General elections are a travesty of democracy – let’s give the people a real voice | George Monbiot

General elections are a travesty of democracy – let’s give the people a real voice | George Monbiot

Our system is designed for the powerful to retain control. Participatory democracy and a lottery vote are just two ways to gain real representation

Everything hangs on them but little changes. For weeks or months, elections dominate national life. Media reports and public conversations are monopolised by furious jostling and frantic speculation. All else – policymaking, problem-solving, reason itself – grinds to a halt. Unsurprisingly, when the frenzy is over, we discover we have solved almost none of our problems.

An election is a device for maximising conflict and minimising democracy. Parties gain ground by sowing division and anger, often around trivial issues that play to their advantage. At the same time, as the big players seek to appease commercial lobbies and the billionaire press, they converge disastrously on far more important issues, such as austerity, privatised public services, massive inequality of wealth and the unfolding genocide in Gaza. Many of those who seek election manipulate, distract and lie.

George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist

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