Princeton Study: U.S.
No Longer An Actual Democracy
By Brendan James
January 18, 2015 "ICH"
- "TPM"
- A new study from
Princeton spells bad news for American
democracy—namely, that it no longer
exists.
Asking "[w]ho really
rules?" researchers Martin Gilens and
Benjamin I. Page
argue that over the past few decades
America's political system has slowly
transformed from a democracy into an
oligarchy, where wealthy elites wield
most power.
Using data drawn from
over 1,800 different policy initiatives
from 1981 to 2002, the two conclude that
rich, well-connected individuals on the
political scene now steer the direction
of the country, regardless of or even
against the will of the majority of
voters.
"The central point
that emerges from our research is that
economic elites and organized groups
representing business interests have
substantial independent impacts on U.S.
government policy," they write, "while
mass-based interest groups and average
citizens have little or no independent
influence."
As one illustration,
Gilens and Page compare the political
preferences of Americans at the 50th
income percentile to preferences of
Americans at the 90th percentile as well
as major lobbying or business groups.
They find that the government—whether
Republican or Democratic—more often
follows the preferences of the latter
group rather than the first.
The researches note
that this is not a new development
caused by, say, recent Supreme Court
decisions allowing more money in
politics, such as Citizens United or
this month's ruling on
McCutcheon v. FEC. As the data
stretching back to the 1980s suggests,
this has been a long term trend, and is
therefore harder for most people to
perceive, let alone reverse.
"Ordinary citizens,"
they write, "might often be observed to
'win' (that is, to get their preferred
policy outcomes) even if they had no
independent effect whatsoever on policy
making, if elites (with whom they often
agree) actually prevail."