Direct democracy is necessary to save democracy before it is too late.

Representative democracy is in dire straights in the West, in the rest barely exists.

The root problem with representative democracy is that gives the government, the legislature, the judges and the economic and intellectual elites the power to progressive accumulate more power.

In all representative democracies, the power of government has increased without the explicit consent of citizens.

Ordinary citizens feel it in their bones. They experience how every year there is one more tax to pay, one more permit is necessary, one more paper to fill out, one more obligation or prohibition. It does not happen by chance; it happens because the politicians and the bureaucrats have the power to accumulate more power.

The rise of rightist and leftist “populists” is not the problem of representative democracy, it is the symptom. The people see how the elite they elect talks about “the people”, “justice”, “education”, “jobs”, etc., decade after decade, but it does not happen. What happens is more and more responsibilities and more limits to their freedom every year.

It is no longer a matter of “the Left against the Right”. Millions of voters perceive the differences among Left and Right are cosmetic; both row in boats of different colours, but in the same direction.

The political, economic and social elites in the West speak and behave as if the leaders of the new leftists and rightists are the devils who fool the people.

The elites believe the people can be easily fooled, perhaps because they have been doing it themselves for decades.

But the people are patient, not stupid. Their frustration and anger builds until it explodes.  History shows it. The elites should know that.

Sometimes is even worse, the elites treat those who support populists as if they were a bunch of idiots who do not understand what is good for them. But it is the other way around; it is the elites who do not understand ordinary people.

Therefore every revolution catches the elites flat-footed; think of the French Revolution, the American Revolution, the Russian Revolution, the Cuban Revolution.

Revolution does not always mean things will improve for ordinary people, they often make life worse, but that is after the old regime is gone.

The elites seem to believe that because they have more years of formal education, because they know more about academic subjects, they are wiser, superior to ordinary people; it is a huge mistake.

The elites in a representative democracy are not really democrats; democracy is government by the people. For it to be “government by the people”, the people have to be the decision-makers in all important issues affecting their lives. They have to be so in the country, the city, the town and the village. In representative democracy, the people vote but do not decide.

The elites in representative democracy agree that the people can elect who governs, and no more; that all important decisions should be made by the elected representatives, the top bureaucrats and the “experts”, who often are lobbying experts too.

Other elements of the elite, the rich, the intellectuals and the media commentators, also believe they are wiser than ordinary people, and even wiser and morally better than the elected representatives. They are convinced they have the wisdom to suggest to the elected representatives what is good for ordinary citizens.

Under representative democracy, things can not change. The people have the power to elect their representatives, but they always elect people who belong to the same elites, nothing really changes.

The system is not too different from the time when kings ruled; the king may die, but another king took his place, the aristocracy did not change, etc. In representative democracy we have freedom to speak and criticize, and that is a huge advance, but we still no power to decide.

Direct democracy is based on a different idea; that the people must have the power to elect representatives and to make the decisions. Direct democracy is about the majority, the people, deciding, because the majority knows what is best for the majority.

Direct democracy turns the power pyramid upside down; at the top we have now the people.

Because the people make the key decisions, in direct democracy the politicians have no choice but to carry out the will of the people. In a direct democracy, the people are the real boss.

We know direct democracy works because Switzerland is the best-run country in the World. Don’t take my word; just inform yourself about Switzerland and its direct democracy.

Fed up with politics and politicians?; make politicians less important!

In the 1800s the Swiss had it with politicians. In 1848 they could not take it anymore. They decided the politicians would not make the major political decision, the people themselves would make those decisions.

Most Swiss politicians, as well as many in the and the economic and cultural elites, opposed the idea. You know the argument, the elites in your country use it now; “truckers and bus drivers, electricians, housewives, owners of small shops, factory workers, salesmen, etc., just do not have the education to make important decisions about laws, budgets, taxes, international relations, economic and social policies, etc”.

“That is our job, to decide on their behalf. Us, the professional politicians, the wealthy executives who run the complex business of the very and super-wealthy, the intellectuals and commentators who spend our whole lives thinking about these issues, we are the ones with the capacity to understand what is good for society”.

“Yes, we are divided in two major opposing bands; the Left and the Right.  “Each side “knows” the other is wrong, but we reach that conclusion after “rigorous”, “educated”, “rational” analysis. Such a task is beyond the skills of the majority of the population”.  “As we all “know”, most voters are swayed by emotion, not by seasoned rational arguments”.

The elites also say: “Even the best-educated among the population; those with university degrees, the doctors, the lawyers, the accountants, the engineers, the dentists, etc., who have the intellectual ability to grasp the issues, they do not have the time to study them and decide correctly”.

“Therefore, representative democracy is the best option; the people elect representatives to make the hard decisions. The representatives listen to the intellectuals and the commentators to further guide their decisions”.

I think the arguments are weak, but wrapped-up in nice-sounding sophistry, (I could use a more direct word…)

The Swiss people said to all that: “We no longer buy that. We changed our minds. We believe we are smart enough to run our lives, do our jobs, run our small business, raise our families, we are sure we are also smart enough to make the political decisions by ourselves, directly. We do not need middle-men”.

The Swiss radically changed the rules of the game. They did it without bloodshed, (this is not a small credit to the average Swiss and also to the elites).

The Swiss liked the people-initiated referendum to make major decisions so much that the idea rapidly spread to the Swiss cantons, cities, towns and villages. The cantons in federal Switzerland are like the states in the US and Australia, the Canadian provinces, etc.

In today’s Switzerland, popular referendums are routine. Every year the Swiss vote 3 to 4 times. Each time they decide on laws, on changes to the constitution, rising or reducing taxes, approve or reject budgets, etc. They do it at the national, cantonal, and local level.

The overall history of Switzerland is not radically better than the history of current stable representative democracies. If they did it, others can too.

The Swiss truckers, bus drivers, housewives, doctors, lawyers, small business owners, etc., have proven that by making the major political decisions themselves, they have produced the best-run country in the world; prosperous, stable, peaceful, free, with excellent health care, excellent education, excellent social protection, a high-tech powerhouse, etc.

By taking politics into their own hands, the Swiss are no longer fed up with politics and politicians. Why should they be, if they are the ones who call the shots?

This radical resetting of the balance of power has also made elections in Switzerland far less important than in representative democracies. When the politicians have less power than the people, it does not matter much who gets elected, or which party gets the most votes.

The parties and the politicians know that too. They realize the laws and decisions they develop need the support of the people to pass. If they do not have that support, the people can call a referendum and stop whatever the politicians want to do.

But the change goes beyond stopping the politicians; the Swiss people also have the power to propose national, cantonal, and local laws. They can propose changes and change the national constitution and the constitution of the cantons, increase minimum wages, approve a universal income, buying weapons for the Swiss Army, build a new public swimming pool, a new road, etc.

Another wonderful effect of people’s power has been that the politicians of left, right and center, work cooperatively to make laws and policies. Each knows that the other’s voters also have to support the new law for a law to pass.

Because they have to work cooperatively, Swiss politicians also avoid the aggressive fights in parliament, in the media, etc., that dominate in representative democracies

Politics in Switzerland is a far more subdued affair than in representative democracies.

Direct democracy, real people power, also prevents the rise of demagogues of the Left or the Right, with their promises like; “if you vote for me, for my party, we will bring peace, prosperity, justice, harmony…”. They only have to add “paradise…”.

It is time you and your fellow citizens push for this bloodless revolutionary change, don’t you think?

 

Another ranking by the OECD that makes no sense.

Yesterday I analyzed why the OECD Better Life Index does not make a lot of sense with regard to Switzerland’s education system and practices.
 
Today I look at another category; “Civic Engagement”.
 
This factor includes two indicators: “Voter Turnout” and “Stakeholder Engagement for Developing Regulations”.
 
In “Civic Engagement”, this is the OECD ranking by country. The list starts with the country with the highest level of engagement:
 
1. Australia
2. Korea
3. Netherlands
4. Belgium
5. New Zealand
6. United Kingdom
7. Denmark
8. United States
9. Luxembourg
10. Mexico
11. Sweden
12. Canada
13. Brazil
14. Italy
15. Israel
16. Norway
17. Iceland
18. Slovak Republic
19. Estonia
20. Turkey
21. France
22. Germany
23. Finland
24. Poland
25. Austria
26. South Africa
27. Spain
28. Latvia
29. Slovenia
30. Greece
31. Lithuania
32. Hungary
33. Switzerland
34. Czech Republic
35. Ireland
36. Portugal
37. Russian Federation
38. Colombia
39. Japan
40. Chile
 
Let us now look at how the OECD ranks countries in the two indicators used to compute “Civic Engagement”.
 
“Voter Turnout”:
 
1. Luxembourg
2. Australia
3. Belgium
4. Turkey
5. Denmark
6. Sweden
7. Netherlands
8. Austria
9. New Zealand
10. Iceland
11. Brazil
12. Norway
13. Korea
14. Germany
15. France
16. South Africa
17. Italy
18. Israel
19. Spain
20. Hungary
21. United Kingdom
22. Canada
23. Russian Federation
24. Finland
25. United States
26. Ireland
27. Estonia
28. Greece
29. Mexico
30. Czech Republic
31. Slovak Republic
32. Latvia
33. Portugal
34. Poland
35. Columbia
36. Japan
37. Slovenia
38. Lithuania
39. Switzerland
40. Chile
 
“Stakeholder Engagement in the Development of Regulations”
 
The OECD says this indicator means “participation in the development of laws and regulations”.
 
Here is the ranking:
 
1. Mexico
2. United States
3. United Kingdom
4. Slovak Republic
5. Canada
6. Korea
7. Estonia
8. Australia
9. Poland
10. Netherlands
11. Israel
12. Italy
13. Slovenia
14. New Zealand
15. Lithuania
16. Switzerland
17. Finland
18. Brazil
19. Latvia
20. Norway
21. Iceland
22. France
23. Belgium
24. Denmark
25. Sweden
26. Greece
27. Spain
28. Germany
29. Luxembourg
30. Czech Republic
31. South Africa
32. Portugal
33. Turkey
34. Colombia
35. Japan
36. Ireland
37. Austria
38. Chile
39. Hungary
40. Russian Federation
 
Let me start by commenting on “Civic Engagement”.
 
It makes no sense to rank Switzerland as 33rd in Civic Engagement; the Swiss people left “engagement” behind because Switzerland is a direct democracy.
 
With direct democracy, the Swiss people have more power than the Swiss Government, the Swiss Parliament, and even more power, in matters related to the Swiss Constitution, than the Swiss Supreme Court.
 
The Swiss people are not “engaged”, they run the country.
 
To rank Switzerland number 33 in “Civic Engagement” is absurd.
 
I am also surprised to see Mexico as number one in “Stakeholder Engagement in the Development of Regulations”. It has to be a mistake. I hope it has nothing to do with the fact that Mr. Angel Gurria, a Mexican politician, is the OECD Secretary-General.
 
If Mexico is truly number one the OECD should explain the policies, procedures, and culture of civic engagement of Mexico.
 
Let me also look at the indicator “Voter Turnout”.
 
Perhaps in representative democracies, voter turnout is an indicator of civic engagement, in Switzerland’s direct democracy, it is not.
 
The reason is that elected politicians, in Switzerland’s direct democracy, have much less power than politicians in representative democracies.
 
Because of that, in Switzerland, it is no so important who wins the election. The Swiss elected representatives can not pass any law, or do anything else of importance if most Swiss people disagree with them.
 
In representative democracies, it is not like that. In representative democracies, the politicians make the decisions, not the people.
 
The Swiss also vote several times each year. They vote on laws, treaties, budgets, and on the Swiss Constitution itself. What they decide is also binding for the government and parliament. Swiss voter engagement does not depend on the goodwill of the government, it is there by law.
 
Turn out in each referendum, often is not very high in Switzerland. It could be because there are many referendums, but it is also because not every issue interests most voters. However, if we consider all the referendums in one year, 80% of the Swiss who can vote, vote. 80% of participation is a high number.
 
In representative democracies, voter turnout perhaps is a representative indicator of voter engagement. In representative democracies, voters can not decide on issues. Elections are much more important in those conditions.
 
Conclusion: The “Civic Engagement” factor of the OECD’s Better Life Index is wrong about Switzerland. There is no higher level of civic engagement than direct democracy.  
 
I am also skeptical of the rankings of several other countries.
I believe the criteria the OECD uses to assess “Civic Engagement” need rebuilding.

Another ridiculous ranking of Switzerland; this time by the OECD’s Better Life Index.

Switzerland is not getting a fair shake in many of these international indexes, perhaps others don’t either.

The country is for me very important because it is the best society in the World, by most measures. I am not Swiss, just in case you thought I am.

Switzerland is also a direct democracy at all levels of government; national, state-regional, and local. It is the only direct democracy humans have now. Some day all countries will have direct democracy, just like they all now have Internet.

Direct democracy means “the people are the final decision-makers on all important issues”; not the elected representatives, not the judges in the highest courts.

Direct democracy is the next step in the development of representative democracy.  I have no doubt the best representative democracies are ready now for the transition to direct democracy.

Such a move will overcome the key problems we see in most representative democracies.

The Better Life Index is wrong in its ranking of Switzerland. Its ranking does not help the advancement of direct democracy. Direct democracy is necessary for a better life.

But let us look at the OECD’s “Better Life Index”.  The Index includes several categories.  I will analyze only the categories in which I have enough knowledge.

Education is one category the OECD considers is a big factor for a better life.  I am certain education is The Essential Factor for a better life.

Unfortunately, I do not think the way the OECD looks at education captures the factors that produce a better life. I even believe some factors the OECD looks at are wrong or irrelevant. I will show why I believe that.

Under “Education”, the OECD includes Educational Attainment, Years in Education and Student Skills.

Educational Attainment refers to the percentage of students who have completed upper secondary education.

In Educational Attainment, the OECD ranks Switzerland behind Finland, Australia, Estonia, Denmark, Canada, Slovenia, Japan, Sweden, Poland, Germany, Korea, Check Republic, Belgium, the Netherlands, Ireland, and Norway.

Another indicator is the Number of Years Students Spend in the Educational System. By this indicator, Switzerland ranks behind Australia, Finland, Denmark, Belgium, Sweden, Iceland, Greece, Netherlands, Lithuania, Slovenia, Norway, Ireland, Germany, Latvia, Spain, Czech Republic, New Zealand, Estonia, Poland, and the United Kingdom.

Just look at some countries ahead of Switzerland on that list! It is absurd to consider years of education as an indicator of the quality of life of a country.

Several of the countries ranked ahead of Switzerland are barely functioning democracies. They are plagued by corruption, low technological development, high unemployment, weak health care systems, much lower standard of living, political and social instability, etc.

To see how this ranking is not just wrong, it is ridiculous, do this: assume that fewer years of education produce a better life. Now look at the countries ranked even lower than Switzerland, countries with even FEWER years of education; Chile, Canada, Korea, United States, Austria, Portugal, Italy, France, Slovak Republic, Hungary, Japan, Brazil, Israel, Mexico, South Africa, Luxembourg, Colombia.

Compare now this list with the list of countries with MORE years of education than Switzerland.

It is obvious several with fewer years of education than Switzerland are much better societies than several with more years.

The OECD should scrap years of education as a factor in the quality of life.

Another indicator the OECD uses is Student Skills.

To assess student skills, the OECD considers the results of the well-known PISA surveys as the indicator. Unfortunately, the PISA surveys measure reading skills, math skills, and science skills IN THE CLASSROOM, not in the actual world of work or family life.

PISA does not consider the ability to apply those skills in real-life situations. It considers neither skills that are even more important to have a good and advanced society; skills such as work cooperatively, solve real-life problems, psychological maturity, initiative, self-responsibility, tolerance of different views, creativity, common sense, ability to discuss problems, and on and on.

In student skills, the OCDE places the following countries ahead of Switzerland: Japan, Estonia, Canada, Finland, Korea, Slovenia, Ireland, Germany and the Netherlands.  Again, overall, Switzerland is ahead of them in the real World.

My conclusion: How can education, as measured by the indicators, be so important when Switzerland has higher standard of living (with no natural resources), better health care, better democracy, more rights, more social and political stability, etc. than the countries ranked ahead of it in “Education”?

Something is wrong with the Better Life Index.

I do not know what educational factors really produce a better life, but those in the OECD Index need a heavy tune-up. As it is now, the Index hemorrhages credibility.

The real factors correlating education with a better life are not those in the Index. Direct democracy is a better life.

 

In a direct democracy, we do not need the Supreme Court or the Constitutional Court with political power.

We see in representative democracies how the constitutional court decides if this or that law is constitutional, such courts also “make new laws” in some of their decisions.

This should not happen in a democracy. In other representative democracies the supreme court, such as the US the Supreme Court, has those powers.

Through their decisions, such courts change health policies, labour laws, welfare benefits, marriage laws, abortion laws, etc.; they “legislate”.

That should not happen because it is not democratic. In a real democracy, only the voters should make such decisions.

In Switzerland’s direct democracy, they do that. It is not possible for the Swiss Supreme Court to create new laws with its decisions. Furthermore, the Swiss Supreme Court, under the Swiss Constitution, can not review any Swiss federal law to decide if the law is “constitutional”. Neither can it decide on issues such as abortion.

Greek democrats 2500 years ago made the point for all of us; ordinary people with common sense make the laws and decide on the laws; no god or gods, holy books, “special leaders”, kings, priests, aristocrats, “wise men”, the rich, the academics, the pundits, the intellectuals, or the judges, should make such decisions.

Let me give you an example of how they do it in Switzerland.

On June 2nd, 2002, the Swiss decided in a national referendum to make it easier for women to have an abortion. The Swiss Supreme Court, or the elected politicians did not decide, the voters did.

The option to make abortion more readily available won;  72% of the voters supported it. The same voters rejected the alternative proposition to ban abortion; 82% voted against.

Those who lost can argue abortion is immoral, but they have to accept the decision because it comes from the majority. It does not come from polls or from what the politicians believe is “right”, or from the judges.

The people who lost the argument know the only way to win next time is to work hard to persuade the Swiss people to vote again and to vote differently; no riots, no demonstrations, just arguments.

In contrast, in the US, many citizens fear now a conservative Supreme Court could reverse the decision to legalize abortion. If that happens, there will be riots.

In the UK and the Netherlands, they are wiser than in the US; they do not give that kind of power to their supreme courts. In those countries, the legislative power is the ultimate authority. This is better than having the judges decide, but it is even better if the people are the supreme authority.

There are other positive effects of direct democracy. Because Switzerland’s Supreme Court has no political power, politicians in Switzerland do not fight over Supreme Court nominations the way US politicians do.

In other representative democracies with Constitutional Courts, things are not much better than in the US because such courts are also politicized and have power similar to the US Supreme Court.

In Switzerland, they politicize the Swiss Supreme Court because the political parties appoint the judges. It would be better if the people elected the Swiss Supreme Court Judges.  However, the situation does not create political problems for democracy because the Court has no political power to decide on the constitutionality of laws or to make decisions equivalent to new legislation.

All democracies should have, at least, the Swiss system of a Supreme Court that can not decide on national laws or make “landmark” social and political decisions.

If you believe the Supreme Court, or the Constitutional Court, in your democratic country has too much power, do something about it.

 

The fake “facts” of “low voter turnout” and “voter fatigue” in Switzerland’s direct democracy.

I keep hearing about “low voter turnout in Switzerland”.

I also hear that, somehow, low voter turnout has something to do with the quality of democracy.

The Swiss vote in 2020 on the following proposals at the national level.

Besides individuals and other groups, political parties and other organizations can also make proposals if, like everybody else, they collect the required number of signatures within a specified period.

This is how the Swiss voters decided in 2020 at the national, cantonal and municipal level. At the canton level, I only mention the Canton of Geneva. At the municipal level, I include only the referendum in the municipality of Bernex, population 10 000. Throughout Switzerland’s cantons and municipalities, referendums take place on many issues that the citizens decided they must decide.

February 9th, 2020 referendums:

Swiss citizens voted on a proposal to increase affordable housing. They rejected it; 57% against, 42% in favour.

On the same date, they also voted on another proposal to retain anti-discrimination legislation based on sexual orientation. They approved it; 63% in favour, 38% against.

September 27, 2020 referendums (Includes several postponed from May 17th because of the virus):

Proposal to restrict immigration. Rejected; 61% against, 38% in favour.

Proposal to make it legally easier to kill wolves threatening farm animals. Rejected; 52% against, 48% in favour.

Proposal to increase the tax allowance if you have children. Rejected; 63% against, 37% in favour.

Proposal to block the purchase of new fighter aircraft for the Swiss Air Force. Accepted; 50.15%, 49.85% against. You can not get much closer!

Proposal to stop new paternity leave benefits law for fathers. Approved; 60% in favour of stopping the law, 40% against.

November 29, 2020 referendums:

The voters will decide the fate of two initiatives.

One proposes a change to the constitution to make Swiss multinational companies liable in Switzerland for violations of human rights and damages to their environment in their activities abroad.

The other initiative proposes to ban the financing of Swiss producers of war materials.

But there is more to Swiss democracy than decisions by voters on national issues. At the Canton (Equivalent to a state or province in a federal government) and local level, the Swiss people also are the last authority; not the executive, not the elected representatives, not the Supreme or Constitutional court.

For example, in the Canton of Geneva and the city of Geneva, like in all cantons and municipalities, they also have referendums on cantonal and local issues.

Interestingly, the official name of the Canton of Geneva is “Republic and Canton of Geneva”. The name alone gives you an idea of the autonomy and power of the Swiss Cantons. They have more power and autonomy than, for example, the states in the United States, including states like California where they also have referendums, “the devil is in the detail”, but that is a topic for another day.

The initiative proposed that financing of public services must be preserved, that the level of municipal and cantonal tax and progressive taxation shall be also maintained.

It passed. 50.03 voted in favour, 49.97 against. Yes! you can get even closer results than the results on the proposal to buy aircraft for the Swiss Air Force!

A referendum in the Canton, to make 23 Swiss Francs (25 USD) per hour the minimum wage. Passed; 73% in favour, 27% against.

A referendum to accept the modification of Swiss federal road laws in the Canton of Geneva. Passed; 59% in favour, 41% against.

Municipal referendum. Town of Bernex, near Geneva. Population 10,000.

A referendum on the acceptance of the deliberation of the municipal government to open a credit line of 1 960 000.00 Swiss Francs, (2 144 000 USD), for the development of streetcar stops in the municipality.

The referendum rejected the recommendation of the municipal government; 60% voted for rejection, 40% for acceptance. Notice the referendum was not on the decision by the government. It is clear the decision power lies within the people, not the government.

Voter turnout in each referendum oscillated between 40 and 60%. In other cases, the turnout has been as low as not much above 30%, an as high as 75%. Most of the time the turnout is around 40%.

Many observers do not go beyond these numbers and speak of “Switzerland’s low voter turnout”, even of “voter fatigue”. They are wrong, wrong.

Voter turnout in Switzerland can be low on particular referendums because people vote on the issues that concern them.

For example, concerning the referendum on affordable housing and anti-discrimination legislation, the turnout was 42%. For most Swiss voters, those two issues were not pressing. We do not know why; perhaps they feel the vast majority of Swiss have no problems finding housing, perhaps they believe discrimination is not a problem.

Many more turned out, about 60%,  concerning immigration, hunting, taxes, paternity leave and the purchase of fighter aircraft.

Nevertheless, in Switzerland, no issue is closed. Things can change; they could organize another referendum on any of those issues, and new ones.

The more interesting figure is that if we take one year, 80% of the Swiss vote. This is higher than any other democracy. That turn out in Switzerland is low and voters are burned out is wrong, they make no sense. Whoever says that has not looked beyond the surface or does not want to see…

Voter turnout can be low or for many reasons, in Switzerland and everywhere else. Voters can turn out in low number because they feel they do not need to bother because the country is well run, or for the opposite; citizens have given up on elections and politicians, perhaps they are just accumulating anger until they explode.

The Swiss have more trust in government than any other democracy. Surveys also show the vast majority are satisfied with direct democracy.

Swiss direct democracy is more democratic than any representative democracy because the people decide more often and in the most important issues. Any representative democracy is also more civil, humane and fair than any non-democracy.

Even Swiss direct democracy can improve!

For example, they could directly elect the members of the Swiss executive, the Federal Council.

It is odd that in a direct democracy the people do not elect the executive. Even odder is that in most representative democracies, all of them less democratic than Switzerland, the people do elect the executive.

In Switzerland, the Swiss parliament, the politicians, elect the executive. It is not very democratic to leave the people out of the decision.

But the Swiss people do not seem too bothered by such an undemocratic way of electing the executive.

Perhaps it is because, despite what the Swiss Government website states: “The Federal Council is the highest executive authority in the country”, the highest executive authority in Switzerland is the people, not the Federal Council or even the Parliament.

In Switzerland, the people have more authority than the executive, the legislative, and in constitutional issues, than the Supreme Court.

The Federal Council is the highest executive authority, but is always subject to the decision of the Swiss people. The Swiss people can change the way the Federal Council is elected; no Parliament, no Senate, no Constitutional Court, no Supreme Court, can stop them.

They can do it by collecting 100 000 signatures in less than 18 months and putting the proposal to a national vote.

But there is something else in Switzerland that, on paper, is not democratic either; the major political parties have a long-standing agreement to be represented in the Federal Council in proportion to the number of seats they hold. The people have no say on that either.

Right now, this is the composition of the Swiss Federal Council:

Social Democrats: 2 members.

Swiss People’s Party: 2 members.

The Liberal Party: 2 members.

Christian Democrats: 1 member.

In other democracies, there could be are revolution if the politicians alone decided who will form the executive. Many would see that as extreme corruption; “the politicians deciding who, among themselves, will run the country? No way!”. They would take to the streets. The French would probably be the first. Yet the French put up with a system that, overall, is far less democratic than Switzerland’s, go figure!

Despite those formally undemocratic practices, in Switzerland, there is no desire for revolution. I believe it is because the Swiss people control the executive and the legislative through their power to decide on anything of importance. On any issue, the Swiss people have the power to prevail.

Other factors make it relatively easy for the Swiss people to accept the current way to elect the executive.

For example, the President of Switzerland does not exist as an executive position comparable to the US President, the French President, the UK Prime Minister or the German Federal Chancellor, the Swiss president has far less power within the executive itself. The Swiss President is one of the seven members of the Federal Council. The Presidency rotates yearly among the seven members.

In Switzerland, you have an executive with less power than the people and a president with no power over other members of the executive.

In the Swiss Federal Council, all decisions are collective decisions, not always unanimous.  The vote of the President counts for two, this is the only situation where the president has “more authority”.

Because the decisions of the Council are collective decisions; every member of the Council has to “forget” about loyalty to his or her party. This may also help the Swiss people accept that the political parties elect the Federal Council; we could the decisions are “less political”.

The Federal Council and the political parties also know they can not have rigid “ideological” (or self-interest) positions; they need to accommodate the diverse interests of most of the voters they represent.

Because individual authority in the Swiss Federal Council does not exist, the Federal Council is the Collective Head of State. Only on trips abroad does the rotating President of the Council represent the Swiss Federation. In Switzerland, it is the seven who are “the CEO” of Switzerland.

While the Swiss people are the final decision-makers on everything of importance to them, the current system leaves room for lobbies to perhaps unduly influence the Federal Council, and also the Swiss Parliament, in matters that perhaps do not attract the attention of most of the people.

The Swiss system can be more democratic, but the Swiss people only have to look at representative democracies around them, and beyond, to see they have a democracy that is more democratic than any other.

 

 

This is how direct democracy will work on Nov. 29th, 2020 in Switzerland, why not wherever you are?

The Popular Initiative allows ordinary Swiss citizens to change, by referendum, any article of the Swiss Constitution, or even the whole Constitution itself.

This very different from what happens in representative democracies. I will give you some examples.

In France the people can not call referendums to change the constitution, only the government can.

In Germany, the citizens can not change the constitution but the politicians can, without consulting the people, some democracy!

In Italy, the citizens can initiate a referendum but the politicians decide if it goes ahead. Not very impressive either.

In the Netherlands, the people can call for a referendum, but the politicians can ignore the result; incredible in a democracy (rule by the people, for the people… blah, blah, blah).

In the United States, the people have no say on the Constitution; only the politicians and the Supreme court can do that, not very democratic.

I will now show you an example of practical, down to earth, formal people’s power, and how it works.

In 2016 many Swiss people became concerned about the conduct of Swiss multinational companies in Third World countries, in relation to human rights and the environment.

I am not for or against the conduct of such companies concerning those issues because I do not know enough to have a reasoned opinion. I am using this example to show how one tool of direct democracy works in Switzerland. It could also work in your country.

The people concerned with the behaviors of those companies drafted a document to amend the Swiss Constitution. Their intention was to make Swiss multinationals legally accountable in Switzerland for their behaviour in other countries.

Under Swiss law, citizens have 18 months to collect 100 000 signatures supporting the document articulating their concerns. If they succeed, the document goes to the Swiss Federal Government and the Swiss Parliament.

Once the group presents the proposal, the Government has to respond in one of three ways: accepting the proposal, rejecting it, or presenting a counterproposal to the people who presented the proposal.

The proponents of the proposal can accept or reject the Government counterproposal. If the proponents reject the counterproposal, the Government has no choice; the voters will decide in a national popular referendum. The decision is binding for the government.

If the majority of those who voted in the referendum support the proposal, and also if the proposal wins the popular vote in the majority of the Swiss Cantons (Roughly equivalent to the States in the United States, Australia or Germany, the Provinces in Canada, etc.), then the proposal is incorporated into the Swiss Constitution and becomes the law. This is one of the ways in which the Swiss people, directly, make laws.

In the case of this initiative, the people backing it collected 120 000 signatures within 18 months, as required.

In October 2016 they registered the proposal with the Government. After discussing the proposal for several months, the Executive recommended to the Parliament to reject the proposal.

Once it received the recommendation, a committee in the Parliament discussed the issue for about another year.

After much deliberation, the Parliament ( “lower house” ) agreed on a counterproposal. The other chamber of the Swiss Parliament, The Council of States then discussed this counter proposal. The Council of States represents the Swiss Cantons. The Swiss cantons are very important because Switzerland is a federation of states (the cantons). This means that there is a balance between the overall national vote and the votes in each Canton,

In 2018 the Council of States accepted the counter-proposal.

After much discussion among the politicians, and also with business and other parties, the Swiss Parliament sent, in June 2020, its counterproposal to the proponents of the initiative. The proponents of the initiative, who represent the 120 000 people who signed up supporting it and many others, rejected the counterproposal.

This means the initiative will now go to a national referendum for the voters to decide its fate.

The referendum will take place on November 29.

On the same date, the Swiss will also decide the fate of another initiative: “For a ban on financing producers of war material”.

The Swiss direct democracy system gives all parties ample time to discuss and negotiate over any issue of concern to citizens.

This open process strengthens democracy. If the initiative wins, those who argued against it can not say they were not heard. They can not say either the decision was not democratic. If the initiative loses, its proponents have no rational choice but to accept the results. What else can they do?; their initiative was widely known, was widely discussed, and the decision to reject it was democratic.

Only you can decide if direct democracy is more democratic than representative democracy. I know it is because in a direct democracy the people decide.

If you believe you should have control of what happens in your country, then direct democracy is for you.

Direct democracy (well executed) radically increases trust in government, politicians and judges

What a chart!

The OECD prepared the chart. In this link to the OECD, you will find more information about trust in government.

But let me discuss the chart.

The chart shows Switzerland is at the top. You probably know Switzerland is a direct democracy. I Believe this has a lot to do with Switzerland being at the to of the chart.

One could say direct democracy is: “Control by the people of the executive, the legislature and the judiciary”. If the people control what the government does, and if they see, decade after decade, how government actions reflect the will of the people, it is logical for the people to trust the government and, incredibly, in politicians too!

I suspect that another chart, reflecting the level of trust of the government in the people, would look fairly similar… Would you not like to know to what degree your politicians, and top bureaucrats, trust you and your fellow citizens? Would they respond honestly to the survey?

Direct democracy gives the Swiss people the power to stop laws, to propose new laws and to change the constitution, etc. In this way, the will of the Swiss people prevails over the will of the government. The Swiss government has learned to govern for the people and with the people.

I believe the high level of trust Swiss citizens have in their government, over 80%, is one of the most important effects of direct democracy.

I do not think the Swiss are more trusting of government by nature than the people of other lands or cultures. It can not be the culture because Switzerland is a multicultural nation (although their concept of “multicultural” has little to do with what “multicultural” means in representative democracies). The Swiss trust their government because they know the government does what the people want. The Swiss practice, better than anyone else so far, (except the ancient Greeks) “government by the people for the people”.

If you live in a representative democracy YOU KNOW it is not like that; you elect a representative government and, once the election is over, it is “hasta la vista!” (“See you at the next election!”). In representative democracies, from election to election, the people have no control over the government.

Notice in the chart how Switzerland is almost 10 points above the second-ranked country, Luxembourg, and over 10 ahead of the third one, Norway.

To give you an idea of what such difference means, just think of what a crushing defeat it would be in any democracy to lose an election by 10 points.

The next several countries in the chart, all recognized as among the best in the World in many areas; low levels of corruption, political stability, social services, etc., are about 20 points below Switzerland. The group includes the Netherlands, Canada, New Zealand, Ireland, and Germany.

Turkey comes right behind. Unfortunately, Turkey is far from a solid representative democracy. For that reason, I am not very interested in the Turkish model of trust in government, even if it outranked Switzerland.

It may also surprise you to see how Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Australia, and Austria are further behind.

Even further down are the UK, France, and the United States. The three rank between 40 and 50 points behind Switzerland!. This is shocking because the three have contributed the most to the adoption of representative democracy in the modern World. In fact, in several ways, the Swiss base their democracy in American ideas (whose core originated in England). Swiss democracy also owes to the French.

Italy and Greece are at about 60 and 75 points below Switzerland. This is extraordinary; the earlier Italians, the Romans, made very important contributions to democracy, rule of law, etc.

It is interesting to note that Italy shares a border with Switzerland and many Swiss are Swiss-Italian.

Greece is geographically not far from Switzerland either. The situation of the Greeks is beyond extraordinary; more than 2500 years after their ancestors invented democracy, this nation lays in a sorry state, and not only by its low level of trust in government. Greece demonstrates how democracy can unravel.

The same thing could happen to the Swiss. It is as if democracy is the “politically non-natural state of humans”; even peoples blessed with the values and intelligence to have democracy can lose them, and democracy too.

Italy and Greece make it obvious that heritage, geographical proximity, even cultural proximity, modern communications, travel, trade, etc., do not contribute decisively to the ability to assimilate direct democracy.

If it is important for you, for your family and friends, to have trust in the government of your country, pushing for direct democracy is a good way to start.

The Swiss had to push hard for it too; it did not happen because of the great Swiss chocolate, the Swiss cheese, or by contemplating the spectacular Swiss Alps. Their politicians did not like direct democracy, most of your politicians don’t either. They don’t because they will have less power.

Tomorrow I will show a practical example of how the Swiss people are at the controls of their country. The example will show how you and your fellow citizens can also be at the controls.

Direct democracy does not need full-time politicians, and that is very good.

It is logical that direct democracy does not need full-time politicians, and that is good. In a direct democracy, the citizens make the most important decisions. This means there is no need for politicians to work full time.

In a direct democracy, the politicians become more like civil servants of the people; they execute the will of the people. Sometimes they do that because the people leave them no choice, other times it is because they are in tune with the people, and they decide in tune with the people.

From previous blogs, you may remember politicians in direct democracy are in tune with the will of the voters because, overall, the system of direct democracy leaves them no choice.

When people make the key decisions, politicians do not have to make them; they need not work as hard, there is no need for politicians to work full time. Neither do they need large office staff to inform them, prepare papers, speeches, interviews, debates, and on and on; all that is less important when the people are the decision-makers.

Not only parliamentarians are less important in a direct democracy, the president, the prime minister, the ministers are also less important too and they need less staff.

In a direct democracy, the politicians have less to do because they have less power, as simple as that.

As you know, Switzerland is a direct democracy. It is probable that if Swiss politicians could decide, they would prefer to have more power to do more things for the good of the town, the canton (state or province), and the country.

If they had the chance, Swiss politicians would prefer to have more to do, they would need to work full-time, just like politicians do in your country now.

Swiss politicians have assimilated direct democracy, and most prefer to be part-time politicians. As many of them say, “working part-time in politics, having also real jobs, keeps us connected to ordinary Swiss citizens”. But the desire for more power always lurks. We know that because Swiss history itself proves it.

When direct democracy “came” to Switzerland, when the citizens pressured and pressured the political class until they go it, Swiss politicians did not want the change, they liked representative democracy.

Another event in Swiss history confirms politicians like representative democracy more than direct democracy; during WW II the Swiss Parliament granted the executive the power to govern by decree. This also suspended direct democracy; no longer could the Swiss people hold referendums to reject laws, etc.

The politicians liked the suspension of direct people’s power. They liked it so much they did not want to go back to representative democracy. The Swiss people had to insist and insist until the politicians relented.

It is obvious politicians, not just in Switzerland, enjoy having more power. More power requires more work. More work means working full-time in politics.

Because direct democracy requires less effort by politicians, in Switzerland, even in the national parliament, most politicians work part-time and hold also normal jobs. At the canton (state or provincial) level, and at the local level the proportion is even higher.

All of the above is logical because Swiss politicians have less to do at all levels of government.

Part-time politics has other many important advantages for the nation.

For example, the Swiss politician does not depend on his or her political job to earn a living, as much as full-time politicians do in the representative democracies of Germany, France, Italy, the UK, the US, etc. This means Swiss politicians are less attached to their political jobs. If they are less attached, it means they can leave them more easily, this helps renovation in parliament and the executive and prevents entrenchment.

If the Swiss politician depends less on his political job to make a living, it also means he or she is less dependent on big donors to finance the campaigns he or she needs to win and stay in politics.

Being a part-time politician, who also holds a job in the actual world, also keeps the Swiss politician more in contact with the lives of the ordinary citizens who elected him or her.

Another important advantage of part-time representatives is that it helps prevent the rise of the “political class”. You know, those entrenched politicians who, not only are they full-time politicians, they are so decade after decade because many know how to get re-elected decade after decade.

Someone said: “power corrupts”. This means the less power politicians have the less corruption there will be among them. This is another good reason to have a direct democracy.

If you think direct democracy is the way to improve the representative democracy your country has now, do not forget that one advantage is part-time politicians.

But to get direct democracy, wherever you are, you will have to press and press and press for it to happen, just like the Swiss did. You will also have to stay vigilant, like they did, not to lose direct democracy.

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