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London Review of Books

The Leader’s Cheerleaders subscriber-only content

Simon Jenkins

  • The Cost of Democracy: Party Funding in Modern British Politics by K.D. Ewing  Buy this book

Men are dying daily to bring Western democracy to supposedly less advanced parts of the world. Its export is the chief cause of conflict between the developed and the developing world, in Asia, Africa and Latin America. But how healthy is that democracy? Most people assume that its requirements are met by a periodic visit to a polling booth, but dictators can arrange that. What if ever fewer people vote? What if prosperous modern citizens take the view that their lives are more or less fine, so why bother? In particular, why worry about other things democracy is supposed to entail, like free speech, executive scrutiny, judicial independence and membership of political associations, all in noticeable decline in modern Britain?

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Simon Jenkins’s Thatcher and Sons: A Revolution in Three Parts will come out in a new edition next month. He writes for the Guardian and the Sunday Times.