Tanzania goes to vote in elections set to keep the same party in power for 7 decades

**Tanzania’s Ruling Party Set to Extend 64-Year Rule Amid Concerns Over Election Fairness**

*NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)* — Tanzania’s governing party, Chama cha Mapinduzi (CCM), has been in power for 64 years, largely unchallenged by serious opposition. This long-standing dominance looks set to continue as Tanzanians prepare to vote on Wednesday in a general election widely expected to be won by President Samia Suluhu Hassan.

Hassan, a former vice president, assumed the presidency in 2021 following the death of her predecessor. She is Tanzania’s sixth president and the country’s first female leader. Despite Tanzania being a multiparty democracy, CCM has maintained control since independence from Britain in 1961.

With a population of 68 million and an annual per capita income of roughly $1,200, Tanzania stands out in a region where liberation parties are losing ground and vibrant opposition groups, often led by young people, are pushing for political change.

However, authorities have cracked down on opposition leaders, civil society organizations, journalists, and others in what Amnesty International describes as a “climate of fear” ahead of the elections. These polls will decide the country’s next president, lawmakers, and various local leaders.

**A History of Limited Opposition**

Under former President John Pombe Magufuli, an authoritarian figure who restricted opposition campaigning outside election periods, repression was intense. While early expectations suggested President Hassan might adopt a more open style, many voters have grown disillusioned with the increased authoritarianism during her tenure.

Opposition parties allowed to contest this election have run minimal campaigns, with some candidates even seeming to endorse Hassan’s bid for re-election.

**Opposition Leaders Silenced**

Voters will select from Hassan and 16 other candidates. Yet two of her main rivals—Tundu Lissu of Chadema and Luhaga Mpina of ACT-Wazalendo—have been barred from contesting the presidency.

Lissu, a prominent opposition figure known for his charisma, spent years in European exile after surviving an assassination attempt in 2017. He is currently imprisoned on treason charges widely seen as politically motivated. Recently, police also arrested John Heche, deputy leader of Chadema, while he was attending Lissu’s treason trial.

**Campaign Promises and CCM’s Position**

With her major opponents sidelined, Hassan has been touring the country, campaigning on promises of stability and prosperity, especially for those working in agriculture. Her slogan—“work and dignity”—emphasizes moving Tanzania forward.

CCM, which maintains ties with China’s Communist Party, enjoys loyal support in parts of the country. However, the party’s share of the popular vote has been declining amid growing calls for change from opposition groups.

Nicodemus Minde, a Tanzanian researcher with the Institute for Security Studies in South Africa, describes CCM as heading to the polls “virtually unchallenged.” He notes voter turnout has been dropping since 2010 and predicts low participation, partly because a CCM victory is seen as a foregone conclusion.

“Voter apathy could be high due to the impact of the disqualification of the two main opposition parties,” Minde said. He warned that this election “presents a significant risk of strengthening authoritarian practices rather than advancing democratic governance.”

**Tensions and Threats of Unrest**

The opposition has called for protests on election day. Chadema insists that free and fair elections are impossible without essential reforms.

Many voters interviewed by The Associated Press expressed concern about potential threats to peace, especially after authorities warned they would not tolerate disruptions stemming from demonstrations. There are widespread fears regarding repressive tactics, including arbitrary arrests and abductions by unknown individuals.

Some also worry the government may shut down internet access ahead of voting.

“Peace must prevail for the election to run smoothly,” said Joshua Gerald, a resident of Dar es Salaam who requested anonymity for safety reasons. “Without peace, there can be chaos or fear, and people may fail to exercise their democratic rights.”

Noel Johnson, another young voter from the city, emphasized the need to safeguard constitutional rights. “The government needs to protect our constitutional rights, especially the right to demonstrate because we are not satisfied with the ongoing electoral processes,” he said.

President Hassan has urged voters to turn out in large numbers and assured that peace will be maintained. Yet concerns over possible unrest persist.

Richard Mbunda, a political scientist at the University of Dar es Salaam, warned that public dissatisfaction could push Tanzania toward instability.

“There are clear signs of unrest,” Mbunda said. He cautioned that even seemingly stable countries risk turmoil if authorities remain indifferent.

“The tone of reconciliation spoken about during campaigns should be genuine,” he added. “Dialogue is needed. The election is legally valid but lacks political legitimacy.”

Muhumuza reported from Kampala, Uganda. Associated Press writers in Dodoma and Dar es Salaam contributed to this report.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/tanzania-goes-vote-elections-set-045907785.html

‘No Kings’ protests against Trump

WASHINGTON — Large crowds of protesters marched and rallied in cities across the U.S. Saturday for “No Kings” demonstrations, decrying what participants see as the government’s swift drift into authoritarianism under President Donald Trump.

People carrying signs with slogans such as “Nothing is more patriotic than protesting” or “Resist Fascism” packed into New York City’s Times Square and rallied by the thousands in parks in Boston, Atlanta, and Chicago. Demonstrators marched through Washington and downtown Los Angeles and picketed outside capitols in several Republican-led states, a courthouse in Billings, Montana, and at hundreds of smaller public spaces.

Trump’s Republican Party disparaged the demonstrations as “Hate America” rallies, but in many places the events looked more like a street party. There were marching bands, huge banners with the U.S. Constitution’s “We The People” preamble that people could sign, and demonstrators wearing inflatable costumes, particularly frogs, which have emerged as a sign of resistance in Portland, Oregon.

It was the third mass mobilization since Trump’s return to the White House and came against the backdrop of a government shutdown that not only has closed federal programs and services but is testing the core balance of power, as an aggressive executive confronts Congress and the courts in ways that protest organizers warn are a slide toward authoritarianism.

In Washington, Iraq War Marine veteran Shawn Howard said he had never participated in a protest before but was motivated to show up because of what he sees as the Trump administration’s “disregard for the law.” He said immigration detentions without due process and deployments of troops in U.S. cities are “un-American” and alarming signs of eroding democracy.

“I fought for freedom and against this kind of extremism abroad,” said Howard, who added that he also worked at the CIA for 20 years on counter-extremism operations. “And now I see a moment in America where we have extremists everywhere who are, in my opinion, pushing us to some kind of civil conflict.”

Trump, meanwhile, was spending the weekend at his Mar-a-Lago home in Florida. “They say they’re referring to me as a king. I’m not a king,” the president said in a Fox News interview that aired early Friday, before he departed for a $1 million-per-plate MAGA Inc. fundraiser at his club. A Trump campaign social media account mocked the protests by posting a computer-generated video of the president clothed like a monarch, wearing a crown and waving from a balcony.

**Nationwide demonstrations**

In San Francisco, hundreds of people spelled out “No King!” and other phrases with their bodies on Ocean Beach. Hayley Wingard, who was dressed as the Statue of Liberty, said she too had never been to a protest before. Only recently she began to view Trump as a “dictator.”

“I was actually OK with everything until I found that the military invasion in Los Angeles and Chicago and Portland — Portland bothered me the most, because I’m from Portland, and I don’t want the military in my cities. That’s scary,” Wingard said.

Tens of thousands of people gathered in Portland for a peaceful demonstration downtown. Later in the day, tensions grew as a few hundred protesters and counterprotesters showed up at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building, with federal agents at times firing tear gas to disperse the crowd and city police threatening to make arrests if demonstrators blocked streets.

The building has been the site of mostly small nightly protests since June — the reason the Trump administration has cited for trying to deploy National Guard troops in Portland, which a federal judge has at least temporarily blocked.

About 3,500 people gathered in Salt Lake City outside the Utah State Capitol to share messages of hope and healing after a protester was fatally shot during the city’s first “No Kings” march in June. More than 1,500 people gathered in Birmingham, Alabama, evoking the city’s history of protests and the critical role it played in the Civil Rights Movement two generations ago.

“It just feels like we’re living in an America that I don’t recognize,” said Jessica Yother, a mother of four. She and other protesters said they felt camaraderie by gathering in a state where Trump won nearly 65% of the vote last November. “It was so encouraging,” Yother said. “I walked in and thought, ‘Here are my people.’”

**Organizers hope to build opposition movement**

“Big rallies like this give confidence to people who have been sitting on the sidelines but are ready to speak up,” Democratic U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy said in an interview with The Associated Press.

While protests earlier this year — against Elon Musk’s cuts and Trump’s military parade — drew crowds, organizers say this one is uniting the opposition. Top Democrats such as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders are joining what organizers view as an antidote to Trump’s actions, from the administration’s clampdown on free speech to its military-style immigration raids.

More than 2,600 rallies were planned Saturday, organizers said. The national march against Trump and Musk this spring had 1,300 registered locations, while the first “No Kings” day in June registered 2,100.

“We’re here because we love America,” Sanders said, addressing the crowd from a stage in Washington. He said the American experiment is “in danger” under Trump but insisted, “We the people will rule.”

**Republican critics denounce the demonstrations**

Republicans sought to portray protesters as far outside the mainstream and a prime reason for the government shutdown, now in its 18th day. From the White House to Capitol Hill, GOP leaders called them “communists” and “Marxists.” They said Democratic leaders, including Schumer, are beholden to the far-left flank and willing to keep the government shut to appease those liberal forces.

“I encourage you to watch — we call it the Hate America rally — that will happen Saturday,” said House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana. “Let’s see who shows up for that,” Johnson said, listing groups including “antifa types,” people who “hate capitalism,” and “Marxists in full display.”

Many demonstrators, in response, said they were meeting such hyperbole with humor, noting that Trump often leans heavily on theatrics such as claiming that cities he sends troops to are war zones.

“So much of what we’ve seen from this administration has been so unserious and silly that we have to respond with the same energy,” said Glen Kalbaugh, a Washington protester who wore a wizard hat and held a sign with a frog on it.

New York police reported no arrests during the protests.

**Democrats try to regain their footing amid shutdown**

Democrats have refused to vote on legislation that would reopen the government as they demand funding for health care. Republicans say they are willing to discuss the issue later, only after the government reopens.

The situation is a potential turnaround from just six months ago, when Democrats and their allies were divided and despondent. Schumer in particular was berated by his party for allowing an earlier government funding bill to sail through the Senate without using it to challenge Trump.

“What we are seeing from the Democrats is some spine,” said Ezra Levin, a co-founder of Indivisible, a key organizing group. “The worst thing the Democrats could do right now is surrender.”

Associated Press journalists Lisa Mascaro and Kevin Freking in Washington, Jill Colvin and Joseph Frederick in New York, Jeffrey Collins in Columbia, South Carolina, Hannah Schoenbaum in Salt Lake City, Terry Chea in San Francisco, Chris Megerian in West Palm Beach, Florida, and Bill Barrow in Birmingham, Alabama, contributed.
https://www.phillytrib.com/no-kings-protests-against-trump/article_0e012434-cac9-47ad-bf8c-9a2f7ab226eb.html

‘No Kings Day’ Street Theater Meets Shutdown Politics: A March for Democracy or a Midterm Ad Buy? David Manney

Like a high school pep band after practicing all week, the crowd had the optics down cold: waving signs, rehearsed chants, and flags snapping in the wind. “No Kings!” they shouted, filling city squares from Washington, D.C., to Chicago.

On its face, it was a noble-sounding message, but the more you watched, the more it resembled a movie using the wrong genre tag — less a protest against tyranny and more a well-produced commercial for the Democratic Party.

With prices still high and a government shutdown stretching into a third week, the nation’s political theater troupe invaded the streets, with predictable corners providing glowing reviews. At the same time, the rest of the country wondered what it was really watching.

### The Left’s Framing: A Patriotic Uprising

If you had the time and stomach to scan progressive outlets, writers on the left called it a peaceful stand for democracy, a people’s rejection of authoritarianism. Labor unions trucked supporters in, celebu-tards posted solidarity selfies, and public officials—from Illinois Governor JB Pritzker to former Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff—made cameo appearances during major rallies.

Boasting thousands, organizers of local events declared “record-breaking” participation in Washington, D.C. It was a self-congratulatory tone, showing, they said, proof that America still had fight left in her.

Chants about liberty mingled with pop-up art shows, drum circles, and costume parades. Organizers insisted it was democracy in motion, with families, veterans, clergy, and students linking arms in defense of the republic.

This is how the left told the story: peaceful, inclusive, righteous, and even necessary; a warning to would-be strongmen that Americans hadn’t forgotten their founding creed.

### The Right’s Reaction: A Political Performance

Meanwhile, conservative America watched a different production. To us, it didn’t feel like a revolution; it was merely a rehearsal.

The same groups that decried corporate influence and elite control staged an event that was funded, staffed, and promoted by unions, donors, and media partners who benefit from keeping the spectacle alive. There were too many gears moving the choreography towards perfection, with timing that was way too convenient.

The “No Kings” narrative landed exactly as the Schumer Shutdown entered its third week. Presumably, the message delivered was something like, “If Congress can’t reopen the government, then we’ll reopen the streets.”

The svelte George Conway, the eponymous Never-Trump mascot, wore a T-shirt that said “I Am Antifa,” an image that crystallized just how blurred the line between satire and self-parody is.

At the same time, left-leaning governors stood in line, offering moral weight while the cameras rolled, followed by fundraisers. What started as a spectacle of grassroots resistance quickly resembled a campaign commercial shot on public property.

To many conservatives, what we witnessed was pure theater—props, lights, and lines all memorized.

### A Crown in the Mirror

Carrying obvious historical power, the phrase “No Kings” conjured up images of Jefferson and the Continental Congress rebelling against hereditary rule.

Yet, to most of us on the right, the movement’s hypocrisy revealed itself. The same party, insisting it stands for “the people,” embraced rule by bureaucracy, executive orders, and speech codes that silence dissent.

The same activists raging against “authoritarianism” cheer when their preferred leaders begin weaponizing agencies or throttle free expression online.

The irony was almost too thick to ignore if the point was to warn against kings. It was a protest calling itself “No Kings” while bowing before the very institutions craving more power, not less.

The movement wasn’t about monarchy; it was about message control, and that crown fit so neatly atop the heads of those holding the microphones.

### Scale, Substance, and the Illusion’s Cost

Media allies did their part by hyping crowd sizes, with some claiming it was the largest protest in D.C. history, but independent verification never followed. Sympathetic outlets even hedged over crowd size.

The numbers didn’t matter, though. It’s all about the proper images.

The synchronization was excellent: television captured aerial shots of properly timed banners, color-coded chants, and pre-approved “spontaneity,” creating a Woodstock-like atmosphere for political consultants—an emotional product aimed at viewers rather than legislators.

In the meantime, real issues such as the economy, border security, and energy independence took a backseat to creative signage and sound bites.

What we’ve been watching isn’t civic engagement; it’s marketing.

Every chant, costume, and drone shot served a larger campaign narrative, simplifying it: democracy equals our side; opposition equals danger.

To those on the right, it was less about principle than power retention, something they see as a ruling class terrified of losing control of the story.

So, what’s left? Rent out the stage and call it virtue.

### Why It Matters Now

Social media loves the left’s rallies, but voters—not views—decide politics. Spectacle doesn’t fix inflation, secure a border, or lower grocery bills and gas prices. Even though it might fill a news cycle, it doesn’t fill a fridge.

Stepping back, Republicans see it as a costly distraction, a way of rebranding activism as patriotism while shifting attention away from the shutdown they caused.

Democrats, in contrast, see it as a cultural reinforcement, a moral booster for their base as they head into the midterms.

In a sense, both are right; it’s a theater serving politics.

Voters craving honesty see straight through the fog; they’ve watched years of “resistance” branding that ends in fundraising emails and not much else.

When movements become marketing campaigns, authenticity dies.

### Final Thoughts

In what was supposed to be a moment of unity, “No Kings Day” echoed the right’s affirmation that America belongs to the people. That was the ideal.

What unfolded instead was a political costume ball, where actors wore moral urgency, but the script was pure campaign strategy—no matter what.

If the goal of Democrats was to show moral courage, they fell short. They ended up revealing something far more ordinary: the machinery of modern politics dressing itself as a revolution.

It may have led to a show of extraordinary measures, but when the lights go out, we’ll see who still believes the performance actually changed anything.

Crowds may move cameras, but only convictions move countries.

*Comments are closed.*
http://www.ruthfullyyours.com/2025/10/19/no-kings-day-street-theater-meets-shutdown-politics-a-march-for-democracy-or-a-midterm-ad-buy-david-manney/

Democracy at crossroads:From people’s power to monopoly’s plaything

Has democracy exhausted its potential? That uncomfortable question haunts political thinkers across the world today. What was once celebrated as the triumph of people’s power now appears to be little more than a cover for the consolidation of monopoly capitalism.

The result is stark: resources and power are being hoarded by a few, while the vast majority is left with little more than an illusion of choice. Lenin’s century-old warning that democracy under capitalism would serve as a mask for the interests of the powerful has never felt more prescient.

On paper, democracy still thrives. One can see citizens vote, parties campaign, and parliaments debate. Yet beneath these rituals, democracy has been hollowed out. As political theorist Sheldon Wolin observed, we are drifting toward inverted totalitarianism, where corporations and governments merge into a seamless machine that neutralizes dissent while pretending to uphold democratic ideals. The façade remains; the substance has vanished. It is merely an instrument to legitimize the capitalist greed of very few avaricious souls.

Take the United States, where the presidential campaigns of Bernie Sanders—arguably the only mainstream candidate in decades who openly challenged corporate power—were effectively neutralized by his own party establishment. The message was clear: challenges to entrenched wealth and monopoly are not permissible within the bounds of acceptable democracy.

Or look to India, where the rise of corporate titans like Mukesh Ambani and Gautam Adani has been accompanied by political consolidation. The lines between business and governance blur to the point where policies are tailored not for citizens but for conglomerates. The largest democracy and the oldest democracy stand as case studies in how wealth increasingly dictates political destiny.

It is telling that names like Elon Musk or Ambani are spoken of with the kind of reverence once reserved for heads of state. They command not only industries but also governments, with their decisions rippling across borders.

Economist Thomas Piketty has shown that wealth concentration today rivals that of the 19th-century Gilded Age. Yet the power of today’s billionaires is far more entrenched. Unlike the tycoons of a century ago, today’s moguls do not merely purchase influence; they write the rules, set global norms, and, in some cases, substitute themselves for public institutions.

When governments race to accommodate the interests of billionaires in fields like space exploration, artificial intelligence, and digital communications, it is hard to argue that sovereignty resides with the people. The accumulation of wealth and power in fewer and fewer hands is no longer an exception—it is the defining political reality of our time.

The contradictions of democracy are even sharper when viewed internationally. Prominent democracies—especially the US—have often been quick to side with dictatorships in the developing world whenever it suited their strategic or economic interests. This double standard exposes democracy as more of a geopolitical tool than a universal value.

Pakistan is perhaps the clearest example. Military rulers—from Ayub Khan to Pervez Musharraf—found their regimes legitimized and supported not by the will of the people but by Western powers that claimed to champion democracy.

The Cold War, the War on Terror, and regional rivalries all provided convenient justifications for democratic states to back authoritarian regimes abroad. Thus, people’s will and its expression through democratic systems is a farce.

Nor do the double standards stop there. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, widely seen as one of the most ruthless leaders in modern politics, is, so to say, democratically elected. He continues to enjoy the overt backing of major democracies despite presiding over catastrophic assaults on Gaza and the daily suffering of Palestinians.

Israeli forces strike where they choose, jeopardizing international peace, while much of the democratic world offers cover rather than accountability. The irony is glaring: a state acting with impunity abroad, while being shielded under the language of democracy.

This is not the first time the contradiction has played out. For decades, Western democracies lent tacit and material support to apartheid South Africa, justifying ties with a brutally exclusionary regime in the name of strategic interests.

Governments were reluctant to act, but global grassroots solidarity—the boycotts, divestment campaigns, cultural sanctions, and the moral pressure exerted by millions of ordinary citizens worldwide—eventually forced a shift in policy.

The lesson is unmistakable: when democratic governments fail to uphold their professed values, it is often people’s movements that bend the arc of history toward justice.

Today, as Gaza burns under bombardment and Palestinians endure dispossession, the question is whether the world will again allow geopolitical expediency to eclipse moral clarity, or whether civil societies across the globe will summon the determination that helped end apartheid.

The malaise is global. In Sri Lanka, citizens poured into the streets in 2022 against leaders perceived to have mismanaged the economy while shielding elites from accountability. Bangladesh has seen multiple cycles of elections overshadowed by accusations of authoritarianism and corruption. Nepal’s fragile democratic experiment is marred by instability and elite capture. Indonesia, often hailed as a democratic success story in Southeast Asia, faces deepening concerns about oligarchic politics.

Meanwhile, in the developed world, the crisis wears a different mask. Populist leaders in Europe and the United States channel public frustration not against monopoly power, but against immigrants and minorities. Fear replaces solidarity; scapegoating substitutes for justice.

On September 13, Tommy Robinson, a known right-wing activist, gathered more than 100,000 people in London to protest against immigrants and called for them to be sent back to their countries of origin. That has become a new normal in the developed world.

Hannah Arendt’s warning in *The Origins of Totalitarianism* echoes loud: when democratic institutions fail to deliver dignity and equality, resentment becomes fertile ground for exclusion and authoritarian tendencies.

This is a moment of reckoning. If democracy is no more than a platform for monopolies to perform their power, then it has already failed. But history offers another path.

Democracy has survived crises before—from the robber barons of the Gilded Age to the authoritarian temptations of the 20th century. It was rescued every time by popular mobilization: labor unions, civil rights movements, anti-colonial struggles.

As political theorist Chantal Mouffe has argued, democracy can be reinvented—reborn as a politics of the people, not corporations. That requires moving beyond the myth that elections alone equal democracy.

Democracy must be participatory, not performative; redistributive, not extractive. It must empower citizens to shape decisions, hold elites accountable, and resist the monopolization of resources and institutions.

The challenge is formidable, but the alternatives are grimmer still. If citizens resign themselves to democracy’s decline, monopoly power will harden into a new aristocracy.

To resist this, three steps are vital.

First, grassroots organizing: social movements, unions, community groups, and citizen coalitions must rebuild the culture of democratic participation from below. Change has rarely come from elites; it is won by ordinary people demanding dignity.

Second, global regulation of monopolies: unchecked wealth accumulation is not just a national issue. In a world of borderless finance and technology, international cooperation is essential to tax the ultra-rich, regulate corporations, and prevent the capture of public goods by private hands.

Third, strengthening democratic institutions: parliaments, courts, and media must be shielded from corporate capture and political manipulation. Independent oversight and citizen-led accountability mechanisms can help restore credibility to institutions that have lost public trust.

The choice is clear. Either democracy remains a hollow ritual serving monopoly interests, or it is reclaimed as the true expression of people’s will. The hour is late, but not beyond redemption.

As the struggle against apartheid once proved, when people organize across borders and demand accountability, even the most entrenched systems of injustice can be forced to change.

Democracy will either be reclaimed by the people—or it will cease to be democracy.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/tns/detail/1345117-democracy-at-crossroadsfrom-peoples-power-to-monopolys-plaything

Democracy at crossroads:From people’s power to monopoly’s plaything

Has democracy exhausted its potential? That uncomfortable question haunts political thinkers across the world today. What was once celebrated as the triumph of peoples’ power now appears to be little more than a cover for the consolidation of monopoly capitalism. The result is stark: resources and power are being hoarded by a few, while the vast majority is left with little more than an illusion of choice.

Lenin’s century-old warning that democracy under capitalism would serve as a mask for the interests of the powerful has never felt more prescient. On paper, democracy still thrives. One can see citizens vote, parties campaign, parliaments debate. Yet, beneath these rituals, democracy has been hollowed out.

As political theorist Sheldon Wolin observed, we are drifting toward inverted totalitarianism, where corporations and governments merge into a seamless machine that neutralizes dissent while pretending to uphold democratic ideals. The façade remains; the substance has vanished. It is merely an instrument to legitimize capitalist greed of very few avaricious souls.

Take the United States, where the presidential campaigns of Bernie Sanders — arguably the only mainstream candidate in decades who openly challenged corporate power — were effectively neutralized by his own party establishment. The message was clear: challenges to entrenched wealth and monopoly are not permissible within the bounds of acceptable democracy.

Or look to India, where the rise of corporate titans like Mukesh Ambani and Gautam Adani has been accompanied by political consolidation. The lines between business and governance blur to the point where policies are tailored not for citizens but for conglomerates. The largest democracy and the oldest democracy stand as case studies in how wealth increasingly dictates political destiny.

It is telling that names like Elon Musk or Ambani are spoken of with the kind of reverence once reserved for heads of state. They command not only industries but also governments, with their decisions rippling across borders.

Economist Thomas Piketty has shown that wealth concentration today rivals that of the 19th-Century Gilded Age. Yet the power of today’s billionaires is far more entrenched. Unlike the tycoons of a century ago, today’s moguls do not merely purchase influence; they write the rules, set global norms, and, in some cases, substitute themselves for public institutions.

When governments race to accommodate the interests of billionaires in fields like space exploration, artificial intelligence, and digital communications, it is hard to argue that sovereignty resides with the people. Accumulation of wealth and power in fewer and fewer hands is no longer an exception — it is the defining political reality of our time.

The contradictions of democracy are even sharper when viewed internationally. Prominent democracies — especially the US — have often been quick to side with dictatorships in the developing world whenever it suited their strategic or economic interests. This double standard exposes democracy as more of a geopolitical tool than a universal value.

Pakistan is perhaps the clearest example. Military rulers — from Ayub Khan to Pervez Musharraf — found their regimes legitimized and supported not by the will of the people but by Western powers that claimed to champion democracy. The Cold War, the War on Terror, and regional rivalries all provided convenient justifications for democratic states to back authoritarian regimes abroad.

Thus, people’s will and its expression through democratic systems is a farce.

Nor do the double standards stop there. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, widely seen as one of the most ruthless leaders in modern politics, is, so to say, democratically elected. He continues to enjoy the overt backing of major democracies despite presiding over catastrophic assaults on Gaza and the daily suffering of Palestinians.

Israeli forces strike where they choose, jeopardizing international peace, while much of the democratic world offers cover rather than accountability. The irony is glaring: a state acting with impunity abroad, while being shielded under the language of democracy.

This is not the first time the contradiction has played out. For decades, Western democracies lent tacit and material support to apartheid South Africa, justifying ties with a brutally exclusionary regime in the name of strategic interests. Governments were reluctant to act, but global grassroots solidarity — the boycotts, divestment campaigns, cultural sanctions, and the moral pressure exerted by millions of ordinary citizens worldwide — eventually forced a shift in policy.

The lesson is unmistakable: when democratic governments fail to uphold their professed values, it is often peoples’ movements that bend the arc of history toward justice.

Today, as Gaza burns under bombardment and Palestinians endure dispossession, the question is whether the world will again allow geopolitical expediency to eclipse moral clarity—or whether civil societies across the globe will summon the determination that helped end apartheid.

The malaise is global.

In Sri Lanka, citizens poured into the streets in 2022 against leaders perceived to have mismanaged the economy while shielding elites from accountability. Bangladesh has seen multiple cycles of elections overshadowed by accusations of authoritarianism and corruption. Nepal’s fragile democratic experiment is marred by instability and elite capture. Indonesia, often hailed as a democratic success story in Southeast Asia, faces deepening concerns about oligarchic politics.

Meanwhile, in the developed world, the crisis wears a different mask. Populist leaders in Europe and the United States channel public frustration not against monopoly power, but against immigrants and minorities. Fear replaces solidarity; scapegoating substitutes for justice.

On September 13, Tommy Robinson, a known right-wing activist, gathered more than 100,000 people in London to protest against immigrants and called for them to be sent back to their countries of origin. That has become a new normal in the developed world.

Hannah Arendt’s warning in *The Origins of Totalitarianism* echoes loud: when democratic institutions fail to deliver dignity and equality, resentment becomes fertile ground for exclusion and authoritarian tendencies.

This is a moment of reckoning.

If democracy is no more than a platform for monopolies to perform their power, then it has already failed. But history offers another path. Democracy has survived crises before — from the robber barons of the Gilded Age to the authoritarian temptations of the 20th century. It was rescued every time by popular mobilization: labour unions, civil rights movements, anti-colonial struggles.

As political theorist Chantal Mouffe has argued, democracy can be reinvented — reborn as a politics of the people, not corporations. That requires moving beyond the myth that elections alone equal democracy.

Democracy must be participatory, not performative; redistributive, not extractive. It must empower citizens to shape decisions, hold elites accountable, and resist the monopolization of resources and institutions.

The challenge is formidable, but the alternatives are grimmer still. If citizens resign themselves to democracy’s decline, monopoly power will harden into a new aristocracy.

To resist this, three steps are vital.

First, grassroots organizing: social movements, unions, community groups, and citizen coalitions must rebuild the culture of democratic participation from below. Change has rarely come from elites; it is won by ordinary people demanding dignity.

Second, global regulation of monopolies: unchecked wealth accumulation is not just a national issue. In a world of borderless finance and technology, international cooperation is essential to tax the ultra-rich, regulate corporations, and prevent the capture of public goods by private hands.

Third, strengthening democratic institutions: parliaments, courts, and media must be shielded from corporate capture and political manipulation. Independent oversight and citizen-led accountability mechanisms can help restore credibility to institutions that have lost public trust.

The choice is clear. Either democracy remains a hollow ritual serving monopoly interests, or it is reclaimed as the true expression of peoples’ will.

The hour is late, but not beyond redemption. As the struggle against apartheid once proved, when people organize across borders and demand accountability, even the most entrenched systems of injustice can be forced to change.

Democracy will either be reclaimed by the people — or it will cease to be democracy.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/tns/detail/1345117-democracy-at-crossroadsfrom-peoples-power-to-monopolys-plaything

Democracy at crossroads:From people’s power to monopoly’s plaything

Has democracy exhausted its potential? That uncomfortable question haunts political thinkers across the world today. What was once celebrated as the triumph of people’s power now appears to be little more than a cover for the consolidation of monopoly capitalism.

The result is stark: resources and power are being hoarded by a few, while the vast majority is left with little more than an illusion of choice. Lenin’s century-old warning—that democracy under capitalism would serve as a mask for the interests of the powerful—has never felt more prescient.

On paper, democracy still thrives. One can see citizens vote, parties campaign, parliaments debate. Yet beneath these rituals, democracy has been hollowed out. As political theorist Sheldon Wolin observed, we are drifting toward inverted totalitarianism, where corporations and governments merge into a seamless machine that neutralizes dissent while pretending to uphold democratic ideals. The facade remains; the substance has vanished. It is merely an instrument to legitimize capitalist greed of very few avaricious souls.

Take the United States, where the presidential campaigns of Bernie Sanders—arguably the only mainstream candidate in decades who openly challenged corporate power—were effectively neutralized by his own party establishment. The message was clear: challenges to entrenched wealth and monopoly are not permissible within the bounds of acceptable democracy.

Or look to India, where the rise of corporate titans like Mukesh Ambani and Gautam Adani has been accompanied by political consolidation. The lines between business and governance blur to the point where policies are tailored not for citizens but for conglomerates.

The largest democracy and the oldest democracy stand as case studies in how wealth increasingly dictates political destiny. It is telling that names like Elon Musk or Ambani are spoken of with the kind of reverence once reserved for heads of state. They command not only industries but also governments, with their decisions rippling across borders.

Economist Thomas Piketty has shown that wealth concentration today rivals that of the 19th-Century Gilded Age. Yet the power of today’s billionaires is far more entrenched. Unlike the tycoons of a century ago, today’s moguls do not merely purchase influence; they write the rules, set global norms, and, in some cases, substitute themselves for public institutions.

When governments race to accommodate the interests of billionaires in fields like space exploration, artificial intelligence, and digital communications, it is hard to argue that sovereignty resides with the people. Accumulation of wealth and power in fewer and fewer hands is no longer an exception—it is the defining political reality of our time.

The contradictions of democracy are even sharper when viewed internationally. Prominent democracies—especially the US—have often been quick to side with dictatorships in the developing world whenever it suited their strategic or economic interests. This double standard exposes democracy as more of a geopolitical tool than a universal value.

Pakistan is perhaps the clearest example. Military rulers—from Ayub Khan to Pervez Musharraf—found their regimes legitimized and supported not by the will of the people but by Western powers that claimed to champion democracy. The Cold War, the War on Terror, and regional rivalries all provided convenient justifications for democratic states to back authoritarian regimes abroad.

Thus, people’s will and its expression through democratic systems is a farce.

Nor do the double standards stop there. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, widely seen as one of the most ruthless leaders in modern politics, is—so to say—democratically elected. He continues to enjoy the overt backing of major democracies despite presiding over catastrophic assaults on Gaza and the daily suffering of Palestinians.

Israeli forces strike where they choose, jeopardizing international peace, while much of the democratic world offers cover rather than accountability. The irony is glaring: a state acting with impunity abroad, while being shielded under the language of democracy.

This is not the first time the contradiction has played out. For decades, Western democracies lent tacit and material support to apartheid South Africa, justifying ties with a brutally exclusionary regime in the name of strategic interests. Governments were reluctant to act, but global grassroots solidarity—the boycotts, divestment campaigns, cultural sanctions, and the moral pressure exerted by millions of ordinary citizens worldwide—eventually forced a shift in policy.

The lesson is unmistakable: when democratic governments fail to uphold their professed values, it is often people’s movements that bend the arc of history toward justice.

Today, as Gaza burns under bombardment and Palestinians endure dispossession, the question is whether the world will again allow geopolitical expediency to eclipse moral clarity—or whether civil societies across the globe will summon the determination that helped end apartheid.

The malaise is global.

In Sri Lanka, citizens poured into the streets in 2022 against leaders perceived to have mismanaged the economy while shielding elites from accountability. Bangladesh has seen multiple cycles of elections overshadowed by accusations of authoritarianism and corruption. Nepal’s fragile democratic experiment is marred by instability and elite capture. Indonesia, often hailed as a democratic success story in Southeast Asia, faces deepening concerns about oligarchic politics.

Meanwhile, in the developed world, the crisis wears a different mask. Populist leaders in Europe and the United States channel public frustration not against monopoly power, but against immigrants and minorities. Fear replaces solidarity; scapegoating substitutes for justice.

On September 13, Tommy Robinson, a known right-wing activist, gathered more than 100,000 people in London to protest against immigrants and called for them to be sent back to the countries of their origin. That has become a new normal in the developed world.

Hannah Arendt’s warning in *The Origins of Totalitarianism* echoes loud: when democratic institutions fail to deliver dignity and equality, resentment becomes fertile ground for exclusion and authoritarian tendencies.

This is a moment of reckoning.

If democracy is no more than a platform for monopolies to perform their power, then it has already failed. But history offers another path. Democracy has survived crises before—from the robber barons of the Gilded Age to the authoritarian temptations of the 20th Century. It was rescued every time by popular mobilization: labour unions, civil rights movements, anti-colonial struggles.

As political theorist Chantal Mouffe has argued, democracy can be reinvented—reborn as a politics of the people, not corporations. That requires moving beyond the myth that elections alone equal democracy.

Democracy must be participatory, not performative; redistributive, not extractive. It must empower citizens to shape decisions, hold elites accountable, and resist the monopolization of resources and institutions.

The challenge is formidable, but the alternatives are grimmer still. If citizens resign themselves to democracy’s decline, monopoly power will harden into a new aristocracy.

To resist this, three steps are vital:

First, grassroots organizing: social movements, unions, community groups, and citizen coalitions must rebuild the culture of democratic participation from below. Change has rarely come from elites; it is won by ordinary people demanding dignity.

Second, global regulation of monopolies: unchecked wealth accumulation is not just a national issue. In a world of borderless finance and technology, international cooperation is essential to tax the ultra-rich, regulate corporations, and prevent the capture of public goods by private hands.

Third, strengthening democratic institutions: parliaments, courts, and media must be shielded from corporate capture and political manipulation. Independent oversight and citizen-led accountability mechanisms can help restore credibility to institutions that have lost public trust.

The choice is clear. Either democracy remains a hollow ritual serving monopoly interests, or it is reclaimed as the true expression of people’s will.

The hour is late, but not beyond redemption. As the struggle against apartheid once proved, when people organize across borders and demand accountability, even the most entrenched systems of injustice can be forced to change.

Democracy will either be reclaimed by the people—or it will cease to be democracy.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/tns/detail/1345117-democracy-at-crossroadsfrom-peoples-power-to-monopolys-plaything

Democracy at crossroads:From people’s power to monopoly’s plaything

**Has Democracy Exhausted Its Potential?**

That uncomfortable question haunts political thinkers across the world today. What was once celebrated as the triumph of people’s power now appears to be little more than a cover for the consolidation of monopoly capitalism. The result is stark: resources and power are being hoarded by a few, while the vast majority is left with little more than an illusion of choice.

Lenin’s century-old warning that democracy under capitalism would serve as a mask for the interests of the powerful has never felt more prescient.

On paper, democracy still thrives. One can see citizens vote, parties campaign, parliaments debate. Yet beneath these rituals, democracy has been hollowed out. As political theorist Sheldon Wolin observed, we are drifting toward inverted totalitarianism, where corporations and governments merge into a seamless machine that neutralizes dissent while pretending to uphold democratic ideals. The façade remains; the substance has vanished. It is merely an instrument to legitimize capitalist greed of very few avaricious souls.

Take the United States, where the presidential campaigns of Bernie Sanders—arguably the only mainstream candidate in decades who openly challenged corporate power—were effectively neutralized by his own party establishment. The message was clear: challenges to entrenched wealth and monopoly are not permissible within the bounds of acceptable democracy.

Or look to India, where the rise of corporate titans like Mukesh Ambani and Gautam Adani has been accompanied by political consolidation. The lines between business and governance blur to the point where policies are tailored not for citizens but for conglomerates. The largest democracy and the oldest democracy stand as case studies in how wealth increasingly dictates political destiny.

It is telling that names like Elon Musk or Ambani are spoken of with the kind of reverence once reserved for heads of state. They command not only industries but also governments, with their decisions rippling across borders.

Economist Thomas Piketty has shown that wealth concentration today rivals that of the 19th-century Gilded Age. Yet the power of today’s billionaires is far more entrenched. Unlike the tycoons of a century ago, today’s moguls do not merely purchase influence; they write the rules, set global norms, and, in some cases, substitute themselves for public institutions.

When governments race to accommodate the interests of billionaires in fields like space exploration, artificial intelligence, and digital communications, it is hard to argue that sovereignty resides with the people.

Accumulation of wealth and power in fewer and fewer hands is no longer an exception—it is the defining political reality of our time.

The contradictions of democracy are even sharper when viewed internationally. Prominent democracies—especially the U.S.—have often been quick to side with dictatorships in the developing world whenever it suited their strategic or economic interests. This double standard exposes democracy as more of a geopolitical tool than a universal value.

Pakistan is perhaps the clearest example. Military rulers—from Ayub Khan to Pervez Musharraf—found their regimes legitimized and supported not by the will of the people but by Western powers that claimed to champion democracy. The Cold War, the War on Terror, and regional rivalries all provided convenient justifications for democratic states to back authoritarian regimes abroad.

Thus, people’s will and its expression through democratic systems is a farce.

Nor do the double standards stop there. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, widely seen as one of the most ruthless leaders in modern politics, is so to say democratically elected. He continues to enjoy the overt backing of major democracies despite presiding over catastrophic assaults on Gaza and the daily suffering of Palestinians.

Israeli forces strike where they choose, jeopardizing international peace, while much of the democratic world offers cover rather than accountability.

The irony is glaring: a state acting with impunity abroad, while being shielded under the language of democracy.

This is not the first time the contradiction has played out. For decades, Western democracies lent tacit and material support to apartheid South Africa, justifying ties with a brutally exclusionary regime in the name of strategic interests. Governments were reluctant to act, but global grassroots solidarity—the boycotts, divestment campaigns, cultural sanctions, and the moral pressure exerted by millions of ordinary citizens worldwide—eventually forced a shift in policy.

The lesson is unmistakable: when democratic governments fail to uphold their professed values, it is often people’s movements that bend the arc of history toward justice.

Today, as Gaza burns under bombardment and Palestinians endure dispossession, the question is whether the world will again allow geopolitical expediency to eclipse moral clarity—or whether civil societies across the globe will summon the determination that helped end apartheid.

The malaise is global.

In Sri Lanka, citizens poured into the streets in 2022 against leaders perceived to have mismanaged the economy while shielding elites from accountability. Bangladesh has seen multiple cycles of elections overshadowed by accusations of authoritarianism and corruption. Nepal’s fragile democratic experiment is marred by instability and elite capture. Indonesia, often hailed as a democratic success story in Southeast Asia, faces deepening concerns about oligarchic politics.

Meanwhile, in the developed world, the crisis wears a different mask. Populist leaders in Europe and the United States channel public frustration not against monopoly power, but against immigrants and minorities. Fear replaces solidarity; scapegoating substitutes for justice.

On September 13, Tommy Robinson, a known right-wing activist, gathered more than 100,000 people in London to protest against immigrants and called for them to be sent back to the countries of their origin. That has become a new normal in the developed world.

Hannah Arendt’s warning in *The Origins of Totalitarianism* echoes loud: when democratic institutions fail to deliver dignity and equality, resentment becomes fertile ground for exclusion and authoritarian tendencies.

This is a moment of reckoning.

If democracy is no more than a platform for monopolies to perform their power, then it has already failed. But history offers another path.

Democracy has survived crises before—from the robber barons of the Gilded Age to the authoritarian temptations of the 20th century. It was rescued every time by popular mobilisation: labour unions, civil rights movements, anti-colonial struggles.

As political theorist Chantal Mouffe has argued, democracy can be reinvented—reborn as a politics of the people, not corporations. That requires moving beyond the myth that elections alone equal democracy.

Democracy must be participatory, not performative; redistributive, not extractive. It must empower citizens to shape decisions, hold elites accountable, and resist the monopolisation of resources and institutions.

The challenge is formidable, but the alternatives are grimmer still. If citizens resign themselves to democracy’s decline, monopoly power will harden into a new aristocracy.

To resist this, three steps are vital.

First, grassroots organising: social movements, unions, community groups, and citizen coalitions must rebuild the culture of democratic participation from below. Change has rarely come from elites; it is won by ordinary people demanding dignity.

Second, global regulation of monopolies: unchecked wealth accumulation is not just a national issue. In a world of borderless finance and technology, international cooperation is essential to tax the ultra-rich, regulate corporations, and prevent the capture of public goods by private hands.

Third, strengthening democratic institutions: parliaments, courts, and media must be shielded from corporate capture and political manipulation. Independent oversight and citizen-led accountability mechanisms can help restore credibility to institutions that have lost public trust.

The choice is clear. Either democracy remains a hollow ritual serving monopoly interests, or it is reclaimed as the true expression of people’s will.

The hour is late, but not beyond redemption.

As the struggle against apartheid once proved, when people organise across borders and demand accountability, even the most entrenched systems of injustice can be forced to change.

Democracy will either be reclaimed by the people—or it will cease to be democracy.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/tns/detail/1345117-democracy-at-crossroadsfrom-peoples-power-to-monopolys-plaything

Democracy at crossroads:From people’s power to monopoly’s plaything

Has Democracy Exhausted Its Potential?

That uncomfortable question haunts political thinkers across the world today. What was once celebrated as the triumph of people’s power now appears to be little more than a cover for the consolidation of monopoly capitalism.

The result is stark: resources and power are being hoarded by a few, while the vast majority is left with little more than an illusion of choice. Lenin’s century-old warning that democracy under capitalism would serve as a mask for the interests of the powerful has never felt more prescient.

On paper, democracy still thrives. One can see citizens vote, parties campaign, and parliaments debate. Yet beneath these rituals, democracy has been hollowed out. As political theorist Sheldon Wolin observed, we are drifting toward inverted totalitarianism, where corporations and governments merge into a seamless machine that neutralizes dissent while pretending to uphold democratic ideals. The facade remains; the substance has vanished.

It is merely an instrument to legitimize the capitalist greed of very few avaricious souls.

Take the United States, where the presidential campaigns of Bernie Sanders—arguably the only mainstream candidate in decades who openly challenged corporate power—were effectively neutralized by his own party establishment. The message was clear: challenges to entrenched wealth and monopoly are not permissible within the bounds of acceptable democracy.

Or look to India, where the rise of corporate titans like Mukesh Ambani and Gautam Adani has been accompanied by political consolidation. The lines between business and governance blur to the point where policies are tailored not for citizens but for conglomerates.

The largest democracy and the oldest democracy stand as case studies in how wealth increasingly dictates political destiny. It is telling that names like Elon Musk or Ambani are spoken of with the kind of reverence once reserved for heads of state. They command not only industries but also governments, with their decisions rippling across borders.

Economist Thomas Piketty has shown that wealth concentration today rivals that of the 19th-Century Gilded Age. Yet the power of today’s billionaires is far more entrenched. Unlike the tycoons of a century ago, today’s moguls do not merely purchase influence; they write the rules, set global norms, and, in some cases, substitute themselves for public institutions.

When governments race to accommodate the interests of billionaires in fields like space exploration, artificial intelligence, and digital communications, it is hard to argue that sovereignty resides with the people.

Accumulation of wealth and power in fewer and fewer hands is no longer an exception—it is the defining political reality of our time.

The contradictions of democracy are even sharper when viewed internationally. Prominent democracies—especially the U.S.—have often been quick to side with dictatorships in the developing world whenever it suited their strategic or economic interests. This double standard exposes democracy as more of a geopolitical tool than a universal value.

Pakistan is perhaps the clearest example. Military rulers—from Ayub Khan to Pervez Musharraf—found their regimes legitimized and supported not by the will of the people but by Western powers that claimed to champion democracy. The Cold War, the War on Terror, and regional rivalries all provided convenient justifications for democratic states to back authoritarian regimes abroad.

Thus, people’s will and its expression through democratic systems is a farce.

Nor do the double standards stop there. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, widely seen as one of the most ruthless leaders in modern politics, is so to say democratically elected. He continues to enjoy the overt backing of major democracies despite presiding over catastrophic assaults on Gaza and the daily suffering of Palestinians.

Israeli forces strike where they choose, jeopardizing international peace, while much of the democratic world offers cover rather than accountability. The irony is glaring: a state acting with impunity abroad, while being shielded under the language of democracy.

This is not the first time the contradiction has played out. For decades, Western democracies lent tacit and material support to apartheid South Africa, justifying ties with a brutally exclusionary regime in the name of strategic interests.

Governments were reluctant to act, but global grassroots solidarity—the boycotts, divestment campaigns, cultural sanctions, and the moral pressure exerted by millions of ordinary citizens worldwide—eventually forced a shift in policy.

The lesson is unmistakable: when democratic governments fail to uphold their professed values, it is often people’s movements that bend the arc of history toward justice.

Today, as Gaza burns under bombardment and Palestinians endure dispossession, the question is whether the world will again allow geopolitical expediency to eclipse moral clarity—or whether civil societies across the globe will summon the determination that helped end apartheid.

The malaise is global.

In Sri Lanka, citizens poured into the streets in 2022 against leaders perceived to have mismanaged the economy while shielding elites from accountability. Bangladesh has seen multiple cycles of elections overshadowed by accusations of authoritarianism and corruption. Nepal’s fragile democratic experiment is marred by instability and elite capture.

Indonesia, often hailed as a democratic success story in Southeast Asia, faces deepening concerns about oligarchic politics.

Meanwhile, in the developed world, the crisis wears a different mask.

Populist leaders in Europe and the United States channel public frustration not against monopoly power, but against immigrants and minorities. Fear replaces solidarity; scapegoating substitutes for justice.

On September 13, Tommy Robinson, a known right-wing activist, gathered more than 100,000 people in London to protest against immigrants and called for them to be sent back to the countries of their origin. That has become a new normal in the developed world.

Hannah Arendt’s warning in *The Origins of Totalitarianism* echoes loud: when democratic institutions fail to deliver dignity and equality, resentment becomes fertile ground for exclusion and authoritarian tendencies.

This is a moment of reckoning.

If democracy is no more than a platform for monopolies to perform their power, then it has already failed. But history offers another path.

Democracy has survived crises before—from the robber barons of the Gilded Age to the authoritarian temptations of the 20th century. It was rescued every time by popular mobilization: labor unions, civil rights movements, anti-colonial struggles.

As political theorist Chantal Mouffe has argued, democracy can be reinvented—reborn as a politics of the people, not corporations. That requires moving beyond the myth that elections alone equal democracy.

Democracy must be participatory, not performative; redistributive, not extractive. It must empower citizens to shape decisions, hold elites accountable, and resist the monopolization of resources and institutions.

The challenge is formidable, but the alternatives are grimmer still.

If citizens resign themselves to democracy’s decline, monopoly power will harden into a new aristocracy.

To resist this, three steps are vital:

**First, grassroots organizing:** social movements, unions, community groups, and citizen coalitions must rebuild the culture of democratic participation from below. Change has rarely come from elites; it is won by ordinary people demanding dignity.

**Second, global regulation of monopolies:** unchecked wealth accumulation is not just a national issue. In a world of borderless finance and technology, international cooperation is essential to tax the ultra-rich, regulate corporations, and prevent the capture of public goods by private hands.

**Third, strengthening democratic institutions:** parliaments, courts, and media must be shielded from corporate capture and political manipulation. Independent oversight and citizen-led accountability mechanisms can help restore credibility to institutions that have lost public trust.

The choice is clear. Either democracy remains a hollow ritual serving monopoly interests, or it is reclaimed as the true expression of people’s will.

The hour is late, but not beyond redemption.

As the struggle against apartheid once proved, when people organize across borders and demand accountability, even the most entrenched systems of injustice can be forced to change.

Democracy will either be reclaimed by the people—or it will cease to be democracy.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/tns/detail/1345117-democracy-at-crossroadsfrom-peoples-power-to-monopolys-plaything

Democracy at crossroads:From people’s power to monopoly’s plaything

Has democracy exhausted its potential? That uncomfortable question haunts political thinkers across the world today. What was once celebrated as the triumph of people’s power now appears to be little more than a cover for the consolidation of monopoly capitalism.

The result is stark: resources and power are being hoarded by a few, while the vast majority is left with little more than an illusion of choice. Lenin’s century-old warning that democracy under capitalism would serve as a mask for the interests of the powerful has never felt more prescient.

On paper, democracy still thrives. One can see citizens vote, parties campaign, and parliaments debate. Yet beneath these rituals, democracy has been hollowed out. As political theorist Sheldon Wolin observed, we are drifting toward inverted totalitarianism, where corporations and governments merge into a seamless machine that neutralizes dissent while pretending to uphold democratic ideals. The facade remains; the substance has vanished. It is merely an instrument to legitimize the capitalist greed of very few avaricious souls.

Take the United States, where the presidential campaigns of Bernie Sanders—arguably the only mainstream candidate in decades who openly challenged corporate power—were effectively neutralized by his own party establishment. The message was clear: challenges to entrenched wealth and monopoly are not permissible within the bounds of acceptable democracy.

Or look to India, where the rise of corporate titans like Mukesh Ambani and Gautam Adani has been accompanied by political consolidation. The lines between business and governance blur to the point where policies are tailored not for citizens but for conglomerates. The largest democracy and the oldest democracy stand as case studies in how wealth increasingly dictates political destiny.

It is telling that names like Elon Musk or Ambani are spoken of with the kind of reverence once reserved for heads of state. They command not only industries but also governments, with their decisions rippling across borders.

Economist Thomas Piketty has shown that wealth concentration today rivals that of the 19th-century Gilded Age. Yet the power of today’s billionaires is far more entrenched. Unlike the tycoons of a century ago, today’s moguls do not merely purchase influence; they write the rules, set global norms, and, in some cases, substitute themselves for public institutions.

When governments race to accommodate the interests of billionaires in fields like space exploration, artificial intelligence, and digital communications, it is hard to argue that sovereignty resides with the people. Accumulation of wealth and power in fewer and fewer hands is no longer an exception — it is the defining political reality of our time.

The contradictions of democracy are even sharper when viewed internationally. Prominent democracies—especially the U.S.—have often been quick to side with dictatorships in the developing world whenever it suited their strategic or economic interests. This double standard exposes democracy as more of a geopolitical tool than a universal value.

Pakistan is perhaps the clearest example. Military rulers, from Ayub Khan to Pervez Musharraf, found their regimes legitimized and supported not by the will of the people but by Western powers that claimed to champion democracy. The Cold War, the War on Terror, and regional rivalries all provided convenient justifications for democratic states to back authoritarian regimes abroad.

Thus, the people’s will and its expression through democratic systems is a farce.

Nor do the double standards stop there. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, widely seen as one of the most ruthless leaders in modern politics, is, so to say, democratically elected. He continues to enjoy the overt backing of major democracies despite presiding over catastrophic assaults on Gaza and the daily suffering of Palestinians.

Israeli forces strike where they choose, jeopardizing international peace, while much of the democratic world offers cover rather than accountability. The irony is glaring: a state acting with impunity abroad, while being shielded under the language of democracy.

This is not the first time the contradiction has played out. For decades, Western democracies lent tacit and material support to apartheid South Africa, justifying ties with a brutally exclusionary regime in the name of strategic interests. Governments were reluctant to act, but global grassroots solidarity—the boycotts, divestment campaigns, cultural sanctions, and the moral pressure exerted by millions of ordinary citizens worldwide—eventually forced a shift in policy.

The lesson is unmistakable: when democratic governments fail to uphold their professed values, it is often people’s movements that bend the arc of history toward justice.

Today, as Gaza burns under bombardment and Palestinians endure dispossession, the question is whether the world will again allow geopolitical expediency to eclipse moral clarity or whether civil societies across the globe will summon the determination that helped end apartheid.

The malaise is global.

In Sri Lanka, citizens poured into the streets in 2022 against leaders perceived to have mismanaged the economy while shielding elites from accountability. Bangladesh has seen multiple cycles of elections overshadowed by accusations of authoritarianism and corruption. Nepal’s fragile democratic experiment is marred by instability and elite capture. Indonesia, often hailed as a democratic success story in Southeast Asia, faces deepening concerns about oligarchic politics.

Meanwhile, in the developed world, the crisis wears a different mask. Populist leaders in Europe and the United States channel public frustration not against monopoly power, but against immigrants and minorities. Fear replaces solidarity; scapegoating substitutes for justice.

On September 13, Tommy Robinson, a known right-wing activist, gathered more than 100,000 people in London to protest against immigrants and called for them to be sent back to the countries of their origin. That has become the new normal in the developed world.

Hannah Arendt’s warning in *The Origins of Totalitarianism* echoes loud: when democratic institutions fail to deliver dignity and equality, resentment becomes fertile ground for exclusion and authoritarian tendencies.

This is a moment of reckoning. If democracy is no more than a platform for monopolies to perform their power, then it has already failed.

But history offers another path.

Democracy has survived crises before—from the robber barons of the Gilded Age to the authoritarian temptations of the 20th century. It was rescued every time by popular mobilization: labor unions, civil rights movements, anti-colonial struggles.

As political theorist Chantal Mouffe has argued, democracy can be reinvented—reborn as a politics of the people, not corporations. That requires moving beyond the myth that elections alone equal democracy.

Democracy must be participatory, not performative; redistributive, not extractive. It must empower citizens to shape decisions, hold elites accountable, and resist the monopolization of resources and institutions.

The challenge is formidable, but the alternatives are grimmer still.

If citizens resign themselves to democracy’s decline, monopoly power will harden into a new aristocracy.

To resist this, three steps are vital.

First, grassroots organizing: social movements, unions, community groups, and citizen coalitions must rebuild the culture of democratic participation from below. Change has rarely come from elites; it is won by ordinary people demanding dignity.

Second, global regulation of monopolies: unchecked wealth accumulation is not just a national issue. In a world of borderless finance and technology, international cooperation is essential to tax the ultra-rich, regulate corporations, and prevent the capture of public goods by private hands.

Third, strengthening democratic institutions: parliaments, courts, and media must be shielded from corporate capture and political manipulation. Independent oversight and citizen-led accountability mechanisms can help restore credibility to institutions that have lost public trust.

The choice is clear. Either democracy remains a hollow ritual serving monopoly interests, or it is reclaimed as the true expression of people’s will.

The hour is late, but not beyond redemption.

As the struggle against apartheid once proved, when people organize across borders and demand accountability, even the most entrenched systems of injustice can be forced to change.

Democracy will either be reclaimed by the people—or it will cease to be democracy.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/tns/detail/1345117-democracy-at-crossroadsfrom-peoples-power-to-monopolys-plaything

Democracy at crossroads:From people’s power to monopoly’s plaything

Has Democracy Exhausted Its Potential?

That uncomfortable question haunts political thinkers across the world today. What was once celebrated as the triumph of people’s power now appears to be little more than a cover for the consolidation of monopoly capitalism. The result is stark: resources and power are being hoarded by a few, while the vast majority is left with little more than an illusion of choice.

Lenin’s century-old warning that democracy under capitalism would serve as a mask for the interests of the powerful has never felt more prescient.

On paper, democracy still thrives. One can see citizens vote, parties campaign, parliaments debate. Yet beneath these rituals, democracy has been hollowed out. As political theorist Sheldon Wolin observed, we are drifting toward inverted totalitarianism, where corporations and governments merge into a seamless machine that neutralizes dissent while pretending to uphold democratic ideals. The façade remains; the substance has vanished. It is merely an instrument to legitimize the capitalist greed of very few avaricious souls.

Take the United States, where the presidential campaigns of Bernie Sanders—arguably the only mainstream candidate in decades who openly challenged corporate power—were effectively neutralized by his own party establishment. The message was clear: challenges to entrenched wealth and monopoly are not permissible within the bounds of acceptable democracy.

Or look to India, where the rise of corporate titans like Mukesh Ambani and Gautam Adani has been accompanied by political consolidation. The lines between business and governance blur to the point where policies are tailored not for citizens but for conglomerates. The largest democracy and the oldest democracy stand as case studies in how wealth increasingly dictates political destiny.

It is telling that names like Elon Musk or Ambani are spoken of with the kind of reverence once reserved for heads of state. They command not only industries but also governments, with their decisions rippling across borders.

Economist Thomas Piketty has shown that wealth concentration today rivals that of the 19th-century Gilded Age. Yet the power of today’s billionaires is far more entrenched. Unlike the tycoons of a century ago, today’s moguls do not merely purchase influence; they write the rules, set global norms, and, in some cases, substitute themselves for public institutions.

When governments race to accommodate the interests of billionaires in fields like space exploration, artificial intelligence, and digital communications, it is hard to argue that sovereignty resides with the people. Accumulation of wealth and power in fewer and fewer hands is no longer an exception — it is the defining political reality of our time.

The contradictions of democracy are even sharper when viewed internationally. Prominent democracies—especially the U.S.—have often been quick to side with dictatorships in the developing world whenever it suited their strategic or economic interests. This double standard exposes democracy as more of a geopolitical tool than a universal value.

Pakistan is perhaps the clearest example. Military rulers—from Ayub Khan to Pervez Musharraf—found their regimes legitimized and supported not by the will of the people but by Western powers that claimed to champion democracy. The Cold War, the War on Terror, and regional rivalries all provided convenient justifications for democratic states to back authoritarian regimes abroad.

Thus, people’s will and its expression through democratic systems is a farce.

Nor do the double standards stop there. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, widely seen as one of the most ruthless leaders in modern politics, is, so to say, democratically elected. He continues to enjoy the overt backing of major democracies despite presiding over catastrophic assaults on Gaza and the daily suffering of Palestinians. Israeli forces strike where they choose, jeopardizing international peace, while much of the democratic world offers cover rather than accountability.

The irony is glaring: a state acting with impunity abroad, while being shielded under the language of democracy.

This is not the first time the contradiction has played out. For decades, Western democracies lent tacit and material support to apartheid South Africa, justifying ties with a brutally exclusionary regime in the name of strategic interests. Governments were reluctant to act, but global grassroots solidarity—the boycotts, divestment campaigns, cultural sanctions, and the moral pressure exerted by millions of ordinary citizens worldwide—eventually forced a shift in policy.

The lesson is unmistakable: when democratic governments fail to uphold their professed values, it is often people’s movements that bend the arc of history toward justice.

Today, as Gaza burns under bombardment and Palestinians endure dispossession, the question is whether the world will again allow geopolitical expediency to eclipse moral clarity — or whether civil societies across the globe will summon the determination that helped end apartheid.

The malaise is global.

In Sri Lanka, citizens poured into the streets in 2022 against leaders perceived to have mismanaged the economy while shielding elites from accountability. Bangladesh has seen multiple cycles of elections overshadowed by accusations of authoritarianism and corruption. Nepal’s fragile democratic experiment is marred by instability and elite capture. Indonesia, often hailed as a democratic success story in Southeast Asia, faces deepening concerns about oligarchic politics.

Meanwhile, in the developed world, the crisis wears a different mask. Populist leaders in Europe and the United States channel public frustration not against monopoly power, but against immigrants and minorities. Fear replaces solidarity; scapegoating substitutes for justice.

On September 13, Tommy Robinson, a known right-wing activist, gathered more than 100,000 people in London to protest against immigrants and called for them to be sent back to the countries of their origin. That has become a new normal in the developed world.

Hannah Arendt’s warning in *The Origins of Totalitarianism* echoes loud: when democratic institutions fail to deliver dignity and equality, resentment becomes fertile ground for exclusion and authoritarian tendencies.

This is a moment of reckoning.

If democracy is no more than a platform for monopolies to perform their power, then it has already failed. But history offers another path.

Democracy has survived crises before—from the robber barons of the Gilded Age to the authoritarian temptations of the 20th century. It was rescued every time by popular mobilization: labor unions, civil rights movements, anti-colonial struggles.

As political theorist Chantal Mouffe has argued, democracy can be reinvented—reborn as a politics of the people, not corporations. That requires moving beyond the myth that elections alone equal democracy.

Democracy must be participatory, not performative; redistributive, not extractive. It must empower citizens to shape decisions, hold elites accountable, and resist the monopolization of resources and institutions.

The challenge is formidable, but the alternatives are grimmer still. If citizens resign themselves to democracy’s decline, monopoly power will harden into a new aristocracy.

To resist this, three steps are vital:

**First, grassroots organizing:** Social movements, unions, community groups, and citizen coalitions must rebuild the culture of democratic participation from below. Change has rarely come from elites; it is won by ordinary people demanding dignity.

**Second, global regulation of monopolies:** Unchecked wealth accumulation is not just a national issue. In a world of borderless finance and technology, international cooperation is essential to tax the ultra-rich, regulate corporations, and prevent the capture of public goods by private hands.

**Third, strengthening democratic institutions:** Parliaments, courts, and media must be shielded from corporate capture and political manipulation. Independent oversight and citizen-led accountability mechanisms can help restore credibility to institutions that have lost public trust.

The choice is clear. Either democracy remains a hollow ritual serving monopoly interests, or it is reclaimed as the true expression of people’s will.

The hour is late, but not beyond redemption. As the struggle against apartheid once proved, when people organize across borders and demand accountability, even the most entrenched systems of injustice can be forced to change.

Democracy will either be reclaimed by the people—or it will cease to be democracy.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/tns/detail/1345117-democracy-at-crossroadsfrom-peoples-power-to-monopolys-plaything