NEWS ISSUE OF THE MONTH
Is Democracy Making a Comeback? BY E. G. NADEAU
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mmanuel Macron was just reelected as President of France. He fended off a challenge from Marine La Pen, a far-right, pro-Russian challenger, who would have sent shockwaves through the entire European Union. Does Macron’s reelection represent a pro-democracy trend, or was it just an isolated victory? A review of analyses of political trends over the last couple of decades would give a pessimist answer to this question. For example, the Democracy Report 2022 concludes: “The level of democracy enjoyed by the average global citizen in 2021 is down to 1989 levels. The last 30 years of democratic advances are now eradicated. Dictatorships are on the rise and harbor 70% of the . . . world population . . . .”
WHAT ACCOUNTS FOR THE RAPID RISE, THEN GRADUAL DECLINE OF DEMOCRACY SINCE WORLD WAR II? This is a complicated question. Following are some possible answers. Much of the proliferation of new democracies after World War II resulted from the end of colonialism in Asia, Africa, and on islands in Oceania and the Caribbean from the late 1940s through the 1970s, and from the break-up of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia around 1990. As we have found out, however, one cannot just wave a magic wand and create a democracy. In 1945, there were 74 sovereign in the world. Today, there are 193 member states in the United Nations, representing just about every country in the world. That is approaching an almost threefold increase in less than 80 years. Many of the newly minted (or liberated) countries have struggled to become democratically run—even if they were formed as nominal democracies.
Not exactly uplifting news for those of us who value “government of the people, by the people and for the people.” Other recent analyses have drawn similar conclusions about the erosion of democracy over the last decade or more.
A different set of factors have undercut long-established democracies in the early 21st century, especially self-serving politicians and political parties, often financed by wealthy individuals and corporations.
But then along came Putin’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022. In addition to the deaths, destruction, suffering and dislocation inflicted on Ukrainians by Russia's ”special military operation,” there have been three major consequences not intended by Putin: strong, effective resistance by the Ukrainian government and its people to the invasion; an outpouring of support for Ukraine by democratic countries around the world; and a level of political, economic, and military cooperation among them that has not been seen since the end of World War II.
Taken together, these diverse factors have reduced the level of democracy around the world.
Thus, despite the gradual decline in democratic institutions in recent decades and the continuing tragedy of the war in Ukraine, the tone of this article is optimistic about the future of democracy in the world.
CHANGES IN DEMOCRACY SINCE WORLD WAR II Each year the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), Freedom House and other organizations publish reports on the current state of democracy in the world. For the past 16 years the EIU’s Democracy Index has been on a downward trend. The Freedom House Index has shown a similar negative pattern for 17 years. That is, the countries of the world have become less democratic and more authoritarian during most of the 21st century to date. There was a very different pattern that began during World War II, according to the Center for Systemic Peace. The world experienced an unprecedented flowering of democracy that continued through the remainder of the 20th century. According to the center, the approximate number of democratic countries increased from 10 during World War II in the early 1940s to 80 in 2000, and autocratic rule declined from a peak of about 90 countries in the late 1970s to 30 in 2000. 16 | SHEPHERD EXPRESS
THE REACTION OF DEMOCRATIC COUNTRIES TO PUTIN’S WAR The United States, the United Kingdom, the European Union, NATO, the United Nations, and other democratic countries and institutions have denounced Russia's invasion of Ukraine. They also quickly supported a range of economic sanctions on Russia and the provision of arms and humanitarian assistance to Ukraine, including support for refugees. The current actions of democratic countries around the world echo their response to the German, Italian, and Japanese invasions of their neighbors in World War II. Democracy in the world was up against the wall in the early 1940s, but the allies prevailed in Europe, Asia, and Africa. At the time, Russia was a key, but uneasy, part of this anti-fascist coalition. As was borne out in the following decades, Russia had a very different, long-term goal from its democratic allies—creation of an authoritarian Soviet empire rather than preservation and expansion of democracy. Now, Russia is the autocratic aggressor against its democratic neighbor, Ukraine. And a world democratic alliance has rapidly formed to counter this aggression.
A RESURGENCE OF DEMOCRACY, AN UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCE OF PUTIN’S WAR As Jennifer Rubin put it in a recent Washington Post opinion piece: “A renaissance of bipartisan, pro-democracy sentiment may be one of the many startling consequences of Russia’s invasion.”