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Madison's Metronome - The Constitution, Majority Rule, and the Tempo of American Politics (Paperback)
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Madison's Metronome - The Constitution, Majority Rule, and the Tempo of American Politics (Paperback)
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In the wake of national crises and sharp shifts in the electorate,
new members of Congress march off to Washington full of intense
idealism and the desire for instant change-but often lacking in any
sense of proportion or patience. This drive for instant political
gratification concerned one of the key Founders, James Madison, who
accepted the inevitability of majority rule but worried that an
inflamed majority might not rule reasonably. Greg Weiner challenges
longstanding suppositions that Madison harbored misgivings about
majority rule, arguing instead that he viewed constitutional
institutions as delaying mechanisms to postpone decisions until
after public passions had cooled and reason took hold. In effect,
Madison believed that one of the Constitution's primary functions
is to act as a metronome, regulating the tempo of American
politics. Weiner calls this implicit doctrine "temporal
republicanism" to emphasize both its compatibility with and its
contrast to other interpretations of the Founders' thought. Like
civic republicanism, the "temporal" variety embodies a Set of
values-public-spiritedness, respect for the rights of
others-broader than the technical device of majority rule.
Exploring this fundamental idea of time-seasoned majority rule
across the entire range of Madison's long career, Weiner shows that
it did not substantially change over the course of his life. He
presents Madison's understanding of internal constitutional checks
and his famous "extended republic" argument as different and
complementary mechanisms for improving majority rule by slowing it
down, not blocking it. And he reveals that the changes we see in
Madison's views of majority rule arise largely from his evolving
beliefs about who, exactly, was behaving impulsively-whether
abusive majorities in the 1780s, the Adams regime in the 1790s, the
nullifiers in the 1820s. Yet there is no evidence that Madison's
underlying beliefs about either majority rule or the distorting and
transient nature of passions ever swayed. If patience was a fact of
life in Madison's day-a time when communication and travel were
slow-it surely is much harder to cultivate in the age of the
Internet, 24-hour news, and politics based on instant
gratification. While many of today's politicians seem to wed
supreme impatience with an avowed devotion to original
constitutional principles, Madison's Metronome suggests that one of
our nation's great luminaries would likely view that marriage with
caution.
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