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According to the media, the 2000 election debacle was a once-in-a-century fluke. But, in this riveting new polemic, political analyst Daniel Lazare argues that such events are increasingly likely to become the rule rather than the exception. After more than two hundred years, Americas antiquated government is in a state of chronic breakdown. A constitutional overhaul is urgently needed to update the machinery in line with the needs of modern democracy. With an amending clause that requires approval by two-thirds of Congress and three-quarters of the states, such change is extremely difficult to achieve. As a result, the United States has entered the twenty-first century with an eighteenth-century government. Not only will breakdowns like the one that occurred last November grow more frequent, they will grow more serious as well.
Lazare contends that nothing less than a democratic revolution is needed to rescue American politics from growing paralysis and decay. A constitution supposedly drawn up by “we the people” that cannot be amended by the people is patently absurd. A new arrangement for governments is required, one which abolishes such pre-democratic vestiges as the electoral college, equal representation in the Senate for all states regardless of size, and an all-powerful Supreme Court. Rather than a constitution that chains them to the past, Lazare argues that the American people need a constitution over which they can exercise control and which can set them free from the shackles of the past.
“His knowledge of American history is as persuasive as his wit.” New York Times Book Review
“A brilliant polemic that subjects American political arrangements to the kind of analysis from which they are usually exempt.” Michael Lind on The Frozen Republic
Daniel Lazare has written for the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, The Village Voice, Harpers, Dissent, Le Monde diplomatique, and New Left Review. He is the author of The Frozen Republic and Americas Undeclared War. He lives in Manhattan. |
Publication
September 2001
160 pages
Cloth
ISBN-13: 978 1 85984 633 9
£15 / US$23 / CAN$34


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