Abstract

AbstractPopulist political movements claim to be democratic in expressing what the people want, against the political establishment. These claims are misconceived to begin with in presupposing a definitive unitary people. Nonetheless, constitutional democracies face a special challenge to resist these claims in principle because they are unmistakably democratic sounding claims; they purport to empower popular will so that the people can rule themselves. Populist movements can be successful at the ballot box and push political culture in antidemocratic directions through democratic means, all the while claiming democratic legitimacy. The very processes of democracy are under threat. Traditionally, political winners are not motivated to change the system that saw them elected; populists are different in this regard. The populist challenge prompts a revisit of the debate about the democratic legitimacy of judges being empowered to displace the decisions of elected legislative assemblies (the constitutional review debate). An underdeveloped aspect of the constitutional review debate was the scope for courts to intervene specifically in political processes to correct them when they have gone awry and to help prevent them going awry in the first place. Judicial intervention is costly in democratic terms, and yet democracy has to be protected. This Article analyzes the search for a balance between popular will shaping democratic processes and judicially managed constitutional limitations on popular will shaping those processes. The recommended judicial role is styled as courts protecting—not perfecting—democracy, and it is a John Hart Ely-inspired modification of a separation of powers defense of constitutional review. In addressing the populist challenge, courts can, in principle, try to be a step ahead in anticipating and, where they can, slowing degradation of democracy and thereby helping to prevent it.

Highlights

  • Populist political movements claim to be democratic in expressing what the people want, against the political establishment

  • The populist challenge prompts a revisit of the debate about the democratic legitimacy of judges being empowered to displace the decisions of elected legislative assemblies

  • An underdeveloped aspect of the constitutional review debate was the scope for courts to intervene in political processes to correct them when they have gone awry and to help prevent them going awry in the first place

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Summary

Introduction

Constitutional democracies face a special challenge to resist them in principle because these are unmistakably democratic-sounding claims; they purport to realize and empower popular will so that the people can rule themselves. We see efforts by elected populists around the world to change constitutions and electoral systems in ways that concentrate and cement political power, their efforts variously termed “abusive constitutionalism”[5] and “one-partyism.”[6] The populist experience has not so much been a matter of a successful political movement proclaiming high-sounding principles and in practice doing something different. The closing down of democratic competition is consistent with and even entailed by the stated democraticsounding principles. This is the puzzle of, and challenge from, populism. Populists are trying to be democratic and have a claim to being democratic, so how can you resist them in the name of democracy?

Democratic theory to the test
Democracy as contested and pluralist
Democracy needs law
Constitutional arrangements
Democracy’s vulnerability
The constitutional—or judicial—review debate
Kyritsis’s separation of powers defense of constitutional review
Who guards the guardians?
Conclusion
Full Text
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