You probably have heard/read about last week’s “Summit for Democracy,” convened by President Biden via Zoom on Dec. 9-10. In spite of criticism from totalitarian governments (especially from China) and some domestic opponents, the President sought determinedly to defend democracy.
(Here
is the link to the President’s closing remarks on Dec. 10.)
The Decline of Democracy
Freedom House is a non-profit, non-governmental organization in Washington, D.C., that conducts research and advocacy on democracy, political freedom, and human rights. Here is part of their report for 2021:
Accordingly, President Biden warned world
leaders at the Summit for Democracy on Dec. 9 of a “backward slide” in democracy
around the globe and urged them to champion the form of government that needs
concerted work to be sustained through an “inflection point in history.” (See
here.)
The editors of the Dec. 15 issue of The
Christian Century wrote of “Democracy’s death spiral” in the U.S., declaring
that right now democracy “is under open attack.” (You can read that powerful
editorial on p. 7 here).
And even Pope Francis has recently lamented
that democracy has deteriorated dangerously as discontented people are lured by
the “siren songs” of populist politicians who promise easy but unrealistic
solutions. (The Pope expressed that sentiment on Dec. 4 as reported
by Reuters.)
The Threat to Democracy
The biggest domestic threat to U.S. democracy in everyone’s lifetime was the attempted coup by Donald Trump and his fanatical supporters on January 6 of this year. But according to Barton Gellman, January 6 was practice for what is coming.
Gellman (b. 1960) was on the staff of The
Washington Post for 21 years, but now is a staff writer at The Atlantic. His cover story for the Jan./Feb. 2022
issue of that venerable magazine (founded in 1857) is “Trump’s
Next Coup Has Already Begun.”
It is becoming increasingly clear from the
indefatigable work of the January 6 Committee that the events on that volatile
day at the Capitol were not due to outside rabble-rousers. It clearly was an
inside job, that is, plotted from inside the White House.
An
opinion piece in the Dec. 14 issue of The Washington Post is titled “Trump’s
PowerPoint coup plotters were crackpots. We may not be so lucky next time.”
In that article, columnist Dana Milbank quips
that then-White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, now being held in contempt
of Congress (for his refusal to testify), “would more properly be held in
contempt of competence.”
Milbank concludes by saying that on 1/6/21 “democracy
was saved only by the bumbling of the coup plotters.” Next time, though, “we
may not be so lucky.”
The Defense of Democracy
To a large extent, the defense of U.S. democracy
is up to the Congress—and up to us voters who elect the 535 voting members of
Congress. That is why next year’s election is so important. All 435 members of
the House will be elected, of course, and 34 Senate seats will be decided.
But now the changes in election procedures in numerous
states jeopardizes a truly democratic election next year.
The President was determinedly defending democracy
at the Summit for Democracy last week. Now he must do everything necessary to
defend U.S. democracy in 2022 and beyond.
Addendum: What about Democracy in the
Church?
This article has been about the form of government
employed, or rejected, by nation states. But what about churches, either as
denominations or as local congregations? As a baptist (lower case intended), I
am a strong advocate of democracy in church government.
I wonder, though, about the contradiction in the
thinking of people who are advocates of democracy in the national government but
have no qualms about accepting a hierarchical, non-democratic form of
government for churches.
For example, is the completely hierarchical (authoritarian?)
structure of the Roman Catholic Church, for example, in direct contradiction to
the Pope’s good word about political democracy?