2014-07-11 Reform

Recently, Jürgen Hubert shared a link to a Foreign Policy post and said on Google+ that while the German system wasn’t perfect, at least it *worked*.

a Foreign Policy post

on Google+

Some people commented and said they agreed. I wrote that from what I heared Germans in Switzerland say, many like it here as well. I love the Swiss system. And the weird thing is: the Swiss Federal Constitution of 1848 “was *influenced by the ideas of the constitution of the United States of America* and the French Revolution.” (Emphasis mine.)

Swiss Federal Constitution

I guess what I’m trying to say is that I wholly support efforts by Lawrence Lessig: Rootstrikes.

Lawrence Lessig

Rootstrikes

I just finished listening to the latest bunch of episodes about the American Revolution and the drafting of the United States Constitution, and the List of amendments to the United States Constitution, at the Revolutions Podcast. Excellent material if you’re into podcasts at all.

United States Constitution

List of amendments to the United States Constitution

Revolutions Podcast

When I read the FP article, I felt disappointed because of its shallow analysis. What about Exportweltmeister and the price the Germans paid, stagnating wages? What about the discussions of the 5% hurdle after recent elections? What about the historic justifications for the Senate in order to convince smaller entities to join the federation? These can be an important issue in heterogeneous federation like Switzerland (there was a time when each canton had its own currency)—and possibly also of interest for nations after a civil war (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Lebanon, Syria) or countries where so many regions strive for more autonomy and the state is always in fear of breaking apart (Spain, Italy). So yes, the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany is great. But the US has its United States Bill of Rights, and a Constitutional Court, and that’s great. In contrast, Switzerland allows its citizens to easily amend the constitution, but there is no constitutional court, so sometimes issues linger for *years* before appropriate laws get passed! So it would seem to me that the US has all the tools it needs. I suspect it has mostly *a broken process*. Something needs reform, but I’m not sure that the German system is a good place to start looking.

Exportweltmeister

Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany

United States Bill of Rights

​#USA ​#Germany ​#Switzerland ​#Podcast