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Cake day: June 3rd, 2023

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  • Hungary:

    • Non-proportional parliament (easy to get a single party majority)
    • Single chamber
    • President appointed by said chamber, not by popular vote as in some other countries

    As you can see, the Hungarian system has a single point of failure – the majority in parliament. It is then no surprise that when Viktor Orban’s party won the 2010 election, where was practically no stopping them going on from there

    Compare that to Slovakia:

    • Also single chamber parliament
    • Proportional system
    • President elected in elections

    Slovakia has just as shitty politicians as Hungary does but the fact that power in Parliament is distributed across a coalition plus the fact that their president is elected completely independently to that means that it is much harder for any single party to rule alone, unchecked.






  • Czechia: IMO pretty durable

    • Two chambers – House and Senate
    • one is proportional, one is majoritarian => different compositions
    • Senate has staggered terms, takes 6 years to replace
    • Need 60% in both for constitutional changes

    Here comes the clever part:

    Abolishing democracy would requite breaking a Catch-22. All you need to govern is a majority in the lower house. Hence populist leaders only fight to gain majorities in the House. The Senate is powerless when it comes to everyday government (it can be overruled) and only has teeth when it comes to blocking changes to the constitution. Most emotionally driven voters find the Senate pointless and hence do not go to vote in its elections. The only people who go to vote in Senate elections are those who understand its importance as a constitutional break. So the chamber self-filters an electorate that finds democracy important.


  • UK:

    • No constitution, no hard checks and balances
    • A law introducing slavery could be passed with a simple majority vote
    • No guarantee of stability, a new govt can repeal any of the previous govt’s laws

    You’d think this would be playing with fire but the fact that it has managed to last this long makes you question a lot of the assumptions that people usually use to justify entrenched, codified constitutions.

    It would seem that checks in the UK system do exist, but just weren’t explicitly designed and aren’t written into law anywhere:

    • The population has lived in relative freedom for so long that anyone trying to abolish democracy would face immense pushback. Compare this to post communist democracies like Serbia where people are used to authoritarian rule and comply in advance.
    • A prime minister may have a majority on paper, but British political parties are fractious and rebels often appear even in the PM’s own party
    • The legislative process seems to contain a lot of friction as is, even theoretically OK laws have problems passing for a myriad of reasons
    • Whereas in other countries long-term policies would be entrenched in constitutions, in the UK MPs have to think of more creative ways to make them difficult to repeal (usually connecting repealing them with some large political or logistical cost).