https://www.nationalreview.com/2022/01/misrepresenting-madison-destabilizing-democracy/#slide-1
A Columbia law professor takes to the New York Times to libel the Constitution’s chief architect and to propose system-unsettling changes to our politics.
T here is much talk of the impending death of American democracy. Some of it is worth reading and worrying about. A volatile situation is brewing as partisan tribes become more internally homogenous and distanced from one another — geographically, ideologically, and culturally.
We can ward off potential disaster via piecemeal changes geared toward lowering the temperature and weakening the power of the most extreme elements in our politics; we will catalyze disaster through brash, systemic overhauls. Enter Columbia Law professor Jedediah Britton-Purdy and his recent New York Times opinion piece, “The Republican Party Is Succeeding Because We Are Not a True Democracy.”
In support of his advocacy for constitutional change by simple majority, Britton-Purdy draws a straight line from our supposedly antidemocratic constitutional structure to much of the Republican Party’s (ongoing) descent into conspiracy and rejection of the democratic process during the Trump era.
He argues that “an antidemocratic system has bred an antidemocratic party,” while claiming that key Founders such as James Madison harbored “elite dislike and mistrust of majority rule” that they then translated into an antidemocratic document. That’s not true.
The current iteration of the Republican Party has many problems. But we can’t let partisan arguments slip into libels of the Constitution and its Framers for a simple reason: Recommitting ourselves to their insights regarding government and human nature — and the Constitution they framed embodying those very insights — is the only way we’ll forge a functional politics. Defaming the dead isn’t a good call when it is their wisdom that could help lead us out of our present mess.