Archive for June, 2008

America as a post-fact society

Sunday, June 29th, 2008

Farhad Manjoo, author of True Enough: Learning to Live in a Post Fact Society, is the guest on the WELL’s open discussion conference Inkwell.vue at the moment. Here’s an extract from his introductory post:

For many Americans, on many issues, objectivity has been supplanted by subjectivity. In my subtitle, I call this the “post-fact” society.

But why? Let me summarize my thesis. New technology has given us more information than ever seemed believable. Think about where you get your news — not just newspapers and network TV, but also blogs, cable news, talk radio, podcasts, etc., all these rich forms of media that we’d never dreamed of three decades ago. We also have more power of that information than we once did. With tools like iPods, Digg, blog networks, and other new mechanisms, now we can easily pick and choose our media.

There’s something wonderful about this new freedom; we’re no longer reliant on an institutional media for our facts about the world. But the shift also creates a problem. We humans have an innate preference to seek out information that confirms our worldview. That’s just how our brains work: If given a chance, we’ll avoid news facts that we don’t like.

Digital technology allows us to indulge those human desires better than we could in the past. On the Web, television, radio, and all manner of new devices, today you can watch, listen to, and read what
you want, whenever you want; seek out and discuss, in exhaustive and insular detail, the kind of news that pleases you; and pursue your political or social or scientific theories, whether sophisticated or naive, extremist or banal, grounded in reality or completely insane.

Contrasting views

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

An apocalyptic view of the future of democracy, and a localised one.

The muddled democracy of the Lisbon referendum

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

I’ve already written here about the mixed messages that come out of the Irish referendum result – and the waters are muddied further by opinion polling (reported by Mark Mardell) that suggests almost three quarters of Irish voters saw the no vote as a the start of a negotiation rather than a final answer. Today, with the dust having settled, and another period of reflection underway, I want to think a bit more about the contesting visions of democracy that the referendum and its aftermath set out.

‘Democracy’ has been one of the most overused words in Lisbon-related newspaper commentary and on blogs. We are told the Irish referendum result is democracy in action (or it is not democracy at all). It’s not democracy if the British people aren’t allowed a referendum, but it’s also not democracy if a hundred thousand Irish voters (the difference between the two sides) can dictate to half a billion Europeans. It’s even, some say, disrespectful for other national governments to ratify the treaty following the Irish no vote.

So what’s the truth? Every democratic system, from the EU down to your local cricket club, has to reach a compromise between the ideals of democracy as the rational form of government (where decisions are based on facts and reason rather than religion or the personal whim of a monarch) and democracy as the expression of the (ever changing and self-contradictory) popular will.

This is not just a question of sly technocrats versus noble democrats. Rationalist models of democracy, like the Westminster parliamentary model, can make a case that they are operating on the basis of a generally-expressed popular will (a sort of ‘popular will averaged over time’) that comes from their election. In this view, the desires expressed during the election campaign are acted upon over their time in office, allowing for consultation with affected parties, and changes resulting from professional and expert opinion. This is not an unreasonable argument on an intellectual level, though it’s hardly populist. Even the archetypal democracy, in Athens, had constitutional provisions preventing established laws being changed on the spur of the moment.

Right at the other end of the spectrum from this rationalist approach is the referendum. Citizens can vote in them without doing any research, for the wrong reasons, or on the basis of completely irrelevant issues, but they are still citizens, and their votes a true reflection of the popular will at that moment. To say that is not to imply, as many have done in the wake of the Irish vote, that referendums are automatically more legitimate and more authoritative than decisions of elected governments. Referendums are snapshots of a view, taken in isolation from other issues, and are different from, not better than elections. Given the media and political structures within which referendums take place, they are not even necessarily better or more honest than elections or the decisions of democratically-elected governments

The Irish referendum vote, and the commentary after it, was an excellent opportunity to see the rationalist and popular-will ideals of democracy go head-to-head.

The EU is perhaps the ultimate example of a rationalist government. All its main arms of government have some democratic element to them, but – as you might expect for an intergovernmental institution – the democracy they contain is at one or more removes, rather than from direct popular support. The Commission is appointed, though by democratically-elected politicians. The Council of Ministers, made up of members of elected Governments, has a form of mandate, but its members in theory act as representatives of national governments rather than as party politicians. Only the Parliament has a direct connection with the popular will, and even that comes from elections that are not fought on Europe-wide campaigns and have low turnouts.

The referendum was not the Irish government’s choice, it was mandated by their constitution, and as the only referendum taking place anywhere in Europe it was freighted with all sorts of expectations, from nationalists in the UK who wanted less Europe to socialists in France who wanted more.

So the Irish referendum was a tussle between two ideals, and looking at the coverage that has followed, it’s clear that the referendum easily won the popular legitimacy contest over parliamentary ratification in the other 26 member states. It’s fair to say that some of the cheering for the referendum result is motivated by partisanship, and comes from newspapers and bloggers who would have praised the wisdom of the coin if the treaty had been decided on a coin-toss. But scorning the result as worthless and the commentators as partisan doesn’t answer the whole question – after all, many general election voters don’t really know what they’re voting for, either.

To leave the pros and cons of the EU aside, and use the Irish vote as a political marker, it provides another example of how rationalist approaches to democracy are losing the battle for legitimacy with more direct forms. This is not to say that people in general want to tear down the Parliaments and distribute power to the people, whatever they say on blog comment pages. Few people would want to be governed solely on the basis of referendums, if it were a realistic prospect. But they should be believed when they indicate - repeatedly - that the current system is not close enough to the popular will.

This is a problem that all governments in the democratic world face, not just the institutions of the European Union. With few exceptions, western democracies rule through rationalism tempered by quadrennial expressions of the popular will. One of the Society’s aims is to create spaces where the popular will can be moulded by rationalism, and rationalist politicians can get an honest unmediated window on the popular will. The Irish referendum, and the reaction to it, shows how pressing that need is.

A vignette on journalists’ attitudes to politicians

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

In this clip, near the start, it’s interesting - and reflective of current attitudes in the media - to see Andrew Neill mocking and shouting down an MP who tries to defend his colleagues against a viewer’s accusation that MPs only ever turn up for PM’s Questions.

Not different, just more

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

A post at Tree of Knowledge reports from the Personal Democracy Forum event in NYC, and confirms the impression I have got from the media coverage of the US elections:

the general agreement at this conference is that while ICT has enabled political campaigners to implement a panoply of innovative campaign tactics and strategies, the impact of these new strategies has been less about citizen empowerment and more about campaigning efficiency.

ICELE canned

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

The International Centre for Excellence in e-Democracy is having the funding taps turned off by central government, report Podnosh and Delib.

Views around the web are mixed as to whether it is a welcome relief or an opportunity missed. Although I’ve never had much to do with them directly, from reading the commentary I’d guess it was a step back before two steps forward. ICELE seem to have fallen into a local-authority-shaped hole, for instance providing their own democracy software rather than relying on people to provide their own solutions from the market or open source. If this sort of thinking was typical, they were clearly a bit behind the curve.

Greenslade on blogs

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

Roy Greenslade writes in his blog today about the consequences of blogging for journalism, saying that he is coming round to the view that blogging will be the end of the traditional news media, rather than merely an adjunct to it. I wish I could be as confident as he seems to be that

the digital revolution is … bloodless, and democracy is at its heart

but it’s an interesting piece, nonetheless.

What blogs have and haven’t done

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Commenting on the Personal Democracy Forum, currently underway, Eve Fairbanks at the New Republic complains that the social structure of the Internet has

atomized people, providing an outlet for venting frustrations without actually requiring people to get out of their chairs and start doing anything about their grievances.

Civil servants get online

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

Steven Clift at Do-Wire notes new guidance for civil servants about their online participation. The guidance encourages civil servants to participate as civil servants in online discussions, as long as they follow certain sensible principles.

This is something that is very welcome. Civil servants - and, full disclosure, I used to be one myself - are used to hiding behind Ministers and well-staffed press offices when people ask difficult questions, even in situations where they themselves know the logic of policies better than anyone. There is too much commentary on the Internet for them to be everywhere, but rules that give them a green light to participate where they can are good for the officials and - thanks to their professional expertise - good for the quality of debate online.

No-one wants to see middle ranking civil servants getting papped on Mortlake High Street, but a decorous shuffle slightly farther into the limelight is not before time.

Involve survey on third sector consultation

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

Involve are running a short survey online, to

“inform how government and local authorities engage the third sector in decision making in the future. The findings of the survey will feed into the production of a report and online toolkit to help public bodies make the most of the unique skills and expertise that the third sector can offer.”

Take it here.


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