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External WebsitesTheo Schiller is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Philipps-University Marburg, Germany. His contributions to SAGE publication's International Encyclopedia of Political Science (2011).
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Discussions on direct-democratic institutions deal with several issues. The strongest normative grounds for direct democracy are the democratic principles of popular sovereignty, political equality, and all the arguments for participative democracy that support the idea that all citizens should have the right not only to elect representatives but also to vote on policy issues in referenda. Since assembly democracy cannot be an option in modern societies (outside Switzerland), direct-democratic institutions are regarded not as a full-scale alternative to representative democracy but as a supplement to or counterweight within democratic systems with major representative features. Nevertheless, the institutional difference and competition between representative and direct-democratic processes lie at the core of the controversy whether direct democracy contributes to undermining representative democracy or can offer enrichments of democracy.
In general, representative democracy is often seen as superior because general elections give citizens an encompassing choice between alternative governments and complex and coherent programs; because governments and parliaments have greater capacity for informed decisions, including expert judgment; and because representatives can be held accountable for their decisions. Arguments in support of direct-democratic instruments refer to various aspects:
Direct-democratic issue voting can, during terms of office, deal with issues that have not been discussed at general elections. Citizens’ initiatives in particular can enrich the political agenda and, thus, contribute to the function of political articulation and innovation. The range of political actors tends to be broader than already present in the party system.
Direct democracy also offers citizens additional and more specific instruments of political control during terms of office, particularly initiative proposals and citizen-demanded referenda to reject new legislation or delete existing laws.
One major area of controversy deals with information, competence, and the quality of decision making. While representative institutions may indeed hold intense deliberations on many subjects, direct-democratic decision-making processes can also provide for specific issues the opportunity of intense and widespread public debates, during which citizens can become informed about controversial value and factual considerations. Yet, as voters are often described as badly informed and incompetent, the danger of manipulation (by resourceful parties, strong interest groups, corporations, and social media actors) is a major issue. Design and regulations, however, can make a difference. For example, there is arguably less danger of manipulation in Switzerland than in U.S. states, since Switzerland does not allow television advertising in referendum campaigns. Studies in 2004 and 2005 found that, as a general trend, referendum debates and campaigns provide a major potential for dissemination of information and for political education. Important factors are a broader field of political actors in such campaigns and more intense communication of arguments in the news media.
How voters select their choice in referendum voting attracted two rather opposite assumptions. According to one, party orientations might be simply duplicated in issue voting behaviour; the other one contends that interest groups, news media, and even “demagogues” can influence voters strongly. The trend in the literature seems to be that the less informed parts of the electorate look for party orientation, while voters who are better informed and educated may take a more independent choice by using more arguments for forming opinions. Thus, as political scientist Ian Budge has noted, direct democracy must not be unmediated, since governments and parties can also play an important mediating role. This may be particularly true when government authorities initiate a referendum vote in optional or mandatory referenda.
One promise of direct democracy is that more political participation can be realized. This is surely the case, since more opportunities and occasions to debate policy issues and to vote in referenda are offered. Nevertheless, some criticism remains that the participation goal is not realized, particularly for social groups that also participate little in electoral politics. It is argued that in referenda turnout is often lower than in general elections and that referenda lead to a lower turnout in elections also. Yet this cannot be generalized, since turnout varies significantly depending upon the issues—for example, in Switzerland from 30 percent to around 80 percent of registered voters. In addition, when ballot votes regularly do not take place in conjunction with general elections (like in Switzerland), turnout variation will be stronger than when referendum votes are mostly held on election days (as in the United States). Other shortcomings of extended participation in direct democracy are seen in a “social bias,” where lower social strata with deficits in status, income, and education tend to be less motivated or competent to participate in discussions or in voting. Again, at least to some degree, this seems to be balanced by greater degrees of participation by these groups when policy issues specifically relevant to them are at stake.
Finally, if a larger share of citizens do not participate, but abstain from voting, legitimation problems in referendum votes may arise. In some jurisdictions, regulations respond by requiring a qualified majority for a valid vote in the form of turnout or approval quorums. The disadvantage of turnout quorums is that, in turn, it invites even more abstentions and campaigns to abstain even from voting “no,” while approval quorums at least devaluate majority votes.
Direct-democratic institutions have also been reflected in their relation to majorities and minorities. Citizen-initiated procedures are supposed to serve as potential instruments of minorities, since they can present new proposals or demand a referendum on new legislation. This is likely to be true for placing issues on the agenda. In the referendum vote, however, the majority principle applies, which means that minority rights or interests can be endangered. Specific concerns relate to basic rights of minorities, which, however, can best be protected against offensive majority rule by constitutional guarantees, courts, and prereferendum constitutionality checks. Sometimes, the validity of referendum votes is regulated by qualified or double majorities to protect minorities. More generally, referenda can also support developments toward autonomy or even independence of regional “minority” populations.
Policy impacts of direct-democratic decision making also received attention. Research on economic and financial effects at the regional and local levels of Swiss and U.S. direct-democratic institutions found beneficial consequences in macroeconomic and fiscal performance. According to one thesis, strong interest groups will gain more from initiatives and referenda, whereas empirical economic studies, such as the one conducted in 2004 by John Matsusaka, tend to find advantages rather with the broader population. In other policy issues, such as the environment or moral topics, tentative and controversial evidence prevails.
Other consequences attributed to direct democracy refer to structural or system impacts on representative democracy or the overall system of democracy. In the case of Switzerland, particularly, it has been argued that direct democracy had a long-term effect toward a system of consensus democracy as opposed to majoritarian democracy. Mechanisms of consensus governments may indeed have developed to anticipate and integrate as many interests as possible, which otherwise might be able to initiate referenda against new legislation (instruments such as citizens’ initiatives and mandatory referenda would be less relevant here). In other jurisdictions, however (e.g., in Italy or German or U.S. states), similar effects away from majoritarian party competition and toward consensus democracy could not be observed; in presidential systems, such as in the U.S. states, legislative majorities and the executive are disconnected anyway. Thus, generalizations from the Swiss example on a developmental logic toward consensus government should not be easily drawn.
One should keep in mind that government-initiated and government-controlled referenda may in many respects show distinct features from citizen-initiated procedures. Government-driven instruments tend to be more influenced by policy projects and campaign capacities of central political authorities. Citizen-initiated procedures are more open for minorities, participation, innovation, and government control, yet they are less likely to succeed in the ballot vote. Nevertheless, as a process, they tend to offer a greater potential for supplementing and balancing the institutional shortcomings and power structures of representative democracy. Particularly in times of political crises, direct democracy can provide an important function in offering channels for reactivating popular sovereignty as the fundamental value and force of democracy. This power of preserving the sources of popular sovereignty alone makes it worthwhile to keep direct democracy going under routine conditions of democracy.