No, not from the late Marcel Marceau, no....It's from the iconoclastic British journalist Johann Hari, who writes in the Independent, Do we want a democracy or a pantomime?
But elections do not have to consist of the airless circulation of
soundbites, bike-riding photo-ops and ignorance. We can do better than
this....
Item One: Deliberation Day. The American
political scientists Bruce Ackerman and James Fishkin have come up with
a simple democracy-deepener. Declare every general election a national
holiday, and offer every citizen £150 to take part, there and then, in
a day of debate, modelled on jury service. In the morning you watch a
televised debate between the main political leaders, and then you
divide into groups of 15 who go off for an hour to discuss what you've
seen. Together, you figure out a series of questions you want to put to
local representatives of the political parties – about any issue on
earth. Then, when all the groups come together, the "foreman" of your
"jury" puts your questions. After lunch, you reassemble to debate what
you've heard. Then you vote, and take your cheque.
The national
political debate would then no longer consist of10-second soundbites.
Suddenly, politicians would be able to talk in proper nuanced
paragraphs – and we could argue back. We could move beyond
thought-halting slogans – like "tough on crime" or "war on drugs" – to
a more rational discussion of the evidence.