Kirkus Reviews QR Code
THE GREAT DEMOCRACY by Ganesh Sitaraman

THE GREAT DEMOCRACY

How To Fix Our Politics, Unrig the Economy, And Unite America

by Ganesh Sitaraman

Pub Date: Dec. 10th, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-5416-1811-4
Publisher: Basic Books

A multipronged plan to transform the United States into a compassionate democracy grounded in economic equality among individuals.

Sitaraman (Director, Law and Government/Vanderbilt Univ.; The Crisis of the Middle-Class Constitution: Why Economic Inequality Threatens Our Republic, 2017, etc.) believes that U.S. history is cyclical and that the time is ripe for a major transformation, in the manner of abolition or the New Deal. The most significant policies within the author’s grand plan would rescue the deteriorating climate before it destroys the planet, balance discriminatory immigration quotas, inject true justice into law enforcement, require national service as a path to unify antagonistic population sectors, and promote responsible journalism both locally and nationally. Some of Sitaraman’s less detailed proposals include effective universal health insurance for U.S. residents and the reduced influence of private-sector corporate behemoths. The author believes that citizen participation in what he terms “the great democracy” would increase vastly through legislation and regulations removing barriers based on geography, race, and access to cultural opportunities. Sitaraman also addresses the possibility that his great democracy might not evolve. Undesirable alternatives include a slightly altered version of what he terms “neoliberalism,” which would solidify economic inequality among individuals based on market-driven capitalism; “nationalist populism,” a way of thinking that led to the rise of Donald Trump; or outright authoritarianism, akin to dictatorship and in ascendancy in numerous nations around the world. Despite cataloging outcomes that he finds alarming, Sitaraman projects hope that the next historical cycle will affirm his agenda. How a reader will react to this monograph will depend heavily on that reader’s inclination to see drinking glasses as half full or half empty. “Optimists hope that generational and demographic change will restore inexorable progress,” writes the author. “Pessimists interpret the current moment as the decline and fall of democracy.”

A knowledgeable appraisal of our current moment featuring sensible options for moving forward—but will policymakers take notice?