TruePublica

CONTRIBUTE, SUPPORT OR ADVERTISE

TruePublica

  • Home
  • About TruePublica
  • United Kingdom
  • EU
  • United States
  • Global
  • Contributors
    ContributorsBooksContent Partners

The good, bad and ugly arguments for ditching the EU Charter Of Fundamental Rights

The good, bad and ugly arguments for ditching the EU Charter Of Fundamental Rights

Privatisation - The Myth, The Facts

Privatisation – The Myth, And Some New Facts

Total Collapse of Gaza Healthcare ‘Imminent,’ Warns Medical Charity

Total Collapse of Gaza Healthcare ‘Imminent,’ Warns Medical Charity

What Was It All For? Taliban now pose open threat to 70% of Afghanistan, BBC study finds

What Was It All For? Taliban now pose open threat to 70% of Afghanistan, BBC study finds

Document: Was EU Tax Evasion Regulation The Reason For The Brexit Referendum?

Was EU Tax Evasion Regulation The Reason For The Brexit Referendum?

Israel: DNA tests may provide answers on missing babies

Israel: DNA tests may provide answers on missing babies

Swiss trying to change image as Europe’s spy hub, say officials

Swiss trying to change image as Europe’s spy hub, say officials

Long Read: How Neoliberal is Turkey?

Long Read: How Neoliberal is Turkey?

Wealthy To Get Private Police Force

Wealthy To Get Private Police Force

Aristotle measured the quality of democracy by the extent to which politics constrains the economically powerful, allowing the preferences of the landless to be reflected in public policy. According to a new analysis, American democracy gets a failing grade on Aristotle’s test while the countries of northern Europe are star pupils. Path-breaking recent research has established a causal relationship between preferences of elite earners and public policy outcomes: the income bias. Aristotle’s maxim in the context of the US is the precise hypothesis that Benjamin Page at Northwestern and Martin Gilens of Princeton tested in research. Some 1,779 contentious Congressional votes over two decades were matched with contemporaneous US public opinion surveys. The survey data were parsed by respondent incomes into low (tenth percentile of family income), fiftieth percentile and ninetieth percentile silos. Gilens and Page documented affluence dominance, finding a “total failure” of middle income voters to influence Congressional policy outcomes. For instance, as the share of top earners favoring a particular policy rises from 10 percent to 90 percent, the odds of that outcome occurring increases by 45 percentage points. In contrast, as the share of supportive middle income earners rises from 10 percent to 90 percent, its odds of enactment improve by less than 4 percentage points. The melding of political and economic influence documented by Gilens and Page has placed America on the pathway described by Oxford’s Stein Ringen: “In Athens, democracy disintegrated when the rich grew super-rich, refused to play by the rules and undermined the established system of government. “ Pay-to-play is the pathology at the center of America’s low quality democracy. In pursuit of campaign contributions, the Republican Party in particular has succumbed to the income divergence agenda of the nation’s conservative political donor class – low, regressive taxes, wage suppression and fewer public goods. Hobbled by that party’s opposition, the Obama administration made little effort to restore real wage growth, reverse eroding social mobility and the like – and frustrated non-college white voters in America’s Rust Belt repaid the Democratic Party in kind in 2016. Donor class support of their Republican acolytes was more responsible than the Russians for the 2016 election pathologies that delegitimized US democracy. Nine-digit spending by the Koch brothers was channeled into mendacious personal attacks on opponents and baseless attacks on mainstream factual reporting. The billionaire Mercer family is singlehandedly responsible for the emergence of the incendiary Breitbart website. And both Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News and the mammoth far-right Sinclair conglomerate of 173 television stations lavished billions of dollars worth of fables lauding Republicans and demonizing opponents. The outcome is the most polarized American electorate in five generations since the Civil War. More believe the mainstream press is their enemy than trust it. Surveys by Transparency International find that Americans now have less confidence than Europeans in legislative and judicial institutions. Worse, fewer than half of Americans believe it’s “absolutely important to live in a democracy;” the share rejecting democracy is more than double the share in Northern Europe. And one-third of Americans have come of late to support “a strong leader who doesn’t bother with Congress or elections.” Northern Powerhouse Now look at the situation in northern Europe. Economic mobility is higher, education including college cheaper, vacations longer, health care less expensive and job security greater. There, the preferences of average households are heard and heeded by public officials. Thanks to co-determination and collective bargaining, for instance, wages measured in purchase power terms in the capstone manufacturing sectors of thirteen European nations are more than $10 an hour higher than American wages according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. And real wages in Germany during 2014–16 alone rose as much as real wages for most Americans have in the entire span since 1979. Evidence is also found in data on government redistributive efforts. Changes in the Gini Coefficient measure of income dispersion as a consequence of government tax and spending policies reflects the intensity of efforts to expand prosperity. The diminution of market-income inequality achieved by public policies is nearly twice as great in Belgium, France and Germany, for instance, than in the US. That is unsurprising since American federal tax and spending policies redistribute $1.35 to the highest quintile of earners for every $1 to the lowest quintile. Little wonder then that America’s income disparity after government taxes and transfers resembles that of Turkey. Finally, the electoral failures of Geert Wilders, Marine Le Pen and the German AfD party document that Trumpian tribalism and racism has less appeal in northern Europe than in America. The explanation is multifaceted, including European electoral rules that minimize negative political ads while providing voters accurate policy and candidate information. It also includes the not-distant memories on the continent of fascism. And it includes the more assertive response by Western Europeans to the poisonous threat posed by über-partisan and inaccurate social media posts. But most importantly, the high quality of western and northern European electoral systems reflects success in largely excluding private money from politics. That success is why Gallup finds that Germany (41 percent approval) is today’s top-rated global power, with the US (29%) bunched with the other faux democracies of China (30%) and Russia (27%). Rebuilding the quality of American democracy may take a generation because it begins with ending pay-to-play, dependent on recentering the Supreme Court by Democratic presidents and senators. The interim should be devoted to energizing voter participation with public funding of elections, open primaries, promoting proportional representation, automatic voter registration, election-day registration and other reforms. The high quality democracies of northern Europe confront formidable challenges detoxifying social media and confronting avaricious authoritarians in Poland, Hungary, Russian, China and the like. Even so, they provide seasoned, practical models for the reformation of America’s ersatz democracy. History is rich with ironies, but few as significant as northern Europe displacing an oligarchic America as the indispensable nations, spreading democracy abroad while exhibiting its success at home in spreading prosperity widely.

Right-to-Buy discounts have led to a ‘social housing fire sale’, say council leaders

« First«...278279280281282283284285286...»Last »

MOST READ LAST 30 DAYS

  • The Top Ten Independent News Sources In The UK for 2024 posted on October 20, 2023 | under United Kingdom

  • The Daily Mail – On The Wrong Side of History posted on October 19, 2021 | under United Kingdom

  • Future View: The Collapse Of Western Idealism? posted on April 21, 2025 | under United Kingdom

  • The Top Ten Independent News Sources In The UK posted on June 16, 2018 | under United Kingdom

  • Britain’s Tax Office, HMRC sold 600 state owned buildings to offshore property company posted on May 24, 2016 | under Editors Picks, United Kingdom

  • Top Ten (Free) Sources of Economic News posted on October 29, 2024 | under United Kingdom

  • The Route Out of the Failures of Capitalism posted on November 25, 2024 | under United Kingdom

  • Top 10 Safest Labour and Conservative Seats posted on November 16, 2019 | under NewsBits

  • Little Barbies: Sex Trafficking of Young Girls Is America’s Dirty Little Secret posted on February 8, 2018 | under United States

  • How the Internet and Social Media are Shaping a Misled Society posted on November 8, 2024 | under Global

Brexit book by Graham Vanbergen

Brexit - A CORPORATE COUP D'ETAT

DOWNLOAD THE E-BOOK £2.99

tp logo

Keyword Search

SEARCH CLOUD

Afghanistan america banking boris johnson brexit civil liberty climate change climate crisis corruption COVID-19 david cameron democracy disinformation Donald Trump economy election environment EU european union gaza government health human rights iraq israel neoliberalism NewsFacts NHS palestine police state politics poverty privacy privatisation propaganda russia surveillance syria tax havens terrorism theresa may tony blair TTIP ukraine war

TRUEPUBLICA - CRITICAL | INDEPENDENT | NEWS

Searching For The Truth So You Don't Have To.

  • About TruePublica
  • Advertising with TruePublica
  • Contact & Privacy
  • Contribute or Support
  • Cookie Policy
  • Submit Tips or Intelligence

© 2025 TruePublica | Built by Century Sun

Back to top

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT