In case you missed it:
Study: US is an oligarchy, not a democracy
By
Jasper McChesney
December 19, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
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(First published, April 14, 2014) - So you
live in an oligarchy.
A word usually
associated with deranged Russian oil tycoons
is suddenly front and center in many
American’s minds thanks to a new study
by researchers at Princeton and
Northwestern. The
analysis
of 1,779 recent policy outcomes found
that “economic elites and organized groups
representing business interests have
substantial independent impacts on U.S.
government policy,” while average citizens
“have little or no independent influence.”
In
other words, the U.S. is an oligarchy: a
system of government where a small number of
elites rule. Everyone else? Not so much.
“Well I
could have told you that”
This might seem obvious to some readers.
After all, everyone knows economic
elites run the show in the United States,
right?
As
it turns out, there are surprisingly few
studies out there on this topic. That’s what
makes this study so important. If we want to
have an informed debate about issues of
money and influence, those things “everyone
knows” have to be backed up with real data.
Let’s look behind the headline to see what
the research really says.
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The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
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The Study
The
research was done by two political
scientists, Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page,
and had two parts: First, they measured the
amount of political influence various groups
have in America. Then, they checked this
against some technical definitions of
democracy, oligarchy, and other forms of
government.
Finding 1:
The Wealthy Have More Influence
The
chart here shows how much political
influence different groups have in America
today. Not only do
the wealthy have the most influence;
ordinary voters have basically none.
To
have “political influence” in this case
means that Congress responds to you by
passing the laws and policies you like. Low
influence means you’re ignored — Congress
passes laws that have no relationship to
what you want.
Special interest groups also have sway over
public policy. The researchers divided them
into two types. “Mass” interest groups,
which represent large groups of organized
citizens, have a small amount of power.
Business groups, like trade associations,
have a moderate amount, likely because they
can afford to spend more on lobbying and
political donations.
None of this means that ordinary people
never get what they want from
Congress. In several instance, public
opinion data matched up with things Congress
actually did, but the vast majority were
also outcomes favored by the wealthy and
business interests. What about those other
times? The sad fact is that, statistically
speaking, the government doesn’t care what
90% of Americans think.
Finding 2:
It’s an Oligarchy
Okay, so that’s bad: the wealthy get the
laws they want. The final piece of the
puzzle is to look at the pattern of
influence we have, and see what category
that fits into.
The
authors defined four possible systems we
might have: (1) democracy, (2) oligarchy, or
semi-democratic systems dominated by (3)
interest groups generally or (4) business
groups especially.
You
can look at the figure and judge for
yourself: America in 2014 matches mostly
with the oligarchy model — an oligarchy of
wealthy individuals.
The
problem here isn’t the existence of wealth,
or that wealthy Americans have political
opinions. It’s that the government is
representing only 10% of the American
people. Everyone else is living with
something less than democracy.
The causes
and the solution
This research wasn’t really about what got
us to an oligarchy, but the authors have
some ideas:
It
is well established that organized
groups regularly lobby and fraternize
with public officials; move through
revolving doors between public and
private employment; provide self-serving
information to officials; draft
legislation; and spend a great deal of
money on election campaigns.
At
its heart, this is a problem of corruption –
caused by money in our political system.
Such corruption is fundamentally opposed
to the ideals of our republic because “the
public is likely to be a more certain
guardian of its own interests than any
feasible alternative.”
Martin Gilens
has some hope for change however. In a
recent
interview,
he said, “meaningful campaign finance reform
is the single, most promising avenue” for
change.
Some
Details: How They Calculated Influence
To
find how much influence the general public
has, Gilens and Page looked at polling data
about specific policies, and then compared
that to what Congress actually did. These
line graphs show that comparison: how likely
a law was to pass versus how much the public
wanted it.
The
flat line for most Americans shows that no
matter how popular a law was, Congress was
about equally likely to pass it. Contrast
that with the line for wealthy Americans,
whose opinions substantially affect how
likely a bill is to pass.
You
can read a pre-release version of Gilens and
Page’s research paper
here.
This article was originally published by "Bulletin.Represent.Us"
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