
When Democracies Fail
This post is a revised print from an earlier publication, a reminder of the current situation in our country (USA). How did it get this way? And what changes will be instituted in the future to prevent this kind of situation from happening again?
Please allow the words of this piece to sink in. Absorb the meaning of each example of a takeover of democracy. Compare them to what is happening in our situation, and recognize the similarities.
Democracies face a real challenge with capitalism: the freedom of markets and wealth accumulation can, if unchecked, spill into the political sphere and distort democratic representation.
However, democratic systems often contain built-in protections, some constitutional, some institutional, and some cultural, meant to keep capitalism from hollowing out democracy itself. But do they always work?
Are those “protections” doing what was intended? Or, have they failed?
Here are the main ones:
1. One Person, One Vote
Principle: Each citizen has an equal vote, regardless of wealth.
Protection: Prevents raw economic power from directly translating into formal political power (e.g., no extra votes for billionaires).
Weakness: While this is a cornerstone, money still influences elections through campaign financing, lobbying, and media control.
2. Constitutional Limits on Power
Principle: Constitutions often enshrine rights that markets cannot override.
Protection: Rights like free speech, assembly, due process, and equal protection under the law set limits on how far economic actors can go in shaping governance.
Example: Even if corporations dominate markets, they can’t legally abolish elections or silence dissent without a constitutional amendment (a high bar).
3. Separation of Powers & Checks and Balances
Principle: Power is fragmented between branches of government.
Protection: Makes it more challenging for economic elites to capture the entire state apparatus at once.
Example: Courts can strike down laws that disproportionately empower corporations; legislatures can regulate markets; executives can enforce antitrust laws.
4. Regulation of Money in Politics
Principle: Democracies often establish rules for campaign financing, lobbying, and transparency.
Protection: Designed to keep wealth from becoming equivalent to political speech.
Weakness: In the U.S., Supreme Court rulings, such as Citizens United, weakened this protection by equating corporate spending with free speech.
5. Labor Rights and Collective Organization
Principle: Workers can form unions and associations.
Protection: Balances capital’s influence by allowing collective bargaining and political mobilization from the working and middle classes.
Example: Labor movements historically pushed for minimum wage, workplace safety, and social safety nets—policies that prevent total domination by capital.
6. Antitrust and Market Regulation
Principle: Prevents monopolies and concentrations of wealth that could undermine democratic competition.
Protection: Ensures no single corporation or sector becomes powerful enough to dictate government policy.
Example: Sherman Antitrust Act in the U.S.; EU competition law in Europe.
7. Independent Press & Civil Society
Principle: A free press and civic organizations act as watchdogs.
Protection: Exposes corruption, undue influence, and policy capture by capitalist interests.
Weakness: Media consolidation under corporate ownership weakens this safeguard.
8. Periodic Elections & Public Accountability
Principle: Leaders must periodically seek public approval.
Protection: If capitalist capture leads to corruption or inequality, the public can vote elites out.
Weakness: This depends on voter participation, access to unbiased information, and resistance to disinformation campaigns.
9. Social Welfare and Redistribution Mechanisms
Principle: Progressive taxation, welfare programs, and public services redistribute wealth.
Protection: Mitigates extreme inequality, which otherwise erodes equal political participation.
Example: Scandinavian democracies protect political equality through robust social safety nets.
10. Civic Culture & Norms
Principle: Democratic norms—like fairness, pluralism, and the idea that government is accountable to the people—act as soft safeguards.
Protection: Even when formal rules bend, strong democratic culture resists plutocracy.
Weakness: Norms erode when polarization and disinformation spread unchecked.
Big Picture: Democracy protects itself from being hollowed out by capitalism through structural checks (laws, constitutions, institutions), collective counterweights (unions, civil society), and cultural norms. But these protections are not automatic—they require active participation, vigilance, and reform to remain effective.
Looking at history shows where the built-in protections described worked and where they failed. Here are a few key cases where capitalism (or concentrations of wealth) pushed against democracy and, in some cases, broke it. It would be wise to review the following carefully:
Case 1: The Gilded Age in the U.S. (1870s–1900s)
What happened: Huge monopolies (railroads, steel, oil) created “robber barons” with more influence than many elected officials.
How protections failed:
Wealthy industrialists openly bought campaigns.
Labor unions were violently suppressed with government backing. Antitrust laws were weak or unenforced.
How democracy fought back:
Progressive Era reforms (antitrust laws, direct election of senators, labor protections).
Rise of Investigative Journalism and a stronger civil society.
Lesson: When wealth becomes concentrated and unchecked, democracy risks becoming an oligarchy. Protections must be actively reinvigorated.
Case 2: Weimar Germany (1919–1933)
What happened: Economic collapse after WWI, coupled with hyperinflation and the Great Depression, devastated the middle class. Wealthy industrialists and landowners funded authoritarian parties (including Hitler’s) to protect their economic interests.
How protections failed:
Weak constitutional safeguards allowed emergency powers to override democratic checks.
Political elites aligned with capital supported fascism over democracy to maintain order and profits.
Civil society was fragmented, and labor movements were crushed.
Outcome: Capital effectively destroyed democracy by empowering authoritarianism as a bulwark against socialism.
Lesson: In times of economic crisis, capitalist elites may prefer authoritarian stability over democratic uncertainty.
Case 3: Chile (1970–1973)
What happened: Salvador Allende, democratically elected, attempted socialist reforms (nationalization of industries, land redistribution). U.S. corporations (especially ITT, Anaconda Copper, and PepsiCo) and the CIA worked to destabilize the economy.
How protections failed:
Foreign and domestic capital deliberately created economic chaos (strikes, shortages, capital flight).
The military, supported by elites, staged a coup that replaced democracy with Pinochet’s dictatorship.
Lesson: When capitalist interests feel existentially threatened, they may bypass democratic processes entirely through coups or military intervention.
Case 4: Post-Soviet Russia (1990s–today)
What happened: Rapid privatization created oligarchs who controlled massive portions of the economy and media.
How protections failed:
Weak institutions were unable to regulate new billionaires.
Oligarchs captured the political process, funding parties and controlling TV.
Eventually, Putin consolidated power by weakening some oligarchs while maintaining an authoritarian system.
Lesson: A democracy without strong institutional safeguards can quickly become a plutocracy or autocracy when wealth is concentrated.
Case 5: Contemporary United States
What’s happening now:
Campaign finance: Court rulings (Citizens United, Buckley v. Valeo) equated money with speech, making it easier for wealth to dominate elections.
Lobbying: Corporations spend billions influencing legislation.
Media concentration: A few companies dominate public discourse.
Protections still holding:
Periodic elections remain free and competitive, so far.
Civil society, investigative journalism, and grassroots movements continue to resist plutocratic capture at the moment.
Lesson: Institutions are under strain, but still functioning. The test is whether reforms (campaign finance, antitrust, voting rights) can be enacted before oligarchic tendencies solidify.
Big Takeaway Across History:
Capitalism and democracy are uneasy partners. When capitalism produces extreme inequality or existential threats to elite wealth, democratic protections weaken. Safeguards work only when actively maintained by strong institutions, vigilant citizens, and social movements.
Warning Signs that Capitalism is Undermining Democracy
History shows us patterns, and we can translate them into warning signs. Think of this like a checklist that can apply to any democratic society:
1. Extreme Economic Inequality
Wealth is concentrated in a small elite, while most citizens experience stagnating wages or declining economic mobility.
Warning metric: The top 1% control more wealth than the bottom 90%.
Why dangerous: Economic inequality translates into political inequality—those with resources can dominate elections, media, and lobbying.
2. Capture of Political Institutions
Policy decisions consistently favor corporations or the wealthy over the general population.
Warning metric: High public support for reforms (e.g., healthcare, tax fairness, labor protections) with little to no political action.
Why dangerous: When the government appears responsive only to capital, citizens lose faith in democracy itself.
3. Money-Dominated Elections
Campaign financing is primarily dependent on wealthy donors, PACs, or corporate spending.
Warning metric: Election costs skyrocket; candidates without access to elite funding become nonviable.
Why dangerous: “One person, one vote” erodes into “one dollar, one vote.”
4. Corporate Media Consolidation
A handful of corporations own most major news outlets, limiting the diversity of perspectives.
Warning metric: Decline of independent, local, or investigative journalism; heavy reliance on corporate advertising.
Why dangerous: Public opinion can be engineered to protect elite interests and mute dissent.
5. Erosion of Labor Power
Declining union membership, weakened collective bargaining rights, and the gig economy replacing stable work.
Warning metric: Sharp declines in union density and a rise in insecure/low-wage labor.
Why dangerous: Without organized labor, ordinary citizens lose a significant counterbalance to concentrated wealth.
6. Weak or Captured Regulatory Systems
Antitrust enforcement, environmental protections, and financial regulations are rolled back or undermined.
Warning metric: Regulatory agencies staffed with former industry lobbyists (“revolving door politics”).
Why dangerous: Market concentration grows unchecked, giving corporations semi-sovereign power.
7. Weaponization of Crisis
Elites exploit economic or political crises to bypass democratic norms.
Warning metric: Frequent use of “emergency powers” that curtail civil liberties or centralize authority.
Why dangerous: Crisis politics can open the door to authoritarian solutions backed by capital (as in Weimar Germany, Chile, etc.).
8. Legal or Constitutional Erosion
Courts reinterpret constitutional protections in ways that favor wealth (e.g., equating money with free speech).
Warning metric: Judicial decisions that disproportionately benefit capital, reduce voting rights, or erode citizen protections.
Why dangerous: Formal democratic rules are structurally rewritten to favor plutocracy.
9. Decline in Civic Participation
Voter turnout drops, especially among marginalized groups, while political apathy grows.
Warning metric: Large portions of the population disengage from elections or civic organizations.
Why dangerous: The fewer citizens who participate, the easier it is for organized wealth to dominate.
10. Normalization of Inequality
Inequality is accepted as natural, inevitable, or even virtuous (e.g., “the rich deserve their wealth because they worked harder”).
Warning metric: Cultural narratives shift from demanding fairness to glorifying wealth accumulation.
Why dangerous: Citizens stop demanding reforms, allowing plutocracy to entrench itself without resistance.
Counter-Indicators (Healthy Democracy Resisting Capitalist Capture)
Broad and secure voting rights.
Strong unions and an active civil society.
Competitive, independent press.
Functional antitrust and regulatory enforcement.
Progressive taxation and redistribution reducing inequality.
High civic participation and trust in democratic institutions.
Big Picture:
The destruction of democracy by capitalism doesn’t usually happen overnight; it’s a slow corrosion. These warning signs are like “early symptoms.” If several appear at once, it signals that democracy’s immune system against plutocracy is weakening.
For the video, "Tyranny," click here
If you have any questions or comments, we’d love to hear from you. Your feedback is always appreciated!