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POLITICS: Back to the Town Hall
By David Davenport
Why conservatives should embrace deliberative democracy. By David
Davenport.
Just below the radar of major media coverage, a series of experiments is
under way in what George Washington called “the great experiment” of
American democracy. These new projects—variously described as citizen
engagement, civic participation, or deliberative democracy—seek to restore
something the founders took for granted: the active involvement of everyday
citizens in the work of democracy. But in our supersized republic, town
hall meetings seem a bit quaint, and citizens generally report feelings of
detachment and alienation from their government.
In California, for example, 3,500 people gathered recently in “twentyfirst-
century roundtables” all over the state to deliberate on various alternatives
for health care reform. Chosen randomly from telephone lists, these
everyday Californians came to eight places where they deliberated face-toface
with their peers and were connected via technology to political leaders
elsewhere. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and legislative leaders
attended some sessions and found it helpful to learn the preferences of citizens
who had grappled with the hard issues for a day.
Presidential candidate John Edwards has called for an even larger, regular
gathering of citizens, proposing that “Citizen Congresses,” engaging 1
million Americans, meet every two years. Edwards suggests that technology
will now allow “true national discussions, unfiltered by interest groups,”
on the challenges and trade-offs facing our country, and will let citizens
offer advice directly to leaders. He noted that such processes had been
employed in the designs for the World Trade Center memorial, in the redevelopment
of New Orleans, and in other projects.
Citizen assemblies in Ontario and British Columbia have developed ballot
proposals for voting reform, starting from the principle that elected leaders
were too conflicted and self-interested to resolve such matters. Everyday
Californians have made a similar proposal for political redistricting in their
state. A “deliberative poll” was held during a recent weekend in Europe,
allowing ordinary people from European Union countries to deliberate over
their future, with some narrowing of differences and changes in position
by the end. On a smaller scale, a series of choice dialogues has been held
with randomly selected Californians to get their views on tough trade-offs
in K–12 education policy, gathering useful background for Schwarzenegger’s
“year of education reform” in 2008. Countless smaller efforts—including
town hall meetings, forums, and study circles—occur at the local level
on a regular basis.
Ordinary citizens tend to be interested in pragmatic approaches to policy
problems—ideas often more centrist than the ideological extremes of
political leaders.
Why don’t we hear more about these projects? The short answer is that
no one cares much about political processes; we want to know about results.
Sure, people may be coming together and being heard in new ways, but
what happened to health care reform in California, for example? Essentially
nothing. The commitment of Canadian citizens to come together every
other weekend for the better part of a year to design a new voting system
was impressive, but, in the end, it went down to defeat at the ballot box.
Other local projects have enjoyed greater success, but, as with most political
efforts, the outcomes are mixed.
But some say that improving citizen engagement is reason enough to
continue with these experiments. Ed Everett, the city manager of Redwood
City, California, observes that, at least at the local level, “Officials
need to understand that their center of control must move from the outcome of the
policy-making exercise to the process that achieves this
result.” According to those experienced in the field, ordinary citizens
tend to be more interested in pragmatic approaches to policy problems,
which are often more centrist than the ideological extremes of political
leaders. Such ideas could help political leaders break through the gridlock
of partisan politics and special interests that dominates so many of
our legislative bodies.
As one pollster has said: we do a lot of polling to find out what people
think who aren’t thinking, so why not poll to find out what people would
think if they thought?
As I describe these experiments to my political and policy friends, I get
a more enthusiastic reaction from folks on the Left than on the Right. Perhaps
this is due to conservatives’ general reputation for skepticism—according
to one colorful description, they are the ones who stand astride history,
yelling “stop.” But the reservations are deeper and more specific than that.
Conservatives wonder whether greater citizen engagement might undermine
representative democracy or lead to even crazier policy ideas than are
now on the table.
I submit that there are good reasons why conservatives should look seriously,
and perhaps with favor, at these experiments. Here are a few points
to consider:
- Trust the people. This, as Ronald Reagan said, is the one, clear lesson of
the postwar era. When the choice is between trusting government
bureaucrats and policy elites on one hand, or the people on the other,
conservatives should prefer the latter.
- Follow the founders. The founders assumed that town hall meetings and
robust citizen engagement would continue to be the order of the day.
But as the republic has grown in size and complexity, we must be more
intentional about engaging citizens.
- Revive federalism and local decision-making. One reason political power
seems to have traveled a one-way superhighway from state and local
government to Washington is a failure to address tough issues at a lower
level. Creating new tools and reviving local civic engagement could be
a powerful antidote to more control from Washington.
- Increase deliberation and dialogue. Some conservatives fear that the tools
of citizen engagement come only from the progressives’ tool box, but
this is not necessarily true. As Federalist No. 63 reminds us, our republic
should always seek the cool and deliberate sense of the community,
not the solution reached by a federal judge or one proposed by an expensively
marketed ballot proposition. Engaging people through deliberation
and dialogue, as most of these tools do, could address some of the
ills of the progressives’ direct democracy and the liberals’ judicial
activism, both end-runs around good democratic practice.
- Improve the quality and usefulness of public opinion. One of the
acknowledged problems with public opinion polls is that those responding
frequently have no knowledge about the issues. When a pollster once
asked about “The Public Affairs Act of 1975,” people were not reluctant
to express their views, even though no such law existed. When, 20 years
later, they were asked about its repeal, again there was no lack of uninformed
opinion. Most tools of citizen engagement involve education and
deliberation, so that the results provide officials with far more useful data
than they would get otherwise. As James Fishkin, inventor of the Deliberative
Poll, has said: we do a lot of polling to find out what people think
who aren’t thinking, so why not poll to find out what people would
think if they thought?
New tools of citizen engagement are no panacea, of course, and they
potentially present new problems even while addressing old ones. But I submit
that there are at least three areas in which such tools of civic participation
would be especially useful. First, we need far more citizen engagement
in local matters. To the extent that cities and school boards can learn to
build community and engage citizens, the republic will be stronger. Second,
when the rules of the political game are in question—such as in redistricting
or voting, for example—elected leaders may have too many
conflicts to come up with good ideas. Having a citizens assembly address
such matters, rather than politicians in back rooms or consultants paid to
draw up ballot propositions, is better. Third, in developing democracies,
new tools of civic engagement may quickly build the sort of social capital
that would otherwise take decades to develop through civic associations or
in other ways.
In the 2008 presidential election season, conservatives are eager to know:
where is the next Ronald Reagan? How can conservatism be refined? If
those are the questions, I propose that greater civic engagement may well
be part of the answer.
Special to the Hoover Digest.
Available from the Hoover Press is Leviathan: The Growth of Local Government and the Erosion
of Liberty, by Clint Bolick. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
David Davenport is research fellow and also counselor to the director for external relations. His research and writing focus on international law and treaties, federalism, and values that sustain American democracy. He contributes regular commentaries to Townhall.com and Salem Radio Network, and writes columns for the San Francisco Chronicle. From 1985 to 2000, he served as president of Pepperdine University, where he was also a professor of public policy and law.
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