Defining Politics – Lecture
Politics
The negotiations between the state & civil society, centered around power with the intention of building shared life
Meaning of Life
Meaning – Purpose – Order
The State
States want to be perceived as legitimate and desire for society to be legible
Roots of Legitimacy – tradition, charisma, the rule of law
Have a monopoly on the use of force
The only entity that can form a military, police force etc. This is a fundamental difference between the state & civil society
Civil Society
Apart from the state
Freedom of association
Voluntary, plurality of activities, negative border (exists where the state does not)
Separation of church and state
Against the state
Politicizing the nonpolitical
In dialogue with the state
Public sphere
Dialogue within this sphere is a response/critique as to what is happening in the political sphere
In support of the state
Schools of citizenship
The state cares about whether YOU care
In partnership with the state
More governance, less government – civil society providing what would normally be provided by the state
Beyond the state
Global civil society
Building Governments – Lecture
Democracy
“Rule by the people”
Democratic power is legitimate only when the holders of power are representative of the people
Direct Democracy
Citizens directly make decisions
Representative Democracy
A representative is elected to make decisions on behalf of the citizens
Electoral Systems
Majoritarian – under a majoritarian electoral system, elections produce clear winners/losers and advantage large parties over smaller ones (political stability)
First Past the Post
Winner is the candidate that receives the most votes, even if that amount is less than half of the total votes cast
Two-Round
Two rounds of voting – in the first round, 2 finalists are isolated and in the second, the candidate who receives the most votes will win
Alternative
Voters rank candidates from top-bottom in initial vote – important distinction here is that instead of multiple rounds of voting, there are multiple rounds of counting
First count – if a candidate has more than 50% first choice votes, they win; if this is not achieved then the candidate with the fewest votes gets eliminated
Second count – the eliminated votes get distributed to the voter’s second ranked candidate, and the count continues until a winner is produced
Single Nontransferable Vote
Districts have multiple seats; is the only majoritarian system in which there is more than one winner
Proportional – under a proportional electoral system, elections divide legislature based on votes with the imperative of ensuring all parties have a percentage of seats in legislature roughly equal to their percentage of votes
Party-list
Voters vote for a party, not a candidate
More than one winning party + seats are allocated based on proportion of votes received
Single Transferable Vote
Voters rank candidates in order of preference; a quota is established to determine the number of votes needed for a candidate to be elected
Count begins with first preference votes, if a candidate meets/exceeds the quota they are elected
If no candidate meets quota after this initial count, candidate with lowest votes is eliminated & their votes are transferred
Any votes for elected candidates beyond the quota will be transferred to the next-preferred candidates
Process continues until all seats are filled
Mixed
Mixed Member Majoritarian
Vote 1 – Constituency seats, decided through FPTP
Determines party seat allocation
Vote 2 – Party seats, closed-party list, seats are allocated based on proportion of votes
Mixed Member Proportional
Vote 1 – Constituency seats, decided through FPTP
Vote 2 – Party seats, closed-party list, seats are allocated based on proportion of votes
Legislature reflects party representation
The Problem with Democracy – Lecture
Democratic Theory
The idea that equality and fairness are necessary for representation
Challenges
Marxist argument – capitalism is inherently contradictory to democratic principles; one is concerned with equality whereas the other brings about inequality
Libertarian Capitalist argument – democracy interferes with the production of capital
Individualization – increasing trend of “issue voters” because of a lack of representation within political parties
Backsliding
A process that aims to remove “constraints on accountability” for democratically elected leaders
Democracies backslide when they have failed to protect institutions
Political Participation – Lecture
Defining Political Participation
The mechanism through which the negotiation of power between the state and society takes place; it is shaped by the regime under which the participation takes place
Authoritarian Political Participation
Power sharing is seen as a threat
The legitimacy of authoritarian regimes rests in the head of state; legitimacy is maintained through the exercising of force
Regime falls if it is exposed as weak/incapable of protecting its interests through force
Fall of Mubarak (key factor – decision of the Egyptian military to relinquish their monopoly on the use of force)
Democratic Political Participation
Power sharing is seen as a virtue
The legitimacy of democratic regimes rests in the people
Institutionalized Participation
Formal/structured ways through which individuals engage with politics; it is regular and embedded within the political framework
Voting, being a member of a political party
Problem – social & institutional factors can create inequalities in this type of participation
Weber’s Iron Cage – individuals are trapped within structures/rules that constrain their behaviour in ways that favour the elite
Non-Institutionalized Participation
Political engagement occurring outside of formal political structures/institutions
Contentious Politics – involves interactions in which actors make claims bearing on the interests of other actors, leading to coordinated efforts on behalf of shared interests
Defending existing political identity
Social Movements – collective challenges based on a common purpose/social solidarity; precedes contentious politics because they create political actors
Establishing political identity
A politics of despair (in which people no longer see themselves as actors, merely subjects) is born in the absence of non-institutionalized participation
How Ideas Shape Politics – Lecture
Ideologies
How we interpret the world around us
Beliefs, values, discourse
“Supply/Demand” of political ideas
Demand – the pursuit of answers to questions/problems; opens a political space
Supply – the competition between alternative solutions to current problems
Ideational Change
How individuals, groups and societies exchange old ideas for new ones
Ideational Approach
Political actions/decisions are primarily influenced by underlying ideas, not material needs or institutional structures
Populism
At the core of populist contestation is its appeal to morally relevant emotions (anger, wrath, indignation, resentment) - this is one of the most powerful forces to mobilizing political action
In this way, populism simplifies complex political issues through slogans that appeal to sentiments of justice/fairness
Populist rhetoric can cover up contradictions with the intensity of its emotional appeal
Ex – Trump champions himself as a spokesperson of the working class, but his lifestyle is not reflective of this at all
Ideological Manipulation
Cult of Personality - “Stalin’s kindness illuminates the future of our children”, ensured that a betrayal of Stalin was a betrayal of the revolutionary cause
Climate Change – Lecture
4 Challenges to Addressing Climate Change
North/South divide
Unequal distribution of burdens between global north & south
Political polarization
Partisan divide
Tension between international cooperation and national sovereignty
China vs. USA
Tragedy of the commons
Self-interest harms the collective good
COP29 – “finance” COP set to address monetary issues, debt crises in global south etc.
American Politics – Lecture
Federalism – the division of power between the federal government and the states
The United States operates under a system of decentralized federalism, in which states have more authority
This means variation on policy across states – ex. healthcare, housing, minimum ages (drinking, driving)
Article 6 – Supremacy Clause, established that in the case of conflict between federal and state law, federal law wins
Branches of Government
Legislative – pass federal laws (House of Reps, Senate)
Executive – enforcement of laws (President)
Judicial – interpretation of the laws (Supreme Court, federal courts)
Federalism & Voting
While the federal government sets a general framework for voting rights (ex. age, citizenship), it is individual states that administer elections
States decide whether to enact voter ID laws
States decide whether to provide early voting mechanisms
These decisions can disproportionately disenfranchise voters who are marginalized (race, class)
Electoral College
Has been petitioned for abolishment many, many times
538 electors with one electoral vote; electors are bound by law to vote for the candidate elected by their state
Presidential candidates need only win enough states to get 270 electoral votes; electoral votes are distributed to states based on size
“Winner takes all”
Primaries – basic purpose is to elect major party candidates who will run in the general election
3 objectives – disincentivize new party formation, influence media coverage, influence voter turnout
Rational Choice Theory
Voters are self-interested, short-term maximizers
Presumes decisions are made based on cost/benefit analysis that maximizes benefit
Paradox of voting – the idea that any one voter would be the one to cast the winning vote is infinitely small; therefore, the rational voter would choose NOT to vote
Social Cleavage Structure
Voters are more likely to vote for candidates that represent their group/interests
Identity – Lecture
Voter Behaviour
Interest-based
Policy stereotyping
Ideological stereotyping
General group
Identity-based
Affinity voting – voting based on representation
Need for positive self-esteem
Favoritism
Ideal Type Voters
Rational – maximize accuracy in voting; fully informed
Constrained Rational – gathers information on candidates most likely to win and assesses this based on lived experiences
Fast & Frugal – limits considerations to ½ major issues
Identity – votes to reaffirm partisan identity; has expanded to include race and gender
Intuitive – limits the amount of info needed to decide
Emotional – when candidates generate enthusiasm, voters focus on partisanship and when they generate anxiety, they focus on learning
The Modern Gender Gap
More women than men voting democrat (trend shift from 1960s)
Identity & Contentious Politics
Identity politics is the negotiation of the place of identity within relationships of power (individual, state, society)
Framing
Presentation of movements
ex – Civil Rights vs. BLM
BLM failed to present a “master frame”, one in which numerous groups can articulate their causes within the same frame
A master frame is preferred because it is a central ideology that encompasses multiple issues
Political Hope – Lecture
Evolution of Hope
Ancient Greek thinkers did not like the concept of hope
Early Christian thinkers were the first to assign a positive role to hope in our everyday lives
Modern thinkers believed hope to simply be an emotion
Kant – first thinker to understand hope as a rational reaction to politics
Hope in Politics
Shapes how people think of their roles in democracy
Hope is instrumentally valuable
It is a precondition for politics
It is used to justify institutional arrangements
Some scholars argue hope is undesirable / unavailable
Black nihilism – a politics of hope preserves the structures that sustain black suffering
Climate despair
Natality
Only humans can birth what is not already there; as capable as we are of destruction, we are even MORE capable of rebirth
Moral Imagination
The capacity to imagine ourselves in a web of relationships that include our enemies; the ability to sustain a paradoxical curiosity that embraces complexity without reliance on dualistic polarity, the fundamental belief in and pursuit of creativity, and the acceptance of the inherent risk of stepping into the unknown
Capacity to dream, speak in the future tense & engage in political hope