Part I.
Perhaps Ardana was the case that brought in the change to the Federation that banned caste based discrimination.
I'd really hope that's not the case. Banning caste-based discrimination is such an
obvious thing. That's like saying, "Well, the Federation never thought about banning slavery until they realized they'd let some slavers in..." The Federation and its founding Members should already have been more enlightened than that by 2161.
Kirk doesn't seem to be saying "You've got bigger problems with the Federation that you do with me". No mention of anyhting other than working conditions seems to be made.
No, there were all sorts of social issues to be addressed, including access to medical treatment, access to Stratos, giving the Troglytes a decent education, and generally reversing the perception that Troglyes were inherently mentally inferior to Stratos dwellers. The fundamental nature of Ardanian society was called into question.
A military Junta would involve the military seizing power rather than having members chosen by a lottery.
False. A military
junta is simply a situation where a group of military officers rule the state. They need not have seized power in a coup d'etat.
The medal worn by the various members of whatever body is shown doesn't seem to include Gillian Taylor. It seems to indicate membership in some way.
I think that's particularly flimsy evidence that's not backed up by anything. In particular. President Jaresh-Inyo in DS9 clearly wasn't wearing any medals, even if President Hiram Roth in ST4 was. So we can't conclude anything about those medals.
The people sitting in the main part of the chamber may be the councel members and the three people on the dias may be the actual people who heard the case and decided on the punishment with the President acting in some role with the tribunal. A tribunal couldn't have a tie vote except in the case of one yes, one no and one abstain in which case the president could cast the decding vote. The council members may be surprised because they didn't vote on the case.
Then that throws out the first premise that started this discussion, that the Federation sometimes has its legislature conduct courts-martial of its military as a result of inheriting some legal traditions from worlds other than Earth.
A true Athenian Democracy, where everyone of legal age is elegible to be drafted, wouldn't be discriminatory.
Well, by that logic,
Athens was not an Athenian democracy, since only a small plutocratic elite were eligible to be drafted.
The President may have been elected but there's no indication of who exactly elected him. When Steve Jobs stepped down as CEO of Apple he was elected as Chairman of the Board. I own stock but I didn't get a ballot. The only people that get to vote on Chairman are the board memebrs themselves.
I can think of few institutions in the world as
un-democratic and
un-accountable, and as fundamentally
abusive and
power-hungry, as the corporation. "Corporate democracy" is a joke and a lie. Corporations are democratic and accountable only on paper; in reality, they are accountable to no one but the plutocratic elite who control them.
The President of the United Federation of Planets is democratically elected. The Chairman of the Board of Directors of Apple Incorporated is not.
I sincerely hope that the Federation not only does not emulate corporations, but has in fact abolished them as a legal entity.
Having a position of President yet being what we would normally call a Prime Minister would work if they specifically adopted the South Africa model as an example of a discriminatory state embracing full, equal representative democracy.
1. The Federation shouldn't need to adopt a model of a discriminatory state that embraced full, equal representative democracy, because the Federation should never have been discriminatory in the first place. Why would the Federation have been discriminatory in the past?
2. The thing to understand about the South African Presidency is that it is unique as a presidency elected by the members of the lower house of the legislature because its current incarnation evolved from a parliamentary model. Originally, the Union of South Africa was still a constitutional monarchy and Commonwealth realm like Canada or Australia: Elizabeth II reigned as the ceremonial Queen of the Union of South Africa, represented in South Africa by a Governor-General, with real power falling to the Prime Minister.
The Afrikaner elite, against the wishes of English South Africans, later successfully pushed for a republic; the Union of South Africa was dissolved and the Republic of South Africa proclaimed in 1961. The country left the Commonwealth, and the new head of state became known as the State President of South Africa, elected by the Parliament. But the State Presidents were like the Governors-General: Ceremonial. Real power remained in the hands of the Prime Ministers.
In 1984, a new constitution was enacted, which created a "tri-cameral" Parliament for South Africa: One house for whites, one house for "Coloured" (the term used under apartheid for people of biracial descent), and one house for Indians, with the post of Prime Minister abolished and its powers granted to the State President (who would, in turn, now be elected by an electoral college comprised of 50 whites, 25 "Coloureds," and 13 Indians chosen by their respective houses of Parliament). This represented an attempt on the part of the white power elite to compromise with the "Coloureds" and Indians, while still completely excluding blacks and preserving apartheid in a modified form.
So the modern South African Presidency, while no longer a legal instrument of oppression, has evolved the way it has because of its roots in Westminster parliamentary model. They, in essence, took the role of Prime Minister and re-named it "President," and they've kept that ball going, because the South African Parliament has just
always been the body that determined the head of government, from 1901 on to the present.
So it's highly, highly improbable that the Federation would adopt a model like that. South Africa represents a distinct aberration from the democratic traditions of modern states in that regard -- its president is non popularly elected to serve as head of state and government simultaneously like in the U.S., nor elected to serve as a ceremonial head of state like in Germany or Ireland, nor popularly elected to serve as a head of state who shares power with a Prime Minister, as in France. It makes little sense for any country to adopt the South African model, as it lacks the advantages of a true parliamentary system (possessing an apolitical head of state everybody can support, irrelevant of party) while retaining the disadvantages of a U.S. presidential system (lacking a mechanism to remove the head of government from office if he loses the confidence of the legislature).
In that case the President could be elected by and from the Council without having a Federation wide election for the position.
Could, maybe, possibly, sure. Could.
But you've also got to ask yourself:
Why?
Why would the peoples of Earth, Vulcan, Andor, Tellar, and Alpha Centauri create and consent to a system that
limits their democratic input into the selection of the President? Why
wouldn't you want a direct, popular election?
I mean, hell, even in parliamentary systems, the people can indirectly vote for their head of government, since they know that a vote for this party's candidate or that party's candidate for local MP is also a
de facto vote for the leader of that candidate's party to become Prime Minister. Federates wouldn't even have
that, since the Federation apparently lacks UFP-wide political parties.
Where's the short, copper guys from Journey to Babel? Is this actually representative of the Federation in the 2280's?
Why not? Hell, the Federation Councillor from Janus in
Articles of the Federation is a Horta!
Besides, the idea of randomly-chosen legislators never makes any sense to me. That's like saying you want randomly-chosen neurosurgeons, or randomly-chosen pilots. Representing people is a profession, and it requires professional-level skills. It's not like waiting tables -- which, by the way, even that requires skills not everyone possesses.
What about randomly chosen jurors? Surely determining guilt or innocence in a crime is every bit as important as making laws,
As important? Yes. As complicated? No.
And, further, it's not like there's a single set of Jurors that determine the guilt or not-guilt of every single person on trial in the United States; each Juror is charged with determining the guilt or not-guilt of the accused, based upon evidence admitted to the Court by the Judge, under the Judge's instructions of how to proceed, and then goes back to his or her life. It's a very different, much more limited, much more supervised, situation.
So the idea is to treat legislative service the same way as jury service -- a civic duty that every member of the population is obligated to take on at some point in their lives (unless they have valid reason to bow out).
The first problem with that idea, as I said before, is that legislating effectively requires a set of skills not equally distributed amongst the population; the people should be the judges of who is qualified, not random chance.
The second problem with that idea is that when you have a large population, it effectively becomes impossible for every citizen to serve a term as a legislator; there are just too many people and not enough time for everyone to serve before they die.
The third, and most fundamental, problem with that idea, however, is this:
No one elected them.
You're arguing that someone should be able to hold office and make law
without the consent of the governed. That he or she should be able to hold office and make law with no democratic mandate.
That's
not democracy. Frankly, Athenian democracy should not even be called such. It wasn't a democracy -- it was a plutocracy in which some of the plutocrats served on the basis of random chance. Expanding that set of eligible office-holders to the entire population rather than just a plutocratic elite doesn't actually make it democratic, since you still have people holding office without that individual's holding office being the clear will of the people.
That's really dangerous, really scary. What if someone like Jared Laughtner had been randomly selected to serve in Congress, for instance? Or David Duke? Or someone with severe mental retardation? Or just someone with a really poor grasp of economics, or foreign policy?
There need to be more safeguards.
They serve for a single term, maybe a year or two, and then go back to their lives. They don't make a career out of politics,
I've never understood why the idea of a career politician is seen as an inherently bad thing. Sure, there are power-hungry elitists out there who become career politicians because of that. But there are power-hungry elitists who pursue positions of authority in
every field because of that, from your local library (seriously, a good friend of mine is a librarian, and it's fascinating to hear him talk about intra-library politics) to a hospital to small diners to big corporations.
And there are plenty of people who are
not career politicians who enter the field, vowing one or two terms, but who are, clearly, power-mad lunatics. Just consider Nick Popoditch, a former United States Marine who challenged Congressman Bob Filner for his seat in California last year, lost... and then
led a mob over to Filner HQ and had his people assault Filner and Filner's supporters. Not being a career politico is no guarantee of human decency.
And meanwhile, there are plenty of career politicians who are such because it's a field at which they excel, which allows them to do work they believe in, because they like helping people, and because, well, they
like it. The idea that being a career politician in a democracy is a bad thing just makes no sense to me.
And sure, you need professional-level skills, but there could be advisors put in place for that.
So, in other words, unelected advisers would have actual power and setting policy, with the randomly chosen citizen as a figurehead?
How is
that democratic?
2. I think it's pretty clear that the Federation let Ardana in without really figuring out the basics of their political system or even having all that many Federates on the ground, be they governmental, Starfleet, or just regular civilians. Ardana was clearly in violation of the provision of the Federation Charter prohibiting caste-based discrimination (established in DS9).
It's possible the membership standards were more lax in the 23rd century. Given the "Cold War" situation they were in with the Klingons, the fierce competition for strategic resources or locations, the Federation might've been willing to relax its standards or suspend its review processes and fast-track membership for worlds they wanted to keep the Klingons from getting to first. (Or, to interpret it more benevolently, they wanted to bring those worlds under UFP protection before the Klingons could conquer and oppress them.)
I would certainly hope that the Federation had a ban on caste-based discrimination in its Charter/Constitution/Articles of the Federation/whatever-we're-calling-it-this-week when it was first founded (why
wouldn't it have such a basic ban in its founding documents?), and I'd certainly hope that Ardana's admission represented an aberration from the Federation's normal practices, to be rectified once it was bought to the public's and/or the Council's attention.
You'd be surprised how small legislative chambers can be. I've stood on the floor of the United States House of Representatives -- it's almost shocking how much smaller it looks in real life.
Besides, the idea that the Federation has hundreds of Members is only current as of 2373. Star Trek IV is set in 2385 or thereabouts; it's entirely plausible to assume that the Federation only has around 70 Members or so by that point.
The council chamber in
The Voyage Home has 60 seats -- two sets of bleachers, each with 3 tiers of 10 seats each.
For the purposes of
DTI: Forgotten History, I went through the canonical and literary sources to compile a list of known or probable UFP members as of c. 2270. My list came out to under 50 worlds, some of which were colonies. So it's plausible that they'd have 60 members as of 2285.
Fascinating! Can you give us a hint as to who some of those Members were in 2270?
How the Borg Invasion has impacted the political makeup of the Federation is unclear. We know from Losing the Peace that the Denevan state seems to still exist, legally-speaking, even without its capital planet; that the Federation Councillor from Deneva still holds office after the destruction of Deneva; and that the Federation is actively assisting the Denevans in establishing a new homeworld. So it's possible that the 155 Members number still stands after the Borg Invasion, even if some of those Members' populations have been drastically, drastically reduced.
Very likely. After all, the councillors would represent the governments and peoples of those worlds, not the dirt and rock. Take the land away and the nation still exists. Just ask the Jews or the Roma or practically any Native American nation. A nation isn't a place, it's a people.
True. Though, to be fair, that does present a reasonable question about the nature of Federation democracy. If we assume that most Federation Members have more or less an equal population, it's all good -- but if you have a situation where the typical Federation Member has, say, 6 billion citizens, but Members like Deneva suddenly have maybe 1 million or fewer, you basically have a situation where a Denevan Federate's vote is much more influential, much more determinative, than, say, a United Earth Federate's. (A similar situation exists with the United States Senate today, where the vote of, say, a citizen of Wyoming is much more influential than the vote of someone from California, because there are so many more Californians than Wyomingites.)
Which doesn't mean that abolishing the Denevan state or suspending its Federation Membership is right, either. It just presents an interesting dilemma about the nature of democracy.
Yes, all Federation Members need to be democracies. If they're not, then the Federation itself is not a democracy -- and not worth a damn.
Where has it been stated that all Federation members must be democracies?
In the canon? It hasn't. I'm making that assertion, right now, because if the Federation does
not make liberal democracy a requirement for Membership, then it's a worthless union. Liberal democracy is the only legitimate form of government.
That's a more stringent requirement than even states in the United States must meet; the Constitution merely requires a "republican form of government."
That's a function of the fact that when the United States was formed, it wasn't a democracy -- the qualifications for being able to vote were determined by the states, and each state required that to vote, you be a property-owning white male of a certain age. It was a deeply repressive system designed to exclude women, blacks, Indians, and the vast majority of white men. It was, frankly, little more than a republican plutocracy.
Remember, the United States has evolved into a liberal democracy; it wasn't born one.