Popular Democracy?

JR., JOHN J. PITNEY

Popular Democracy? The virtues and the vices of the initiative process. BY JOHN J. PITNEY JR. Tevye, the conflicted main character of Fiddler on the Roof, pondered tough choices by arguing with...

...What is more, the recent redis-tricting has effectively abolished interparty competition in state legislative elections...
...Politicians are loath to anger constituencies that they themselves have begotten, and so the government grows...
...Conservatives have scored important political triumphs this way...
...He starts with the example of Measure 58, a 1998 Oregon ballot initiative to let adoptees see their birth certificates...
...Unfortunately, Ellis takes some gratuitous swipes at conservative positions...
...Ellis provides Oregon data showing that initiatives with paid gatherers are much more likely to make the ballot than volunteer efforts...
...In practice, these requirements have given rise to initiative-qualification firms, who use paid workers to collect the signatures...
...On the other hand, conservatives revere James Madison, who warned that direct or "pure" democracy "can admit of no cure for the mischiefs of faction...
...Ellis quotes a handbook that tells paid gatherers not to "converse at length with signers or attempt to answer lengthy questions...
...Ironically, there will be so many open seats only because of term limits, a product of the initiative process...
...Maybe the initiative is a worthwhile alternative after all...
...One may find ample justification for such misgivings in Democratic Delusions, by Richard J. Ellis, a professor of politics at Willamette University...
...Though faulting the Florida Supreme Court for blocking Ward Connerly's proposed measures against racial preferences, he adds: "Was Florida better off without Connerly's four sweeping initiatives...
...The careful, deliberative work of legislation simply cannot take place among a large mass of citizens, even when they are all wise and intelligent...
...Thanks to support from more moderate elements, who depicted it merely as a check on the legislatures, it spread to nineteen states by 1918...
...Compared with the initiative, Ellis says, the regular legislative process is better at correcting and learning from errors...
...On the other hand, conservatives make a big mistake if they assume that direct democracy automatically produces more favorable results than representative democracy...
...popular vote...
...Proposition 13, a 1978 ballot measure that cut property taxes in California, revealed the political potency of the tax issue and helped shape the Reagan presidential campaign two years later...
...A decade after Proposition 13, California voters enacted Proposition 98, a union-backed amendment to the state constitution, which guarantees the educational establishment about 40 percent of state revenues...
...In the initiative business, the practical approach trumps the deliberative one...
...Acting through direct popular vote, unchecked majorities can roll over minorities...
...Had every Athenian citizen been a Socrates," Madison wrote, "every Athenian assembly would still have been a mob...
...There is merit to his argument, but he overlooks the tendency of politicians to back their own bets...
...Very early, though, the process started to show most of the defects that critics attack today: confusing ballots, confused voters, misleading titles, and most of all, the influence of organized groups that manipulate it for selfish gain...
...He admires the idealism of the initiative's author but questions whether the voters knew what they were doing...
...Just about the only competition will come in party primaries for open seats...
...Whereas volunteer gatherers care about their issue and are willing to explain it to potential signers, professionals only want ink on paper...
...Ellis ably sketches the evolution of the initiative process from its origins in the late 1800s...
...To get a measure on any state ballot, proponents must gather a certain number of signatures...
...More recent initiatives have rolled back racial preferences and stopped harmful programs that kept immigrant children from learning English...
...Some would claim that it all went to good causes, but a skeptical conservative might wonder whether state legislators were merely papering over their mistakes with wads of cash...
...During the 1980s, state and local spending (minus federal aid) averaged 8.8 percent of gross domestic product...
...Tevye, the conflicted main character of Fiddler on the Roof, pondered tough choices by arguing with himself, starting each new line of thought with the phrase, "On the other hand...
...His few observations on the topic are debatable...
...To create a policy or program is to create a constituency for its preservation and expansion...
...The goal of the table operation is to get petition signatures, not educate voters...
...The reality is quite different in many places, especially California...
...We should approach the issue with both eyes open—and both hands ready...
...When voters no longer like what a politician is doing, they can vote them out of office...
...Ellis does a fine job of explaining the unanticipated consequences of ballot access rules...
...Elections hold politicians accountable for their words and deeds...
...The initiative was a species of tyranny of the majority, with a large but unaffected public that adversely affected a tiny minority of birth mothers...
...Direct legislation began as the handmaiden of economic radicalism...
...On the other hand, while Ellis offers a wealth of shrewd insights into the shortcomings of the initiative, he has little to say about the alternative, namely the regular workings of the state legislatures...
...The Justice Department is now seeking to thwart the Oregon law...
...Initiative activists may talk a populist game, he says, but legislators actually have to face the people...
...During the 1990s, it averaged 9.7 percent—a huge increase in a multitrillion dollar economy...
...Two dozen states and many localities have some version of the initiative, which enables citizens to make law by John J. Pitney Jr...
...With the media paying scant attention to state politics, voters know little about their lawmakers' words, deeds, or even identities...
...The electorate giveth, and the electorate taketh away...
...Oregon voters in 1994 narrowly passed a law legalizing physician-assisted suicide, and three years later beat back a measure to repeal it...
...Though we tend to associate it with clean-fingernails reformism, he notes that its earliest proponents were hard leftists who thought it would transform American society...
...Almost certainly...
...For conservatives, the initiative process is a Tevye issue...
...Although these examples do not rule out conservative support for the initiative process, they do suggest the need for caution...
...Nevertheless, his focus is on process instead of ideology, and conservatives could accept much of what he says...
...The only way an average state legislator can appear on Los Angeles television is to get into a freeway car chase...
...The original goal was sensible: to screen out initiatives lacking even a minimal level of public support...
...With most of the districts having strong Democratic margins, and the small remainder having strong Republican margins, few seats will change hands in the next decade...
...In California and other states, the unions have also vanquished school choice, a top priority of many conservatives...
...is professor of government at Claremont McKenna College and author of The Art of Political Warfare...

Vol. 7 • March 2002 • No. 24


 
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