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2 votes
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Denmark will pull its small military force out of northern Mali after the country's transitional government said no permission had been given for them to deploy there
4 votes -
Jimmy Lai among three Hong Kong democracy activists convicted over Tiananmen vigil
7 votes -
Who controls the Internet? And should they?
10 votes -
Hong Kong leader defends election after single non-establishment figure picked for 1,500-strong committee
6 votes -
'Democracy for sale': Analysis ties corporate consolidation to increased lobbying
9 votes -
Democracy should be sentimentalist not rationalist
6 votes -
Hungary formally lost access this week to over €200 million in grants from Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein amid growing concerns about the country's democratic backsliding
14 votes -
Japan moves (slowly) toward electoral reform (2016)
4 votes -
Millions in UK face disenfranchisement under voter ID plans
7 votes -
Majority of Florida condo board quit in 2019 as squabbling residents dragged out plans for repairs
19 votes -
Slow news is good news
10 votes -
Tiananmen square: Hong Kong vigil organiser arrested on 32nd anniversary
12 votes -
The Emergence of the Global Heartland
4 votes -
Kenan Malik: ‘By demonising asylum seekers, Denmark reflects a panic in social democracy’
8 votes -
China approves Hong Kong electoral system reform bill, further reducing the power of the Hong Kong electorate
10 votes -
Georgia House passes sweeping bill that would restrict voting access, setting up final vote next week
8 votes -
The internet doesn't have to be awful
8 votes -
Myanmar coup: Aung San Suu Kyi detained as military seizes control
15 votes -
Partner of Norway's former justice minister has been found guilty of threatening democracy – she faked attacks on her family home and the torching of her car
10 votes -
When Americans committed insurrection: Until 2021, Americans had confronted federal authority with armed aggression just four times
13 votes -
Hong Kong arrests of pro-democracy activists showcase shrinking tolerance for peaceful opposition
14 votes -
Trump took a wrecking ball to media credibility—can Biden repair it?
7 votes -
Worker cooperatives: Bringing democracy to the workplace
12 votes -
Let’s kill the Assembly (Part one of the Jury Democracy legislative series)
4 votes -
Why Obama fears for our democracy
11 votes -
Is this a coup?
29 votes -
Trump is attempting a coup in plain sight
18 votes -
Fireside Friday: Crisis in the democracies of antiquity
3 votes -
Protests and power
6 votes -
What the internet could be
18 votes -
The path to autocracy; A second Trump term will leave America’s political system and culture looking even more like Orbán’s Hungary
31 votes -
We don’t know how to warn you any harder. America is dying.
25 votes -
Social media platforms can’t be a law unto themselves
5 votes -
Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro wanted to send soldiers to shut down the Supreme Court and replace its ministers
16 votes -
Democracy maybe?
4 votes -
Was the 2004 US election in Ohio unfairly tipped to Bush?
5 votes -
The democratic virtues of skepticism
6 votes -
Why Jeff Bezos must be stopped before it’s too late
17 votes -
Latest $84 million cuts rip the heart out of the ABC, and Australia's democracy
11 votes -
Trump’s latest firing seems to have violated four democratic values
17 votes -
Boris Johnson says three million people in Hong Kong will get path to British citizenship
7 votes -
Why conservative intellectuals like Viktor Orbán
6 votes -
A series of articles on the state of American democracy from early 2015 by Vox
American democracy is doomed ('constitutional hardball' is a great way to describe the 'modus operandi' of the Trump-McConnell GOP.) This is how the American system of government will die I found...
American democracy is doomed ('constitutional hardball' is a great way to describe the 'modus operandi' of the Trump-McConnell GOP.)
This is how the American system of government will die
I found their predictions to be kinda interesting (and clearly minimal)
The best-case scenario is that we wind up with an elective dictator but retain peaceful transitions of power. This is where I'd place my bet. Pure parliamentary systems, especially unicameral ones, give high levels of power to the prime minister and his cabinet, and manage to have peaceful transitions nonetheless. The same is true in Brazil, where the presidency is considerably more powerful than it is in the US.
But parliamentary systems also feature parties that are stronger than their leaders, which serve to prevent single individuals from garnering too much power. America's parties are getting more polarized, but they still aren't as strong as those of most other developed nations.
The worst-case scenario is if the presidency attains these powers and someone elected to the office decides to use them to punish political enemies, interfere with elections, suppress dissent, and so forth. Retaining an independent enough judiciary is a guard against this, but only if norms around obeying its rulings are strong. And, unusually, America allows for true independents, undisciplined by their parties, to become heads of government.
The US political system is not gonna collapse. It's gonna muddle though (A pretty interesting take. There are problems but people won't try to fix them but instead become disengaged and kinda forget about it.)
I think one of the things the authors missed while writing these this is how news became partidarized in the same manner, thus allowing outlets like Fox News to just consume the Republican electorate. They also missed how voting has been targeted too, and underestimated how willing the public was to act and how would the public react to this, which was by electing someone who didn't care about said broken Congress (or any sort of constitutionality), which is what became of Trump.
3 votes -
America’s largest media labor union launches historic advocacy campaign to save industry: "having robust news operations at the local and state level is fundamentally good for democratic stability."
12 votes -
A few articles on the Polish elections' breakdown
Poland 'holds' ghost election with 0% turnout (mostly explains what and who led up to this.) Opposition 'slams' presidential election by post (citing lack of preparation, mostly.) Polish election...
Poland 'holds' ghost election with 0% turnout (mostly explains what and who led up to this.)
Opposition 'slams' presidential election by post (citing lack of preparation, mostly.)
Polish election delayed indefinitely with just 4 days to go (mostly the same as the first article, but also cites how the later these elections are held, the worse Duda (current Polish president) 's chances unsurprisingly become.)
Race to the bottom: all Polish election outcomes are bad [opinion article] (a short analysis on the possibility routes the election could have taken. Admittedly somewhat outdated given the elections have clearly been postponed.
Related article: Poland's ruling party just made it's anti-democratic intention radically clear (tl;dr they're really invested in 'illiberal democracy', not too unlike the Republican party.)
6 votes -
#DemocracyRIP: What the Russian government did to the 2016 elections in the US was just the beginning
9 votes -
Norway's social-democratic compromise doesn't owe to some eternal national character – it was a product of the revolutionary struggles of the interwar period
7 votes -
Hungary no longer a democracy, Freedom House says
17 votes -
Why the two-party system is the root of the problems in the US's constitutional democracy
9 votes