Here's Where It Gets Interesting - Reimagining Democracy with Max Stearns
Episode Date: March 4, 2024Do you ever wonder what Democracy could look like in America? Many voters are familiar with this scene: You walk into a voting booth, review the options, and feel as though you’re voting between “...the lesser of two evils.” You might worry that voting third-party is wasting a vote, but you don’t feel represented by the main candidates. Sound familiar? If you’re like the majority of Americans, you probably find yourself frustrated with the two-party system and a historically unproductive Congress. What if it didn’t have to be that way? Sharon is joined by law professor and author Max Stearns, to hear about another option: a Parliamentary Democracy. What would this look like, and how might Americans benefit by reimagining Democracy? Special thanks to our guest, Max Stearns, for joining us today. Host/ Executive Producer: Sharon McMahon Audio Producer: Jenny Snyder Production Coordinator: Andrea Champoux Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode is brought to you by Dyson OnTrack.
Dyson OnTrack headphones offer best-in-class noise cancellation
and an enhanced sound range,
making them perfect for enjoying music and podcasts.
Get up to 55 hours of listening with active noise cancelling enabled,
soft microfibre cushions engineered for comfort,
and a range of colours and finishes.
Dyson OnTrack. Headphones remastered.
Buy from dysoncanada.ca.
With ANC on,
performance may vary based on environmental conditions and usage. Accessories sold separately.
Hey, friends. Welcome. So glad you're joining me today. My guest today is law professor Max Stearns, who has such an interesting proposition for how to fix our democracy. You are going to want to
listen to his ideas, think about them, let's have a conversation about what he is proposing.
And I'm excited to dive in. I'm Sharon McMahon, and here's where it gets interesting.
I am delighted to be joined today by Max Stearns. And my goodness, what an interesting
topic for a book, Parliamentary America. First of all, welcome. Thanks for being here.
Thank you so much for having me. Okay. First of all, you are proposing some pretty big departures from the way the American governmental system
is set up right now. One of the things that I hear from people all the time is how frustrated
they are with our political system, that Congress is completely dysfunctional. In fact, we have one
of the least functional Congresses in terms of actually getting stuff done in United States
history right now. This Congress is historically unproductive. They spend all their time having
press conferences and grandstanding from committee chairs and almost no time actually working for the
American people. And people are tired of it. People are like, why are you taking my tax money and doing nothing with it? And when I go to vote for president,
or I go to vote for senator, whatever it is, I feel like I am constantly having to choose between
the lesser of two evils, that I rarely get to vote for somebody with whom I deeply align.
Now, some people might be really fortunate and have a great member of Congress representing them
that they really vibe with. But unfortunately, that is not true for so many Americans, and
especially when it comes to the presidency, Max, as you well know, where it's like, I got to vote for one of two
80-year-old white men? Those are my options? 80 and 82? This is the best we can do? These are very
widely felt sentiments. So how did we even get to this point of where we're all just like, well, I guess I'll take the person who's 89 instead of 91.
How did we even get to this point of having this very extreme two-party binary where we
don't ever actually get a chance to vote for somebody that really represents us?
So we have a constitution that was written in the late 18th century, and we put up with
it for a really long time,
even though it never worked the way the people who wrote it thought it was going to work.
If you go back to what you learned in middle school or high school about our constitutional
system, you were told this really lovely story about how the officials in our government,
whether we're talking about the president, members of Congress, justices on the Supreme Court, would be jealous of their
institutions and then fight each other. I use the example of rock, paper, scissors in my class,
where every option can defeat every other option. And then on top of that, we have this notion of
federalism. So we have jealousies in our geography, the federal government against the states, each
branch of government against each other.
And we'd never have to worry about these, what the people who wrote the Constitution
called factions, what today we call parties, entrenching themselves against our interest.
And even if we go way back to George Washington's departing address, so that's a pretty long time ago.
He was like, beware. Beware for unscrupulous men will usurp for themselves the reins of power.
Precisely right. And he noticed that these jealousies weren't playing out the way everybody seemed to think they were.
these jealousies weren't playing out the way everybody seemed to think they were. Instead,
it seemed to be that there were these partisan divides, and we ended up with a two-party system from the beginning of our history. And that's because although the framers had this idea about
these games across institutions, the way we elect our officials, a majority election processed
admittedly through the Electoral College. We
elect members of the House of Representatives in geographical districts. After the 17th Amendment,
we directly elect senators from the states. This creates a stable outcome of two parties,
which we've put up with for a pretty long time. But when we hit the information age,
a couple of really significant developments interfered with that system to the point where
the divisions between these parties grew increasingly far apart. And not just the
parties, but even our culture. We're at a point now where whether it's the politicians or whether it's us talking to each other on social media, there's this sense that the other side can't just
disagree with us. They must be wrong. They must be lacking fundamental intelligence or they must be
evil. We no longer credit each other with just, we disagree. We're at a point now where that's
not good enough. We have to kind of
insult the other side or denigrate the other side. And that's led to some serious
dysfunctions that include candidates coming in who really a lot of people do feel as though
they're not represented. They're not feeling as though they actually have somebody who really embraces what they want by way of policy or what
they value internally as part of their sense of identity and their commitments. And this is what
got me to think about doing this book project to explain how it is we can get from here in a
two-party presidential system that's profoundly dysfunctional to a place in
which we have more parties, more choices, more participation, because people feel rewarded when
they vote for third parties, fourth parties, fifth parties, and where those parties are
motivated to deliver for the people who support them.
motivated to deliver for the people who support them.
I hear this all of the time, that people want more choices. They want to vote for somebody who actually represents their interest, but they feel as though if they do not vote for the lesser of
two evils, particularly when we're talking about the presidency, if they don't vote for the lesser of two evils, well, attack somebody's identity is very, very problematic for somebody emotionally.
It feels a little bit like somebody attacking someone's religion.
And I agree with you that the information age has a lot to do with this.
It now feels to them like we are attacking their religion.
It's an identity level issue for many people. not everybody, certainly, but for many people, especially my observation is younger people, their political identity is very important to them.
They want to be able to vote for somebody system of like, two is all you get.
If you vote for a third one, we're all going to hate you.
Bad idea.
You ruined it.
You wrecked it.
You know, like that's how people feel like you wrecked it.
How do other countries deal with this issue, Max?
So other countries don't use a winner-take-all system. And that's really
a critical part of it. So you can have an electoral system that uses what's called
proportional representation. The winner doesn't have to get everything. And because of the way
our voting works, where we have a geographical location,
whether it's defined at the district for the House of Representatives, the state for the Senate,
or the country as a whole for the president, this tends to divide us into two teams. We learned
pretty early on and pretty quickly that the winning strategy is to divide the other side
and to keep our side together.
The other side learns that too, whichever side we're talking about.
And when you put those two things together, we end up with this majoritarian,
one side trying to be a majority against another side.
We end up with just two parties.
But it turns out that in order to have meaningful third parties,
it's not enough just to throw out a third party and hope for a better outcome.
Because it's built into the structure of our Constitution.
We have to think more deeply about the premises, like the foundations of our Constitution, to achieve meaningful reform that brings about the kind of happier voter that you're talking about. And what I'm
proposing in this book does track what other successful democracies do. And they all make
choices along two axes of politics. One has to do with how you elect the lower legislative chamber
for us, that's the House of Representatives, and how we choose the head of the government, which for us, of course,
is the president. And what I'm proposing is that we have an alternative voting system that will
allow voters to make choices that really represent who they are and that will create multiple parties
in the House of Representatives. It will enlarge the House of Representatives.
And maybe most radically of the things that I propose, I'm going to shift the decision
for selecting the president and vice president from the voters to coalitions in the House of
Representatives. So we're going to have people that really we believe in them. They embrace our values and they're going to be negotiating with other parties on a very preset calendar, a limited number of parties, five that can engage in such negotiations until a majority coalition forms.
So that's the first two amendments, enlarging the House of Representatives, having the House of Representatives use coalitions to choose the president, which really rewards voters because they can send a signal about where they want that coalition to go.
And the last amendment ends this problem that we've had from the beginning, which is never being able to remove a deeply problematic president from office.
The impeachment clause in its entire history has never been successful in removing a problem. And if you think about it, if you go back and you were to ask
the framers, do you think if we survive for a quarter of a millennium, there'll never be a
president that warrants removal? It's unimaginable that the answer to that question would be yes.
And it's all because in our system, the president isn't just the head of a branch of government.
The president is the head of one of two parties in the fate of so many politicians are dependent
on the grace of that person. And that results in profound inabilities to generate new parties.
And so we have to really think foundationally about how it is other
countries do this better, making their voters more satisfied by giving them real options,
as opposed to, as you put it at the beginning of your question, an admonition every four years to
vote for the lesser of two evils. Okay. I hear what you're saying,
and I have a few questions about it. So the first thing is
enlarging the house of representatives. First of all, the house of representatives has been
the size it is for a real long time, a real long time. And you cannot make any legitimate argument,
in my opinion, that all Americans are being represented fairly by the size of the house,
right? The way that we use the formula to allocate numbers of representatives, a representative from California is on average
representing exponentially more people than say a representative from another small state. And by
and large, those smaller states tend to be more homogenous than these huge states because of the
way the formula works, don't have as many per capita representatives assigned to them. So the first thing you're
proposing is expanding the House of Representatives. What is that supposed to do? How will that benefit
America to make the House of Representatives larger? So let me make one observation. Of course,
you're absolutely right. If we look at the Senate, right, which is the most anti-democratic representative institution of any democracy
in the world, a voter in Wisconsin has as much voting power as 67 voters in California,
right? The population of Wisconsin is so minuscule as compared to that of California. So you've got
these egregious representational disparities in the Senate. Of course, the House's population
base of the districts tend to be closer where you've got more even representation. What I'm
proposing we do with the House of Representatives is dramatically going to empower voters.
So I'm proposing that we double the size of the House
of Representatives. And we're going to have two ballots when you vote in the House of Representatives.
One is going to be for a district representative, just like we do now. All of the members of the
House and Senate get to keep their seats in my scheme, which is a central part of why I think
that these proposals not only solve the
problem, but can be enacted. But you're going to have a second ballot too. And that second ballot
is going to be by party. And then we're going to take at a state level, all of the party ballots,
and we're going to make the state delegation to the House proportional based upon the party
votes. And so when you're voting, unlike now where
you're told, you know, vote for the lesser of the two evils, you're going to be able to do two
things. The districted elections will tend toward two parties. There will be two parties that get
more seats than other parties, but they won't get a majority of seats, neither one of them,
because of this proportionality
vote. And what that means is that you're going to get to vote for a party that sends a really
powerful signal as to what you value, what you want the coalition government to do. So your vote
now becomes truly meaningful and a reflection of who you are. But in addition to that, in order to successfully campaign, politicians have to now
be able to say, I'm going to be able to work well with these other parties because in order to
create a governing coalition, I have to form a coalition with other politicians whose ideas
aren't exactly like mine. They might be like yours. And so as a result, what that's going to do
is give more representation where as somebody who's in a state, you're going to have somebody
representing your geographical district, but you're also going to have representatives for
the state as a whole that are affiliated with the party that you most value.
Let me interrupt you for just one second, because I don't know that everybody knows what a coalition is and what it would actually mean to form a coalition.
Like, OK, great. I hear form a coalition. I don't know what that is and how it benefits me.
So can you explain what it means to form a coalition in the context of government?
So the way parliamentary systems work, and the book is called Parliamentary America, the way parliamentary systems work, you've got parties that are seated almost invariably in the lower legislative chamber,, which means that the head of that party has to find the heads of other parties to work with and bring their coalitions together.
And what you do is you form a group that together gets a majority of seats in the legislative body. And that majority, which we'll call a coalition, right, a coalition of
parties coming together, they designate who it is who's going to be the head of the government.
Now, in many parliamentary systems, this person is referred to as the prime minister.
But we're going to retain in my proposal, lots of very foundational American constitutional features. It will be the president
and vice president. So a coalition of parties would come together and negotiate to designate
whoever leads the coalition, they'll have a pre-designated slate, president and vice president,
would then assume those offices. And so in the scheme that
I'm proposing, you would vote for your district representative, but you'd also be signaling
if you're a progressive, say, and you vote for a Democrat in your district, but you vote for the
progressive party, right? You're signaling, I want the coalition to move in this particular direction
and the head of that party, if they join the coalition to move in this particular direction. And the head
of that party, if they join the coalition, they're going to ask for things in return, like
there's a policy commitment or more than one that the progressive party really wants.
And they're going to negotiate that they might get a cabinet position, they might get a Supreme
Court justice, they're going to deliver something for their constituents. On the other hand, if the
Democrats form a grand coalition
with the Republicans, that direction might be a little bit different. And so the idea is that the
heads of the parties that you support have to be good, not at insulting others, but at working with
others. And that's going to have tremendous effects on improving your sense of personal representation
and the commitments of the government to actually deliver on what it says it will do,
which will make it more productive. And it turns out voters in those kinds of systems are happier,
they turn out in higher numbers, and the governments deliver better for their constituencies.
the governments deliver better for their constituencies. So a coalition in this context is, let's say party number one gets, you know, 30% of the seats in the House of Representatives,
and party number two gets, you know, 20%, and party number three gets 10%, etc.
etc. Some of these groups are going to, by definition, be required to work together in order to what is referred to in parliamentary systems, form a government. They're going to actually be
required to work together because there is no way to do it otherwise. So they're going to have to see who wants to work with party one
so that we can actually get a majority to elect a prime minister,
to choose a direction that the country is going to head in.
And this process of being required to form a coalition
where you look around this room and you must find other
people to work with would eliminate, according to your scheme, which by the way, scheme in this
context is not like an evil plot. It's not like a, hey, I have an evil scheme. Scheme is actually
a legal term. It's a construct or a format or a plan in this context. So according to this scheme, it would eliminate
this two-party binary gridlock where all we do is have press conferences and hold up random
pictures from the chairs of Congress of like, is this your text message? Well, I don't like it.
That's all Congress is doing. But according
to this scheme, that's not going to work. Am I explaining that correctly?
You're explaining it beautifully. I'd like to just add one point to your explanation because
it's really important. So the centerpiece of my book is a little bit unusual. I take my readers
on a virtual world tour. I take them to seven
countries. I take them to England, France, Germany, Israel, Taiwan, Brazil, and Venezuela.
And I show you what works and what fails in other systems of democracy. And I show you how other
systems have successfully faced down threats to democracy like we're experiencing or not. But one of the
central lessons that emerges from that world tour is that there's a twin threat to a thriving
democracy. One is when you have a problem like we have, too few parties, majoritarian systems.
The UK also has a majoritarian system. Brexit grew out of the problems of a majoritarian
two-party system. But the opposite threat is when you have so many parties and you see this
fragmentation of parties. And you see this in places like Italy, Israel, Brazil. And what you want to hit on is that Goldilocks principle,
not too hot, not too cold, just right. And the sweet spot, when we talk to political scientists,
they all agree that the goal is a sweet spot of between roughly four and eight parties.
And the system that I propose is called mixed member proportionality, kind of fancy, developed for Germany after World War II.
And was precisely designed by blending these two systems of districted voting and proportional representation to achieve that sweet spot of between four and eight parties.
So you want to have more than two parties, but you don't want to have
too many more than two parties. No, 30 is not going to help.
Exactly right. Okay. So then that explains the coalition and the expanding the House of
Representatives and how that will benefit people. I want to just touch super briefly on this concept
of winner take all. I have long brought up this idea that a lot of
people didn't learn about, which is that the Constitution was not designed for an electoral
college with winner-take-all, but that actually developed decades after the Constitution was
enacted. And they realize that like, if we do winner-take-all, we can make ourselves more powerful.
What do you see as the biggest downside of this very tunnel vision of winner-take-all? The biggest downside is the capacity for a politician to come in that represents a subgroup
within a party that holds extreme views, but is so essential to that party having a majority,
if they let that group go, they lose the majority. Remember what I said that each side wants to
divide the opposition, but keep their part together. The danger is that if you have an
extreme group in one party, the party can't afford to let that extreme group go because then
they relinquish power to the other side. And what we really want to have happen is we would be
better off as a society, as a democracy, and as a culture if the groups did break into separate
parties. If, for example, we had a Democratic Party and a Progressive Party,
a Republican Party and an America First Party, maybe a Libertarian Party, maybe a Green Party,
right? In other words, we naturally have multiple groups that form the Democratic
Party coalition, that form the Republican Party coalition, but it's really a shotgun wedding. They have to stay together because the
price of fragmenting is to empower the other side. And one of the things we can never lose sight of
is at bottom, people enter public service for very admirable reasons. They want to make the
world a better place. They want to enact policies that matter to their constituents, to their voters.
They want to bring about a better world. But the only way that you can achieve that is to have
power, to actually get the offices and have majorities to actually vote on those policies.
And politicians understand that first and foremost, politics is about power. And so this dynamic of having to hold together
your coalition at the expense of the other sides allows a faction within a party to dangerously
take it over, even if people looking to subjectively, oh, we'd never envisioned ourselves going along with that.
But over time, people succumb to certain pressures.
They become more tolerant of things that 10 years before they couldn't have imagined themselves necessarily condoning or tolerating.
That's the real threat of a two-party system.
Okay. I have to speak to what somebody who's listening to this is definitely going to say,
which is I don't want Congress choosing the president for me. I mean, it's like it's in your dating profile now. If you're on Tinder or whatever, it's in your dating profile. Who did
you vote for for president? Being able to select a president, I think, is emotionally important
to many Americans. They're going to view it as like, I'm giving up my right to vote for president.
And I think, Max, even if you sell them on the benefits of these other things, you're like, I like it. I agree with it. Let's have that. Let's do that. Even if
somebody is totally on board with all of your reforms, the idea that they're going to give up
what seems like a right, even if you tell them it's better in the long run, they're giving up
something that's important to them. How do you propose convincing Americans that they're going to be better off by relinquishing
the right to choose the president? So I'll say, I actually think my proposal will make people's
romantic lives a little bit happier because it won't become the defining thing in your profile.
I was going to endorse any particular dating site, but I'm happy to have you do so.
But yeah, I think actually the world's a better place if that's not a defining characteristic
in your sweep left, sweep right choices.
Those right and left choices shouldn't represent political ideology, and too often they do.
But I pose this challenge in the book.
This is the challenge I confront directly in the book.
And I say this, look, if you think about it, when you are choosing the lesser of two evils, the reality is that your vote isn't signaling something meaningful. term. I feel disenfranchised, right? I'm not happy with the Democrat, even though I'm on the left.
I'm not happy with the Republican candidate, even though I'm on the right. They're not making it up.
They're not making it up. The fact of the matter is that we have two candidates running in 2024 that a majority of Americans don't want to have running. And so in fact, people are not feeling
empowered by virtue of their ability to go in and vote for the president. But people would feel empowered if they were able to send a clear signal as to the direction they want the government, the coalition to form. And they will have an ample voice also because many parties or the major parties probably will continue to work through caucuses and primaries.
They'll still have a voice in terms of the dominant party's nominations for president and vice president.
voting for the party where that's the top of the ticket for the president and vice president,
and also signaling how they want that ticket if it joins with other parties to go. And I pose this puzzle in the book.
I say, you know, if you went, for example, to any nation in the world,
take Germany as a good example because it has mixed member proportionality,
and you said to them, you know, here's the deal.
We have an idea. Let's give German voters the ability to directly elect, they call it the
chancellor, right? The head of their government, equivalent to our president, equivalent to other
systems, prime minister. Let's take that from the Bundestag, which is their equivalent to the
House of Representatives and give it to the voters. And you ask the voters, would you be happy with
that? Or do you like the idea that you send these signals and through coalition bargaining, you have an
influence that way? It is clear when we look at satisfaction surveys, that citizens are far more
satisfied with coalition governance than they are with majoritarian systems, which have led to things like Brexit,
which have led to the last three election cycles with voters being tremendously unhappy.
So one of the reasons why I structured the book after explaining how we got here,
giving a bit of our history, how we ended up with a two-party system,
a chapter on the media, one of the reasons why I centered it on a world tour is because I really think that Americans need to understand and can understand that we don't have a lock on
how to do democracy. There are systems around the world where people are happier than we are.
And I think when people learn about not only that they are happier, but why they're happier, what they can do, what they
can signal, I think they can get past this notion that this is somehow deeply entrenched. They must
cast that ballot when in fact they will send a stronger signal by being able to vote for a party
in addition to a district representative. And I'm quite certain that if we ask voters in these other
countries, would you like to give up what you have for the presidential system that we have? The answer would be a resounding no. And so I think that we just need to be as Americans willing to, yeah, we have to rethink things that we've learned going all the way back to childhood. But I think we can. I think we're capable of learning from the
experiences of other countries and learning that, frankly, there are better ways to do democracy.
This idea in American history that what the framers believed and thought of and conceptualized and wrote down
is akin to a holy text, right? To many Americans, it's almost the equivalent of like, well,
that is what is in the Torah. That's what the apostles wrote down in the New Testament, and we're not going
to change it now because it says what it says. You know what I mean? I do think a lot of Americans
hold this view that, whether explicitly or not, that the Constitution was somehow divinely
inspired. That is a belief that some Americans have. The Constitution was divinely inspired. That is a belief that some Americans have. Constitution was divinely inspired.
And or what the framers thought and believed is of paramount importance, even still. You still
see the Supreme Court bringing this up. You still see the Supreme Court trying to divine what the
original intent of the framers was, and then moving on
down the line, as the Constitution was amended, what did they intend when they put in the 14th
Amendment, et cetera? What was the original intention is still very, very important in the
American history system, but also the American legal system. So how would you answer that
question? How would you speak to somebody who feels like, yeah, but the Constitution we have has
gotten us this far, what they thought was important.
We can't give up the constitutional system that we have.
What would your answer to that person be?
So a couple of answers.
One is, this is the foundation for what scholars call American exceptionalism.
The idea that the framers came up with something so profound, so wise, that it has immunized us from the threats to our democracy that other nations around the world have faced.
mistaken lesson that we have to unlearn by thinking about this alternative question, which is,
is it possible that our nation has endured for as long as it has in spite of not because of the constitutional design? So here are some other reasons why our system has endured. One, we have
been relatively isolated and insulated from foreign military threats as compared with other democracies,
for example, in Europe or South America or other parts of the world. Number two, we've had a constant influx of
highly motivated immigrants, which is very, very helpful when you're growing an economy.
Number three, we've had the capacity for westward expansion, albeit at tremendous
pain and cost to Native American peoples. And number four, of course, our original sin, right? Brutally bringing here
under the most horrific conditions, enslaved persons and holding them here for centuries in
a state of abject terror. And so we have to ask ourselves this question, is there a way to test
this counter hypothesis as to, you know, how we've sort of survived and even thrive for so long,
as to how we've sort of survived and even thrived for so long as compared with the American exceptionalism story. And I say, when you think about testing the wisdom and efficacy of systems,
think, for example, of technologies, think of business models, and yes, think of democracy.
Would you ever say that the appropriate test is, can I find a single outlier example that does it
that way against the contrary way that the rest
of the world does things? Nobody would say that. Instead, they would use a replication test.
Do I have a system that has been used over and over again and adapted to a wide variety of
different circumstances? And people would always use replication, whether we're talking about
technology, business models, or democracy. And when we ask this question, how does the United States Constitution fare under a replication test?
The answer is we get an F. We've exported democracy throughout our history. We have not
successfully exported two-party presidentialism. Why? Because it's a failing system. But when we look at mixed member
proportionality, the system that I'm advocating, which we can make our own, that is a system that
has been benignly replicated across cultures, across countries, across settings, again and again,
in highly productive ways, with voters being happier, with politicians performing
better, and with greater satisfaction. So I understand this visceral sense about the special
nature of our Constitution. And one of the blurbists on the back of my book described my
proposal as patriotic. And I think it is patriotic because I am embracing many features
of our system and continuing them. I'm not touching the Senate. I'm leaving the House
of Representatives. I'm leaving incumbents in the two houses as incumbents in the states or
districts that elect them. I'm leaving in place the presidential line of succession.
There are things I'm not touching.
There are other ideas for democratic reform, but what I'm doing is focusing on the specific pathology, problem, diagnosis that's giving rise to the crisis that has led two-thirds of Americans
to think our democracy is under threat. And so I am asking people for one thing, and that is a sufficiently
open mind that they'll hopefully buy my book, but more importantly than that, read the book
and see how other nations do democracy better. Because I think if they take the world tour,
and I think I'm a pretty good tour guide, and it's fun. I point out sites, I point out
lots of interesting things about the countries that we'll be visiting, and they're fascinating,
each of them in their own right. I think that your audience and my readers will come away
questioning some of the things that was ingrained in their education from a very young age,
and I think that's for the better. That's a really good point that we have never exported our system of democracy successfully anywhere and that we perhaps need to interrogate our belief in American exceptionalism.
And perhaps one can be patriotic.
One can love America.
And perhaps one can be patriotic.
One can love America. And that is the basis for wanting to improve it.
Not to burn it all down and to say, screw it, I hate all of y'all, this whole thing,
and it is beyond fixing.
A patriotic love of one's country can be the basis for wanting to improve it and seeking
reforms that better
represent all Americans, not just some Americans, so that we don't have a system where three
quarters of Americans feel de facto disenfranchised.
I absolutely think it's an idea worth exploring.
And I think people who read Parliamentary America will feel like this guy has some stuff to think about in here. And we're not even touching in this episode exactly how one would go about implementing these reforms. You talk about this in the book. And so I really want people to read it. People who are like, yeah, but how do we do it? You need to read Parliamentary America. It gives a lot of very, very specific ideas for these kinds of things. But I really resonate with this idea
that when you love something, you want it to be the best it can be. And I also think it's pretty
clear that the framers understood they did not know everything. They could not predict the future.
They included two separate ways to change the Constitution in the document itself. If they thought it was
holy scripture, they would have added, you know, and nobody will add to or subtract from this
document. Like they would have put that at the end if that was their belief, instead of telling
you two ways to change it. I agree with you so wholeheartedly. I just have to say that. I think
you're absolutely right. Now, I'll just add this one comment. I do love this country.
I've been teaching constitutional law for 32 years and raised a family here.
And what I want more than anything is for my children, for my students who are the ages
of my children, I want them to live in a thriving America and a thriving democracy.
The dedication to my book, the very beginning, when you open up, the first thing you'll see
is to my children and yours. And I mean it.
I love that. Thank you so much for being here today. It was great chatting with you,
giving me so much to think about. I hope everybody listening to this gets a chance
to pick up Parliamentary America because we actually can change the system. We can improve it. It's not impossible.
And despite so many people's frustrations, we do not have the luxury of being hopeless.
I love that.
And I agree with it wholeheartedly.
Thank you, Max.
Thank you.
You can buy Max Stearns' book, Parliamentary America, wherever you buy your books.
And if you want to support independent bookstores, you can order from bookshop.org.
Thanks for being here today.
This episode is hosted and executive produced by me, Sharon McMahon.
Our audio producer is Jenny Snyder.
Our production assistant is Andrea Shampo.
And if you liked this episode, we would love to have you share it to social media
or to leave us a rating or review. All of those things help podcasters out
so much. Thanks for being here and we'll see you again soon.