[EM] language/framing quibble
Michael Allan
mike at zelea.com
Sun Mar 8 11:14:31 PDT 2009
Fred Gohlke wrote:
> Political parties have controlled our existence for 200 years.
> During that period, we have seen incredible advances in technology,
> but, instead of those changes redounding to the benefit of the
> people, they have empowered a few at the expense of the rest of us
> ...
150 years is more correct. Over that particular period, advances in
technology and democracy have tended to favour the parties and
increase their level of control:
In the meantime the structural transformation of the bourgeois
public sphere had set in. The institutions of social-convivial
interchange, which secured the coherence of the public making use of
its reason, lost their power or utterly collapsed; the development
toward a commercial mass circulation press had its parallel in the
reorganization of the parties run by dignitaries on a mass basis.
The advent of equal citizenship rights for all altered the structure
of parties. Since the middle of the last century [i.e. the 19th
century] loosely knit voter groups have increasingly given way to
parties in the proper sense - organized supralocally and with a
bureaucratic apparatus and aimed at the ideological integration and
the political mobilization of the broad voting masses. In Great
Britain Gladstone [1809-98] introduced the caucus system. With this
buildup of an apparatus of professional politicians, organized more
or less like a business enterprise and directed centrally, the local
committees lost their importance. The parties were now confronted
with the job of "integrating" the mass of the citizenry (no longer
really "bourgeois"), with the help of new methods, for the purpose
of getting their votes. The gathering of voters for the sake of
bringing the local delegate to account had to make room for
systematic propaganda, from the very start with the Janus face of
enlightenment and control; of information and advertising; of
pedagogy and manipulation. ^[1]
The rest of the book is equally apropos, for this thread.
[1] Jürgen Habermas. 1962. The Structural Transformation of the
Public Sphere. Translated by Thomas Burger, 1989. MIT Press,
Cambridge, Massachusetts. p. 202-203.
http://books.google.ca/books?id=e799caakIWoC&pg=PA202
--
Michael Allan
Toronto, 647-436-4521
http://zelea.com/
More information about the Election-Methods
mailing list