Well, there is the President of the EU commission who isn't elected by the populace.
Yeah, but he's not the president of a state, he's the president of a committee of an intergovernmental organization. It's really not the same thing.
Towards the end of Spectre Of The Gun, Kirk said: "
I speak for a vast Alliance of fellow creatures who believe in the same thing." You would have to twist things around pretty hard to believe Kirk wasn't speaking of the United Federation of Planets there.
No need. One can simply presume he was simplifying for the sake of an alien culture that has no concept of multiple species uniting into a single sovereign state.
A alliance is very much different than a sovereign state. Kirk could have easily used the term nation, or some other term. But the word he used was "alliance."
To the best of my knowledge, no one ever come right out and said the Federation was "A Sovereign State." It did have at least some of the trappings yes,
No, it has
all of the traits that characterize a sovereign state.
but a Alliance can have a governing body too, and a (somehow) elected President as well.
<SNIP>
They would (certainly during TOS) seem to have a common currency, the frequently mentioned credit. Multiple sovereign nations today use the Euro. More than a few nations use the US dollar.
They possess a combined military (not a military, I know), this might be analogous to (but not exactly like) the NATO alliance, where there is a central command structure,
1. Starfleet is nothing like the NATO command structure. NATO doesn't have its own military; it just coordinates the behavior of the unique militaries of numerous sovereign states that join, and can leave, its command structure as they see fit. The Federation Starfleet, on the other hand, is a single, Federation-wide military, with its own command structure, institutional ethos, and loyalty to the Federation.
2. Yes, it is true that there are some intergovernmental organizations or supranational organizations with
some of the traits of a state. But there is none that possess
all of the traits of a state the way the Federation does. You've drawn an analogy to non-state organizations that possess common currencies, governing bodies, and coordinating structures for militaries, but you have yet to account for the numerous other traits of a state the Federation possesses:
- a defined territory over which it possesses sovereignty, entries into which may not legally occur without authorization, the integrity of which it defends, and which it may trade to other sovereign states ("The Best of Both Worlds, Part I;" "Journey's End")
- a legislature that makes binding laws ("Forces of Nature")
- a President who formulates and implements foreign policy (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country)
- the authority to wage wars and concludes treaties (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country; "A Call to Arms;" "What You Leave Behind")
- The authority to forge its own alliances with foreign states (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, "By Inferno's Light," "In the Pale Moonlight," "What You Leave Behind")
- its own unique military, possessing its own system of courts-martial, rather than a coordinating body for unique militaries ("Court Martial," "For the Cause," "Valiant," "Errand of Mercy," Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan)
- a Constitution that guarantees certain rights and freedoms to everyone within its territorial borders and aboard its starships ("The Empath") and which overrides local law ("Accession")
- the authority to declare states of emergency on its territory and put its military forces on every street corner in a state of de facto martial law ("Homefront"/"Paradise Lost")
- an extensive bureaucracy that is more powerful and important than local bureaucracies (We always hear about Federation bureaucratic institutions, almost never of local ones)
- its own internal security force with powers of arrest (Federation Security in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock)
- its own system of grand juries and courts with powers of subpoena and indictment ("The Ascent")
- a Supreme Court with the power of judicial review ("Dr. Bashir, I Presume?")
- the authority to exchanges ambassadors with foreign states (Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country)
- The possession of its own foreign intelligence agency in Starfleet Intelligence ("Chains of Command," "Honor Among Thieves")
- A monopoly on the legitimate use of force within its territory (as seen in the existence of Starfleet and Federation Security)
The Federation is not a sovereign state for possessing any one or two of those traits; an alliance, intergovernmental organization, or even constituent polity of a sovereign state may share a handful of such traits. The Federation is a state because it possesses
all of those traits.
No reason we can't have accurate counts now, my comment was to, by canon there no indication the people within the Federation vote for President. True, it might simply have never come up, but again no canon.
1. I see no reason to restrict ourselves to canonical evidence. "Canon" is just a corporate decision made to let people writing
Star Trek know which previous
Star Trek works they have to stay consistent with, not a binding rule on what is "real" in a fictional universe.
2. As I've said, it's not IMPOSSIBLE that the Federation President is not directly elected, but it seems highly improbable.
Going back to a prior point...
They possess a combined military (not a military, I know),
No, Starfleet is clearly a military. It has been canonically referred to as a military more often than it has been referred to as not a military -- that only happened once, in "Peak Performance."
-- no need to force anyone to buy a photo ID --
Force them to buy one in order to vote, no.
Force them to have one in order to vote, yes.
What's the point of making people have a photo ID if a voter can just put her finger up to a DNA scanner and say, "Computer, recognize identity: Jane Doe, born Stardate 12345 in the City of Leran Manev, Planet Trill?"
Most of the democracies in which the president isn't directly elected are ones where the president is only a ceremonial head of state
The sole exception I know of would be the United States,
Pardon me. I should have said, "Most of the democracies in which the president is elected by the legislature are ones where the president is only a ceremonial head of state."
the United States is the only current example of an indirectly elected executive President. We the people (to use a phrase) directly elect electors, and they in turn directly elect the US President.
In our history, no American President has ever been elected directly by the American people.
Surely one of the most shameful aspects of American democracy, badly in need of rectification. I would hope a more enlightened democracy like the Federation wouldn't follow in our footsteps there.
ETA:
The United Nations is not a state in any sense of the term. They have no territory, they have no armed forces, they can't make binding law. The U.N. in fact explicitly describes itself as not being a state -- it calls itself a "tool" of its Member States.
I mentioned this in another thread, but the UN not being a global government is mostly a facet of there not currently being a need for a global government. Since we are (for all intents and purposes) alone in the galaxy, a global government has nowhere to represent us. We don't identify ourselves as citizens of Earth, because there is no one to whom we could identify ourselves as such.
Well, on an abstract, theoretical level, sure. On a more direct level, though, the United Nations -- which was originally called in English the United Nations Organization, and which is still called that in its French and Spanish names (
Organisation des Nations unies and
Organización de las Naciones Unidas, respectively) -- isn't a world government or sovereign state essentially because it was never meant to be. The Allied powers that set it up after World War II essentially designed it to perform two basic, sometimes contradictory functions:
1. To provide a neutral global mechanism through which all of the sovereign states of the world could be recognized, peacefully resolve disputes, and launch cooperative ventures; and
2. To provide a global institution with a sense of international legitimacy that could itself legitimize the global domination of the Allied powers over the rest of the world, particularly the United States and Soviet Union.
At no point was the United Nations Organization ever
meant to be a world government -- although public opinion in favor of a world state was as high as it has ever been in the years just after World War II, and the U.N. did start to evolve a
little bit in that direction under Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld, who established a much more independent, pro-active, neutral direction for the U.N. than it ever had before or since.
If we ever do discover alien life, we would need a unified planetary government to represent our interests. The UN (or something analogous) could very well be that representative body.
Well, I don't know if it's a given that humanity would
need a unified planetary state to represent its interests if it encountered alien life. It would depend upon what kinds of interstellar political situations it encounters. If the aliens themselves are highly diverse and unified, for instance, no such unity may be necessary. If humanity encounters a system more akin to that of the Star Trek Universe, however, then, yeah, global unity would probably be necessary.
The U.N. could never become a planetary government at this point, though. It's been far too disempowered since Hammarskjöld's tenure; it's nothing more than the puppet of the permanent Security Council members on most issues, and impotent to act if those P-5 members disagree with each other.
Star Trek got it right when it depicted Earth uniting under an entirely different global body.
I think the Federation government has to much power over the people to be called a true democratic power like we saw on TNG where they try to removed the colonists from the planet that was given to Cardassia Union inorder to achieve peace with them.
Well, it's unclear under what legal justification the Federation could do that.
AFAIK, the colony in "Journey's End" was exactly that: a colony.
Yeah, but what
kind of colony? A colony that's part of the territory of a Federation Member, or a colony that falls directly under Federation jurisdiction? If it's a Member's colony, then the Federation may -- and I want to emphasize the word
may, not must -- not have the authority to trade it away to a foreign state, if the Federation Constitution requires it to respect the territorial integrity of its Members within the Federation.
Since the planet Dorvan V would be legally considered Cardassian territory, I believe that after the area was redistributed to Cardassia, Federation citizens would have no right to be there - the Cardassians could demand their removal even if the Federation didn't want to. The colonists were only allowed to stay if they agreed to become Cardassian subjects. Not only did the Federation have the *right* to remove them, it had the legal obligation to do so.
The Federation would only have such an obligation to remove them if it assumed such an obligation in the treaty that handed ownership of the planet over to the Cardassian Union. Otherwise, all it means is that there's a collection of Federation citizens in Cardassian territory, and it becomes the Cardassians' problem what to do with them.
(All of which ignores the question of the Federation's MORAL right to do so, or the question of whether or not the Federation Constitution allows it to hand over inhabited Federation worlds even if it's legal to do so under interstellar law.)
Or are you questioning whether or not the Federation had the right to negotiate the handing over of the colony to Cardassia?
I thought the context made it clear that that was the issue, yeah -- does the Federation have the authority to hand over territory to a foreign state if that territory is inhabited by an established Federation or Federation Member colony? It almost certainly has the legal authority to do so under interstellar law; whether it has the authority to do so under its own Constitution is questionable. (To make a modern comparison: It is perfectly legal under international law for sovereign states to censor free speech, but it is illegal under, say, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms for Canada to do so.)