Before the Seventeenth Amendment, US senators were elected by
state legislatures. To end the supposed corruption of state
"machines" and make the Senate more responsive to the legislative
needs of the industrial era, the Senate was made a popularly
elected body in 1913. Meanwhile, the spread of information and
communications technology, it was argued, had rendered indirect
representation through state legislators unnecessary. However, C.
H. Hoebeke contends, none of these reasons accorded with the
original intent of the Constitution's framers.
To the founders, democracy simply meant the absolute rule of the
majority. They proposed instead a "mixed" Constitution, an ancient
ideal under which democracy was only one element in a balanced
republic. Hoebeke demonstrates that the states, which were to
provide the aristocratic Senate and the monarchical president,
never resisted egalitarian encroachments, and settled for popular
expedients when electing both presidents and senators long before
the formal cry for amendment.
The Road to Mass Democracy addresses the corruption, character
and conduct of senate candidates and other issues relating to the
triumph of "plebiscitary government" over "representative checks
and balances." This work offers a provocative, readable, and often
satiric reexamination of America's attempt to solve the problems of
democracy with more democracy.
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