The U.S. enjoys many strengths
that give it an edge over other republics, such
as a decentralized and innovative economy that
draws global talent and unmatched military
strength. Yet the Roman Republic, which had its
own comparative advantages, ultimately fell to
autocratic rule, and the U.S. faces a similar
fate if it fails to protect institutional
integrity and unchecked power continues to grow.
Reform is crucial to the
continuity of republican governance, yet history
shows it is often compromised by entrenched
power. Political dysfunction and the growing
influence of corporate interests threaten to
undermine the foundational principles of the
U.S., posing a risk to its long-term stability.
From its inception, the United
States has struggled to address its internal
contradictions in ensuring fair treatment for
its inhabitants. Autocratic tendencies also
emerged early, with second President John
Adams’s Alien
and Sedition Acts targeting political
dissent, immigrants, and free speech. Abraham
Lincoln later expanded executive power during the Civil War,
bypassing Congress to preserve the Union and
abolish slavery, the most contentious and
significant political question since the
country’s founding. Despite such departures from
Constitutional procedure—sometimes for good
reasons—the system’s checks and balances
ultimately resisted later executive overreach,
like FDR’s failed Court-Packing
plan.
Individual political challenges
to republican systems are concerning, but the
erosion of republican culture also leads to
irreversible shifts in the political framework.
Political bribery, unchecked imperialism, and
government serving corporate interests over
citizens combine to steadily capture the system.
A select group of actors has crafted a
continuous, increasingly scripted
cultural-political spectacle, contributing to
civic decline. As a result, the public has
reduced active participation in governance in
exchange for the passive right to cheer or
criticize from the sidelines.
The fall of the Roman Republic,
which endured for centuries before giving way to
tyrants and emperors, offers useful
context—lessons on not only what values to
uphold but also on how reform attempts can
backfire. Half-hearted efforts to fix inequality
and instability often strained the system,
pushing it closer to dysfunction and leading it
to autocracy. Understanding Republican Rome’s
successes and failures offers lessons for
addressing today’s challenges.
A balanced republican political
system encourages elites to compromise, build
consensus, and compete for public approval,
qualities the early Roman Republic struggled to
develop after its establishment in 509 BC.
The Senate, dominated by the
patrician aristocracy, functioned as an advisory
body in theory, but in practice, it exercised
significant control over finances, foreign
policy, and much of the legislative process.
Nonetheless, there was strong competition among
patrician families for the two annual consulship
positions. These roles, filled through the cursus honorum (course of honor), ensured
that two capable leaders rose to the position in
an established hierarchy, and shared short-term
executive authority, limiting any concentration
of power.
Consuls often entered the Senate
or assumed other political positions after their
terms, where they could be prosecuted for
misconduct. This rotation and accountability
meant leaders’ interests lay in the smooth
running of the state, rather than amassing
personal prestige for their role or for past
glories.
The design of Roman statues also
supported this culture, celebrating the civic
virtue of individuals over personal
achievements. Statues portrayed aging and
imperfections, in deliberate contrast to the idealized perfection of Greek art. The Republic
also barred actors from government, viewing
their imitation of life as deceptive and
unworthy of public office.
Like other effective republican
city-states, Republican Rome thrived on
political engagement, though participation was
uneven. The Republic’s seasonal political
process, shaped by agricultural cycles,
military campaigns, and religious festivals,
advantaged wealthy landowners who could afford
to leave their estates for politics,
perpetuating uneven and inconsistent efforts to
address problems. Political advancement in turn
often hinged on military successes, making
military campaigns common and sometimes pursued
for personal ambition rather than strategic
necessity.
Yet this seasonal structure
still created predictable opportunities for many
citizens to travel to Rome to participate in
political affairs, ensuring concentrated and
focused decision-making during key periods. It
also provided ways to reduce the power imbalance
between the patricians and plebeians, or
commoners. The Conflict of the Orders (5th to 3rd centuries BC)
brought about significant gains for plebeians.
Mass strikes disrupted Rome’s economy and
soldiers refused to fight, forcing reforms such
as the creation of another legislative assembly, the Concilium Plebis, alongside the Comita Tributa.
Additionally, after 451 BC,
legal safeguards via the Twelve Tables and the
establishment of the Tribunes of the Plebs—two
annually elected magistrates with executive
power to protect plebeian interests—were also
won.
During the 4th century BC,
plebeians gained greater social mobility,
including the right to intermarry with
patricians, opening access to the consulship, Senate, and positions of religious
authority. After 338 BC, the Latin Rights
extended certain privileges to non-Roman
communities in Italy, such as intermarriage and
participation in commerce. While full
citizenship came gradually, these measures integrated new
populations while preserving the
identity of Roman citizens.
Despite the Republic’s growing
wealth and territories, inequality remained
rife. Plebeians were the backbone of the army
and bore the brunt of imperial expansion but
reaped few rewards. Longer military service in
support of campaigns left them unable to tend to
their farms, indebting many. Patricians often
capitalized on this by purchasing their lands,
while the use of enslaved labor from conquests diminished
plebeians’ bargaining power as essential
workers. Many moved to Rome, swelling the urban
poor.
Earlier republics, including Rome, had periodically erased
debts and eased slavery to reset
economic balances, but such measures waned in
the Late Republic. Expansion also strained
governance, as new territories were home to
communities who had fewer rights than Roman
citizens and paid heavily in taxes, further exposing the
Republic’s systemic inequities.
Policies aimed at addressing
inequality often ended up exacerbating it. The
Lex Claudia (218
BC), for instance, barred senators
and their sons from owning large commercial
ships to prevent them from dominating Rome’s
expanding maritime trade. But this mostly
benefited wealthy plebeians and other elites who
could afford their own fleets, widening economic
disparities.
Richer plebeians also
disproportionately benefited from privileges like access to higher
office, enabling only some to join the
senatorial elite. Meanwhile, the equestrian order emerged as a distinct
wealthy class rooted in Rome’s cavalry. Though
largely lacking formal political power, members
enjoyed elevated benefits and economic strength
that deepened Rome’s social stratification.
Many new elites became populist
reformers, or populares (“for the people”) who
were opposed to the senatorial elite, known as optimates (“best men”). Distinctions
between the two groups were not always strict—the populares included both new
aristocratic elites and sidelined senatorial
factions seeking to reclaim
influence lost to dominant optimates. The motivations of populares-aligned politicians ranged from
genuine reform to self-serving
opportunism, and they used plebeian support
to shift the power dynamic in their favor. Alliances
were fluid, showing how Roman politics
often prioritized status and influence over
rigid ideology.
Elite infighting further
motivated the plebeians to demand greater
equality by leveraging their numbers and
citizenship powers. Political gridlock became
more frequent, and violence escalated. Prominent
pro-plebeian leaders like Tiberius Gracchus (133
BC), Gaius Gracchus (121 BC), and Publius
Clodius Pulcher (52 BC) were assassinated,
alongside many of their supporters. In this way,
Roman politics devolved into a zero-sum struggle
where the defeated often faced death.
The use of violence and
intimidation to damage plebeian interests,
coupled with ongoing inequality, made them more
inclined to break with political
customs and precedents when it suited their
cause. Power was increasingly extended in
executive positions, with populares-aligned Gaius Marius holding seven
consulships, and citizen soldiers showing
increasing loyalty to individual commanders
rather than the state.
Marius’s eventual defeat by
patrician-allied Lucius Cornelius Sulla led to a
dramatic overcorrection. During his dictatorship
(82–79 BC), Sulla’s constitution aimed to curb
instability by empowering the old aristocracy and
Senate, severely weakening the
tribunes, and restricting the powers of citizenship.
The emboldened aristocracy did
little to address underlying economic
inequality. Ambitious figures like Pompey,
through military power, and Marcus Licinius
Crassus, through immense wealth, exploited these
tensions to consolidate power and play
kingmaker. Sulla’s reforms ultimately collapsed
under Julius Caesar, whose plebeian-friendly
policies bypassed the Senate by leveraging
popular assemblies, exposing the new fragility
of Rome’s legal system.
The growing glorification of
individual leaders reached a turning point
when Caesar became the first living Roman to
appear on a coin, a stark departure from
tradition. After being declared dictator for
life, his assassination by senators angered the
public and triggered a power struggle and civil
war. This ultimately led to the rise of Caesar’s
adopted heir, Octavian, who centralized
authority in 27 BC and later became known as
Augustus.
A facade of republican
governance was maintained, but many Romans,
associating it with chaos and instability,
willingly traded their political rights to
escape oligarchic rule, violence, and
uncertainty. When rumors spread of Octavian
relinquishing his special powers, public
sentiment opposed the idea. With the
establishment of the Roman Empire, an urban
proletariat dependent on state-sponsored food
distribution and entertained by spectacles like
gladiator games became increasingly pacified
under the strategy of “bread and circuses,”
solidifying the new order.
A reshuffling of the nobility,
suppression of opposition, and unchecked
territorial expansion fueled instability in
Republican Rome. However, persistent inequality
remained the Republic’s core weakness for its
500-year existence, coupled with flawed attempts
to address it.
These pose lessons for the U.S.
today. Inequality remains a core challenge in
the U.S. Once marked by strong social mobility,
at least for white residents, it has declined since the
1940s, initially due to the end of
the post-war boom but now reflecting deeper
systemic flaws. Compared to the EU, U.S. social
welfare lags, while policies like corporate
bailouts underscore how citizens bear the debt
burden while large corporations profit from
government intervention and lucrative contracts.
A culture of consumerism encourages U.S. citizens
to take on debt, mirroring the problems
of the Roman Republic, instead of building a more
efficient economic system.
Though there are notable
similarities between Republican Rome’s
challenges and those faced by the U.S., the
latter faces its own unique set of issues. In
Rome, the wealthy were directly involved in
political life, using their influence to shape
decisions. In contrast, U.S. elites exert
control through representatives, who, while not
typically from the uppermost of the wealthy
social classes, are incentivized to serve their
interests. This indirect control reduces the
accountability of the elite, as their influence
is masked by the modern U.S. political structure
and hidden from public view. Though corrupt or
inefficient politicians can be removed or
prosecuted, those truly pulling the strings
remain largely untouched, allowing the
pay-to-play political system to continue
unabated.
Rome’s political processes grew
opaque and less respected, a trend increasingly
seen in contested U.S. elections in recent
decades. While skepticism arose among Democrats
after George W. Bush’s controversial
victory in
2000 and Trump’s 2016
win, these doubts remained within
institutional boundaries. However, election
denial escalated dramatically with Trump’s
response to Joe Biden’s 2020 victory, and the ensuing 2021
insurrection marked a major challenge to the
peaceful transfer of power and trust in
electoral integrity.
Restoring trust in the process
requires clear rules on voting, role assignment,
and transparency in procedures. Laws crafted
through open processes rather than private deals
are crucial, allowing citizens to view the
electoral process and governance as fair,
smooth, and rooted in mutual understanding.
However, the dangers of
unrelenting public political engagement have
become more pronounced. Modern technology
enables 24/7 politicization, and constant
campaigning distracts from governance and risks
citizen burnout. Public apathy allows organized
elites to dominate politics, and, according to legal
scholar Ganesh Sitaraman, expanding the electorate can
even amplify factional power since only
well-resourced groups can effectively mobilize
and strategize.
The U.S. judiciary remains
distinct in its reliance on common law, a system
shared by a few English-speaking countries,
allowing adaptability through evolving
precedents as new cases are brought forward. The
use of juries places foundational responsibility
on citizens’ moral and legal judgment, ensuring
public participation. However, this system is
increasingly vulnerable to politicization, as judicial appointments and
voting processes for judges and other
judicial/law enforcement positions risk
undermining impartiality and fairness.
The Founding Fathers meanwhile
opposed political parties, fearing factionalism
would fracture national unity. Today, the two
major parties and their supporters increasingly
treat politics as a sports rivalry, prioritizing spectacle over
policy debate. Both parties leverage
entertainment for engagement—Ronald Reagan
became the first actor-president in 1981,
followed by entertainer Trump in 2017, while
Democrats have consistently relied on
the power of celebrity to attract voters. This
reliance on high-profile public figures allows
citizens to disengage, as these amplified
individuals are granted tacit approval to shape
policy—even when they lack the expertise to do
so—reducing the public’s role in democratic
governance to passive spectatorship.
Violent rhetoric undermines the
culture of compromise essential to republics.
While Trump is commonly
associated with this trend in the
U.S. (and remains its most persistent
voice), Democrats
have also contributed. Political violence, once
largely directed at major figures in the U.S. in
the 1960s and 1970s, now increasingly
threatens local officials as well.
Comments about the existential
danger posed by political opponents have been
consistently undercut by post-election embraces.
President Obama welcomed Trump to the
White House after the latter’s
election victory in 2016, just as Biden did in
2024, while Trump also softened his
tone toward them after victories. These radical
shifts in messaging reveal the performative
nature of politicians’ language and weaken the
credibility of political discourse.
A healthy republic resorts to
war as a last option, relying on public support
and deliberation. Yet although Congress holds
the constitutional authority to declare war, it
has not done so since 1941. Instead, executive war powers
have expanded through the abuse of emergency
provisions, sidelining public influence in
decisions of war and peace. Numerous presidents
have labeled major recent wars like Vietnam,
Iraq, and Afghanistan as mistakes, eroding trust
in leadership to responsibly conduct war.
The Trump administration now
faces the challenge of addressing immigration
and undocumented populations. Past policies like
Reagan’s Amnesty Bill and Obama’s executive
action for so-called Dreamers caused friction
and had far-reaching political consequences.
Immigration was a central issue in the
2024 election, with Trump likely to enjoy
strong support for a crackdown on undocumented
people.
Solutions, however, must go
beyond piecemeal fixes or mass deportations,
which risk violating human rights and republican
ideals. Similarly, less draconian approaches,
such as those pursued under Biden, also fail to
resolve the core issues of immigration reform
and enforcement. Rome offers a cautionary tale:
patricians and plebeians showed rare unity in
the Late Republic when they united against
Gracchus after he pledged to extend
citizenship rights to other
populations. The issue demonstrates the need to
widen responsibility. The U.S. economy benefits from labor tied
to undocumented populations, and the root causes of
migration, including decades of U.S.
intervention in Latin America, must also be acknowledged.
The U.S. was originally founded
as a republican league of states but quickly
recognized the need for national unity to ensure
defense and economic unity. Over time, the
growing centralization of authority in Washington eroded the balance of this
system and led to fears of ever-expanding
executive power, particularly over matters of
war. This consolidation of power enabled a more
assertive and interventionist foreign policy,
allowing the federal government to project power
globally.
Yet U.S. states retain
significant rights, functioning in a federated
system with distributed powers that allow states
to experiment with their
own agendas. The areas in which they can do
so include health care reforms, voting rights,
and working together to counterbalance federal
authority.
American citizens also benefit
from strong protections enshrined in the Bill of
Rights, which, despite historical flaws in terms
of racial and gender equity, established
safeguards against government overreach.
However, a hesitance to fully leverage these
rights remains, partly due to ignorance. Rights
intended to benefit all citizens, such as the
right to bear arms, or judicially determined
issues like access to abortion, frequently
evolve into sources of
contention, framed as victories for one
side rather than universal benefits. This risks
turning benefits into partisan battlegrounds,
undermining their broader societal purpose. Many
rights Americans enjoy were secured not by
courts interpreting the Constitution but through
legislative action driven by social movements,
showing that the true source of rights lies
within the collective efforts of citizens and
lawmakers.
U.S. presidents have been
generally unable to radically alter the nation’s
political system, though the Jacksonian era
proves there are exceptions. Andrew Jackson’s
presidency (1829–1837), as well as the years
immediately before and after, solidified the
two-party system, expanded the use of veto
power, and centralized executive authority,
reshaping the role of the presidency. Jackson, a
populist, challenged corrupt elites and the
political establishment but also aggravated
tensions between the federal and state
governments.
Democratic participation was
broadened, but it was limited to white men, and
resulted in officeholders being replaced with
people loyal to individuals, with support for
the continuity of slavery and the ethnic
cleansing of Native Americans.
Concentrating authority away
from the executive in a few oversight bodies or
enlarged bureaucracy can also backfire, often
encouraging corruption rather than transparency.
For example, legislative reforms for campaign
finance in the 1970s, intended to increase
transparency, inadvertently fueled an
increase in lobbying, attack ads,
and exploitation of the electoral process. This
shift, intended to curb corporate influence,
instead deepened it, allowing corporations and
interest groups to find new ways to wield power.
The Founding Fathers, while focused on
preventing tyranny through checks and balances,
could not foresee the enormous role that
corporate interests would play in shaping
political outcomes, creating a system where
legal monetary contributions increasingly
dictate policy.
The U.S. faces a major struggle
in adapting its republican system to the
realities of the 21st century. While executive
power has been pivotal in addressing monumental
issues, such as the abolition of slavery, it
also carries a risk of abuse. Efforts to
forcefully reform republics from the top down,
like those seen in Rome, often impose rigid
systems that fail to meet society’s evolving
needs. On the other hand, an over-reliance on
populist people power without the necessary
safeguards can lead to impulsive decisions and
destabilized governance.
Rejecting populism does not
equate to diminishing civic engagement; rather,
it calls for more sophisticated participation
for constructive political processes. U.S.
citizens retain significant power, including the
right to gather, protest, and exercise free
speech and association. Realizing the full
potential of these rights and their responsible
use requires a deeper understanding of the
political system and a commitment to responsible
use. This can be achieved by learning from other
countries that cultivate republican values
through education and habits from a young age,
supported by public funding, and promoting
political legitimacy through transparency and
participation. Ignoring the need to address the
decline in civic culture and public
understanding of the system of government will
further weaken the foundation of democratic
practices.
Reforming the U.S. republic is
essential, but institutions like the Bipartisan
Policy Center, despite their efforts to
bridge divides, have been criticized
for being compromised by corporate interests,
which exposes the system’s vulnerability to such
interference. Over time, bipartisanship has
become entrenched as a long-term alignment in
support of big-money interests and an
imperialist foreign policy, sidelining efforts for
systemic change and diverging sharply from the
best aspects of the early U.S. vision.
Contrastingly, the current
discourse around reform is often filtered
through partisan lenses, populism, or
authoritarian impulses, with many advocating for
quick fixes rather than substantive solutions.
Meaningful reform, however, will be a slow and
contentious process, and progress will remain
elusive without addressing the root causes of
major problems and accepting a collective
responsibility to solve them.
This commentary was produced
by Human
Bridges.
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