactions 
between lobbyists and legislators—precisely the sort of tasks that officials 
elected under the current system are unlikely to perform.

Citizen oversight could even play an important role at the municipal level. 
Juries could review policies in police departments or sheriff’s offices, or 
plans to give large tax incentives to corporations—as in the recent failed deal 
between Amazon and New York City.

Finally, councils of randomly selected citizens could help set the agenda for 
elected legislatures. They could draft agenda items and force legislatures to 
vote on issues they are unlikely to pursue because they are politically risky 
(such as criminal justice reform), unpopular among donors (financial 
regulations), or invisible to the wealthier people who dominate our political 
system (payday lending).

None of these institutions need eliminate experts from decision-making. As in 
criminal trials, jurors on an oversight council would be given sufficient time 
in a sufficiently deliberative context to get a handle on a discrete, specific 
question. Experts would help them understand the question and the stakes, but 
the adversarial format would ensure that jurors aren’t hoodwinked, and citizens 
themselves would have the final say.

As in criminal cases, this process will sometimes misfire, and special 
interests may find ways to influence juries. No system is perfect, and the 
specific details of a sortition-centered citizen oversight model would require 
a lot of work—and some experimentation—to pin down. But given how badly the 
current system is failing, that work and experimentation should not scare us 
off. Citizen oversight councils offer a radically democratic process to hold 
policymakers accountable to the public interest.

The model of sortition that we’re imagining has radical ambitions, but it is 
also pragmatic, and has promising real-world precedents. In 2003, for instance, 
the province of British Columbia randomly selected 160 citizens and convened a 
Citizens’ Assembly <https://citizensassembly.arts.ubc.ca/>  to set the agenda 
on the question of electoral reform. The citizens heard from a range of experts 
and policy advocates, helped host public hearings, and deliberated during 
weekend sessions at a special facility in Vancouver. They reviewed systemic 
problems with the provincial election system and debated possible solutions. At 
the end of the process, they proposed a new, customized single transferable 
vote system for elections in the province. Their proposal was approved by 58 
percent of voters in a province-wide referendum—just shy of the 60 percent 
required to pass. But the experiment was radical—and, for many of the people 
who witnessed it, deeply moving.

More recently, the Irish Parliament brought together 
<https://www.citizensassembly.ie/en/Home/>  ninety-nine randomly selected 
citizens to prepare a public report about five social issues, including whether 
the country should reconsider its longstanding ban on abortion—a high-voltage 
issue that the leadership class had been hesitant to touch. At the end of the 
process, the assembly pushed for parliament to take up abortion anyway, 
endorsing a much more liberal policy than anyone expected. Analysts of Irish 
politics have widely credited the assembly with helping to bring about the 2018 
referendum that legalized abortion in the country.

These are the most high-profile recent cases, but they are hardly the only 
ones. In the past decade, municipalities across Canada have started using 
citizen reference panels, selected by lottery, to provide input on major city 
planning questions and other complex municipal decisions. In the lead up to the 
election of Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador last year, his MORENA 
party selected 
<https://equalitybylot.com/2018/05/25/morena-has-another-round-of-sortition-of-congressional-candidates/>
  a number of candidates for its parliamentary list by lot. And just in the 
last few months, national initiatives employing sortition have been announced 
in Belgium 
<https://www.politico.eu/article/belgium-democratic-experiment-citizens-assembly/>
  and Scotland <https://www.gov.scot/news/citizens-assembly-of-scotland/> .

These preliminary steps only scratch the surface of sortition’s full political 
potential, but they have generated significant momentum behind the idea. It’s 
time to put it on the agenda in the United States, where it has potential for 
broad political appeal. An emphasis on citizen oversight addresses conservative 
concerns about an unaccountable bureaucracy. At the same time, it answers 
widespread calls among liberals and the left to defend democratic integrity.

Sortition need not await the arrival of a deep blue wave in Congress. Citizen 
oversight juries can and should be implemented at local and state levels 
immediately. Doing so will help to ameliorate the effects of capture on the 
ground, while familiarizing people with the practice and serving as a trial run 
for federal implementation.

Far more than a policy fix, sortition is a profound rejoinder to an era of 
distant, managerial state power and spectator-sport politics. Neoliberal dogma 
asserts that we only have two choices: either we get rule by unaccountable 
technocrats, or we get the conspiracy theorizing and indiscriminate mistrust of 
all expertise peddled by the populist right. Oversight juries reject this false 
choice. Instead, they model a healthier relationship between experts and 
ordinary people, in which both have a crucial role to play.

Organized parties and competent bureaucrats are a necessary foundation for any 
realistic vision of left politics. But sometimes, justice requires that we 
blind ourselves to faction and rank. Though a citizen oversight movement will 
never resolve democracy’s challenges all on its own, it can help to weaken the 
grip of concentrated wealth on our political system. And unlike so many 
supposed solutions to our present travails, it casts ordinary people, rather 
than elites, in the role of democracy’s saviors.

Michael Schulson is a freelance journalist who writes about religion, science, 
technology, and politics.

Samuel Bagg is a democratic theorist at McGill University and an incoming 
fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford.

  _____  

 

Sent from my iPhone

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> .
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/RadicalCentrism/4319D2F4-F7C4-493D-9C3D-188A2F1E8BC0%40radicalcentrism.org
 
<https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/RadicalCentrism/4319D2F4-F7C4-493D-9C3D-188A2F1E8BC0%40radicalcentrism.org?utm_medium=email&utm_source=footer>
 .

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/RadicalCentrism/03f701d7384c%24f9042f70%24eb0c8e50%24%402chahn.com.

Reply via email to