Cure or Curse? Non-­elected politics. Cure or Curse for the Crisis of Representative Democracy? - 2018 - 2025


 

Abstract

Evidence of a growing disengagement of citizens from politics is multiplying. Electoral turnout reaches historically low levels. Anti-­‐establishment and populist parties are on the rise. Fewer and fewer Europeans trust their representative institutions. In response, we have observed a multiplication of institutional reforms aimed at revitalizing representative democracy. Two in particular stand out: the delegation of some political decision-­‐making powers to (1) selected citizens and to (2) selected experts. But there is a paradox in attempting to cure the crisis of representative democracy by introducing such reforms. In representative democracy, control over political decision-­‐making is vested in elected representatives. Delegating political decision-­‐making to selected experts/citizens is at odds with this definition. It empowers the non-­elected. If these reforms show that politics could work without elected officials, could we really expect that citizens’ support for representative democracy would be boosted and that citizens would re-­‐engage with representative politics? In that sense, would it be a cure for the crisis of representative democracy, or rather a curse? Our central hypothesis is that there is no universal and univocal healing (or harming) effect of non-­‐elected politics on support for representative democracy. In order to verify it, I propose to collect data across Europe on three elements:

(1) a detailed study of the preferences of Europeans on how democracy should work and on institutional reforms towards non-­‐elected politics,

(2) a comprehensive inventory of all actual cases of empowerment of citizens and experts implemented across Europe since 2000,

and (3) an analysis of the impact of exposure to non-­‐elected politics on citizens’ attitudes towards representative democracy. An innovative combination of online survey experiments and of panel surveys will be used to answer this topical research question with far-­‐reaching societal implication.

Mis à jour le 31 octobre 2024