Republicanism
and Democracy
Bo
LI
Perspectives,
Vol. 1, No. 2
What
is republicanism?
What is its relationship with the theory
and practice of democracy?
As
I mentioned in the last essay, republicanism
is regarded as one of the four
sources of democratic theory and practice. However, republicanism is
not attributable to ancient Greece; it was instead
exemplified by republican Rome
(510-23 BC) and was revived by the Italian city-states
in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance
period. Instead of emphasizing the
importance of "rule by the people"
and the ideal of political equality (as
the classical democracy does), the classical
republicanism advocates self-government,
mixed constitution and the need for a government
that reflects the interests not
only of "the many (the people)," but
also of "the one (the monarch)"
and "the few (the aristocrats)," which
in pre-modern days were regarded
as two distinct classes separate from the
people ("the many").
Republicanism
was revived to fight against the claims of natural
rights to rule by monarchs and
churches in medieval Europe. As such, the first key proposition
of the Renaissance republicanism is self-government.
The classical republicanism,
facing various claims of natural rights to rule,
posits that a government should
answer to no one other than the community
of people that it governs. The possibility and institutions of
self-government is at the core of the
classical republicanism, and the
basic idea of sovereignty of people is an important
contribution of republicanism to
the modern theory of democracy.
According to the Renaissance
republicanism, an independent and self-governing
people, together with the right
of citizens to participate in the government
and a constitutional framework
assigning definite roles to various social groups,
forms the basis of liberty.
As
a corollary of the first proposition, the second
important proposition of the classical
republicanism is that government power should
be derived from a great majority
of the people, not from god or other supernatural
forces, nor from a small group
of privileged individuals.
Since a republican government
has to be accountable to the community as a
whole, its power can only be derived
from the community as a whole.
In
addition, the classical republicanism posits
that a government must have a mixed
constitution in order to be legitimate and stable. Governments that are in the
exclusive control of "the one" (monarchy),
"the few" (aristocracy)
or "the many" (democracy) are illegitimate
because none of the groups can
represent the community as a whole.
Only a government that incorporates
the interests of all groups can be truly legitimate. This government is called
a republican government.
The republican government is
also stable because few people can complain
that their voices are not heard.
To
be sure, many of the classical republicanism's
premises and propositions are the
same as those of democracy. The classical republicanism and the
classical democracy have the same goals:
a society sustained by civic virtue,
in which people live a happy life by devoting
to public good and committing to
civic duties. People are by nature political and social,
according to the classical political
thinkers, and that is why people can
be happy only by living in a political association.
The
major difference between the classical republicanism
and the classical democracy lies
in their different approaches to the ideal society.
Republicanism emphasizes the importance
of a mixed government stabilized by
incorporating the preferences of various classes
of the society (meaning, a great
majority of the society), while democracy focuses
on the interests of "the many"
which, as mentioned above, was regarded in pre-modern
ages as a distinct and different
class from "the one" (monarch) and
"the few" (aristocrats).
In other words, the classical republicanism
demands a broad social basis for
self government (which, as we will see below,
survives as a central element of
modern republicanism), and it posits that any
government controlled by one class
is both illegitimate and unstable; in
contrast, the classical democracy favors
participation of the people ("the
many") in the political process and focuses
on the ideals of liberty and political
equality.
There
is another difference between the classical
republicanism and the classical
democracy: while the classical Greek democracy
elates the potentials of civic
virtue, the Roman republicanism is more concerned
with the fragility of the civic
virtue.
As such, the classical republicanism
is closer to the modern liberalism's
assumptions about human nature; i.e.,
people are short-sighted, impulsive and
prone to vanity and passion. The major threat to civic
virtue, according to the classical republicanism,
is factions and political conflicts. As such, the major task of republicanism
is to design a system of mixed
government so that different interests are
balanced and civic virtue is maintained.
The
third difference between republicanism and democracy
is historically obvious.
The classical republicanism tries to
find the truly legitimate source
of government power. In contrast, the classical democracy does
not concern itself with this question;
instead, the Athenians are more
concerned with political equality and political
participation.
To Athenians, there is no
question about legitimate source of government
power because the people is the
government and the government is the people.
In this sense, the classical
republicanism foreshadows the modern theory
of representative government and
liberal democracy, because it implicitly
draws an distinction between "the
government" and "the people."
As
two examples, we will take a look at the Roman
Empire and the city republics in
12th-century Italy.
The Roman Empire is regarded as
republican for two reasons. First, the Roman people were regarded
as highly virtuous and actively
participating in the political process.
Second, with its system of consuls, Senate,
and tribunes of the people, the
Roman Empire maintained a mixed constitution
that accommodated and contained
various social forces in the public domain. Similarly, the 12th-century
Italian city-states were republican because
of their ideals and institutions
of self-government. Their systems of government consisted
of ruling councils headed by "podesta,"
officials with supreme executive
and judicial powers.
Podesta were elected officials with limited
terms, and they were accountable
to the ruling councils and ultimately to the
citizens of the republic.
In feudal Europe, the self-governing
Italian city republics were remarkable
because "they represented an explicit challenge
to the prevailing assumption that
government must be regarded as a God-given
form of lordship" (Skinner).
The
classical republicanism later developed into
two strands, which are called protective
republicanism and developmental republicanism
by Professor David Held.
The major figure in protective republicanism
is Niccolo Machiavelli.
An often misunderstood thinker, Machiavelli
points out the important connection
between republicanism and individual
liberty.
Unlike the classical republicans, Machiavelli
is among the first to foresee the
modern distinction between "the public"
and "the private." In an often neglected but very important
treatise titled The Discourses,
Machiavelli does not believe that there is a
natural or God-given way of organizing
the political order.
To Machiavelli, it is the
task of "politics" to create order
in the world, and the objective of
politics is to strive to gain, maintain and
use power. At the same time, a nation can never
become strong and dominating unless its people
have been enjoying liberty, and
the way to guarantee liberty is to have a mixed
constitution, not to meddle with
people's private life, and to expand by
constantly engaging in wars.
In the end, however, Machiavelli places
collective and national interest
above individual liberties, and he is
concerned more with national strength
than with individual happiness.
As such, like his classical
predecessors, Machiavelli is ultimately an
illiberal republican.
The
most important figure in developmental republicanism
is J.J. Rousseau. To Rousseau,
the appeal of republicanism lies not in its
potential in guaranteeing the private
liberty of individuals, but in its ability to
develop human potentials and to
unleash the "general will." Rousseau is no liberal, but
his influence in republican and democratic theories
is enduring.
Like his classical predecessors, Rousseau
does not see the value of a "private
sphere;" indeed, Rousseau hates the private
sphere.
The existence of a private
sphere, with its accompanying inequality in
wealth, vanity and distortions,
causes much of the human sufferings. Rousseau wants people to
live independently and transparently, and only
the "general will" of
the people can lead people to happiness and
freedom.
Rousseau sees a republican
democracy as the way to general will and freedom.
As
time passes by, the classical republicanism
encounters various difficulties.
One major difficulty is that it became
harder and harder to distinguish
between "the one," "the few,"
and "the many" in a society. As
such, modern republicanism has abandoned the
centrality of mixed constitution
in classical republicanism.
Instead, it emphasizes the
importance of a broad social basis for government
power.
As James Madison puts it
in his famous Federalist Papers No. 39, a republican
government is "a government
which derives all its powers directly or indirectly
from the great body of the people,
and is administered by persons holding their
offices during pleasure, for a
limited period, or during good behavior."
In addition, as Professor Robert
Dahl points out, separation of power, not
mixed constitution, is more important
to modern republicanism.
In
modern terms, republicanism and democracy are
no longer incompatible. Instead,
they tend to focus on different aspects of the
same political regime, and they
are complementary to each other. Republicanism explains the
source and nature of governmental power in a
democracy, while democracy provides
the mechanism for a government to be truly republican.
In addition, the classical
idea of mixed constitution, and the modern idea
of separation of power, can be
regarded as a way to control the problem of
democratic tyranny.
Another
difficulty for the classical republicanism is
about the size of a republic.
Can a republic be a large nation-state?
How can republican ideals
be realized in a large nation-state?
Most of the classical republicans
are worried that, as a country gets larger,
a republican regime becomes unstable
due to the factional disputes and endless quarrels.
However, this worry was alleviated
by the "discovery" of representative
government in the 18th and 19th
century.
We will discuss the theory of
representative government in the next essay. Additionally, the American
Federalists argued in 1787 that a republican
regime is not only possible, but
also necessary, for a large country like the
United States of America.
How
to evaluate the classical republicanism? To be sure, most of the liberal
democratic states of our time have the remnants
of the classical mixed constitution. The United Kingdom, with its system of
the Queen (the monarch), the House
of Lords (with some remaining aristocratic
arrangements) and the House of Commons
(representatives of the people), is
a quintessential example of mixed constitution
in modern times.
Even in the United States,
there are elements of democracy (the use of
various referenda), aristocracy
(the existence of an entrenched class of social
and political elites), and monarchy
(the existence of a powerful President).
The continuing existence of mixed constitutions
proves the enduring influence of
republicanism. More importantly, the republican lesson
that government power must be from
a great majority of the people has become a
central element of the modern theory
and practice of democracy.
When we examine the modern
liberal democratic states, we find that some
of the core propositions of the
republican tradition --- such as its anti-monarchical
spirit and its concern with the
corruption of public life by private
interests --- have been maintained and combined
with the later liberal ideas and
institutions.
(The
author is an associate at the New York law firm
of Davis Polk & Wardwell.
Opinions expressed here are solely those
of the author's and should not
be attributed to Davis Polk & Wardwell.)
References:
1.
Dahl, Robert A. Democracy and Its Critiques.
Yale University Press, 1989.
2.
Held, David. Models of Democracy (2nd Edition).
Stanford University Press, 1996.
3.
Machiavelli, Niccolo. The Discourses. Harmondsworth:
Penguin, 1983.
4.
Madison, James. The Federalist Papers, No. 39.
5.
Rousseau, J. J. The Social Contract. Harmondsworth:
Penguin, 1968.