Point of View: Shoring Up Democracy

Jack Graves writes in the East Hampton Star:

An Op-Ed in The Times not long ago [the author presumably refers to this. -YG] suggested that the ballot in this country be replaced by “sortition” — appointment by lot, which democratic Athens used in the 5th and 4th centuries B.C.E. to stock its populous Council, Assembly, and jury courts.

While the level of participation was very high, putting to shame our apathetic turnouts, Athenian democracy wasn’t at the root all that democratic: Women had no voice, neither did resident aliens, who could not own property; there were slaves, as many as 100,000 in the 4th century, it’s estimated in Thomas N. Mitchell’s “Athens: A History of the World’s First Democracy,” and in its Golden Age an aristocratic general and gifted orator, Pericles, essentially called the tune.

Socrates, who was to be sentenced to death for impiety, wasn’t a fan, nor were Plato and Aristotle, though he saw some potential good in it. Socrates said, “It is absurd to choose magistrates by lot where no one would dream of drawing lots for a pilot, a mason, a flute player, or any craftsman at all though the shortcomings of such men are far less harmful than those that disorder our government.”

Frankly, I see no reason why sortition would work any better in the United States, a vastly larger country, than the representative democracy (or democratic republic, if you will) that we already have; though it’s clear that the Electoral College has skewed things, according to smaller states’ disproportionate power, and, because of the winner-take-all allocation of electoral votes, focuses presidential campaigns on battleground states.

3 Responses

  1. “Women had no voice, neither did resident aliens, who could not own property; there were slaves, as many as 100,000” That is an argument often express about Athenian democracy. An easy one that you could express too at the beginning of our elective democracy, the right for women to vote appears in usa only in 1919 long after the revolution, segregation last even longer in the usa to 1960. Does it do elective democracy irrelevant? No. Same thing for sortition, we could use sortition in a modern way and include womens, have a society without slave. This journalist underline the idea that if sortition is used again we are going to exclude women again and have slaves…. That is stupid.
    I believe it is a poor argument not to speak about the idea behind sortition: representation of the whole society, collective intelligence, impossibility for money to interfere in the draw, equality and so on that you do not have with election.

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  2. I very much agree. This is a lazy and superficial argument. More on classical Athens as a precedent for using sortition here.

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  3. Sortition is not a medicine for everything. When used in politics sortition can be the only way, to my knowledge, that can do wonders, if it is subjected to prerequisites. I demonstrate how this can be done in some articles I posted on this site, or see A Therapy for Dying Democracies, published by Dorrance Publishing Co. USA

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