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Title: Democracy and Anarchy
Author: Errico Malatesta
Date: March 1924
Language: en
Topics: critique, democracy
Source: The Anarchist Revolution: Polemical Articles 1924–1931, edited and introduced by Vernon Richards. Published by Freedom Press London 1995.  Retrieved on March 4th, 2009 from http://www.marxists.org/archive/malatesta/1924/03/democracy.htm.
Notes: This article first appeared in Malatesta’s journal Pensiero e Volontà in March 1924. This translation by Gillian Fleming was published in *The Anarchist Revolution* edited by Vernon Richards, Freedom Press 1995.

Errico Malatesta

Democracy and Anarchy

The rampant dictatorial governments in Italy, Spain and Russia, which

arouse such envy and longing among the more reactionary and timid

parties across the world, are supplying dispossessed ‘democracy’ with a

sort of new virginity. Thus we see the creatures of the old regimes,

well-accustomed to the wicked art of politics, responsible for

repression and massacres of working people, re-emerging — where they do

not lack the courage — and presenting themselves as men of progress,

seeking to capture the near future in the name of liberation. And, given

the situation, they could even succeed.

There is something to be said for the criticisms made of democracy by

dictatorial regimes, and the way they expose the vices and lies of

democracy. And I remember that anarchist, Hermann Sandomirski, a

Bolshevik fellowtraveller with whom we had bittersweet contact at the

time of the Geneva conference, and who is now trying to couple Lenin

with Bakunin, no less; I say I remember Sandomirski who in order to

defend the Russian regime dragged out his Kropotkin to demonstrate that

democracy is not the best imaginable form of social structure. His

method of reasoning, as a Russian, put me in mind and I think I told him

so — of the reasoning made by some of his compatriots when, in response

to the indignation of the civilised world at the Tsar’s stripping,

flogging and hanging of women, they argued that if men and women were to

have equal rights they should also accept equal responsibilities. Those

supporters of prison and the scaffold remembered the rights of women

only when they could serve as a pretext for new outrages ! Thus

dictatorships oppose democratic governments only when they discover that

there is a form of government which leaves even greater room for

despotism and tyranny for those who manage to seize power.

For me there is no doubt that the worst of democracies is always

preferable, if only from the educational point of view, than the best of

dictatorships. Of course democracy, so-called government of the people,

is a lie; but the lie always slightly binds the liar and limits the

extent of his arbitrary power. Of course the ‘sovereign people’ is a

clown of a sovereign, a slave with a papier-maché crown and sceptre.

But to believe oneself free, even when one is not, is always better than

to know oneself to be a slave, and to accept slavery as something just

and inevitable.

Democracy is a lie, it is oppression and is in reality, oligarchy; that

is, government by the few to the advantage of a privileged class. But we

can still fight it in the name of freedom and equality, unlike those who

have replaced it or want to replace it with something worse.

We are not democrats for, among other reasons, democracy sooner or later

leads to war and dictatorship. Just as we are not supporters of

dictatorships, among other things, because dictatorship arouses a desire

for democracy, provokes a return to democracy, and thus tends to

perpetuate a vicious circle in which human society oscillates between

open and brutal tyranny and a the and lying freedom.

So, we declare war on dictatorship and war on democracy. But what do we

put in their place?

Not all democrats are like those described above — hypocrites who are

more or less aware that in the name of the people they wish to dominate

the people and exploit and oppress them.

There are many, especially among the young republicans, who have a

serious belief in democracy and see it as the means of obtaining full

and complete freedom of development for all. These are the young people

we should like to disabuse, persuade not to mistake an abstraction, ‘the

people’, for the living reality, which is men and women with all their

different needs, passions and often contradictory aspirations.

It is not the intention here to repeat our critique of the parliament

system and all the means thought up to have deputies who really do

represent the will of the people; a critique which, after fifty years

anarchist propaganda is at last accepted and even repeated by those

writers who most affect to despise our ideas (e.g. Political Science by

Senator Gaetano Mosca).

We will limit ourselves to inviting our young friends to use greater

precision of language, in the conviction that once the phrases are

dissected they themselves will see how vacuous they are.

‘Government of the people’ no, because this presupposes what could never

happen — complete unanimity of will of all the individuals that make up

the people.

It would be closer to the truth to say, ‘government of the majority of

the people.’ This implies a minority that must either rebel or submit to

the will of others.

But it is never the case that the representatives of the majority of

people are all of the same mind on all questions; it is therefore

necessary to have recourse again to the majority system and thus we will

get closer still to the truth with ‘government of the majority of the

elected by the majority of the electors.’

Which is already beginning to bear a strong resemblance to minority

government.

And if one then takes into account the way in which elections are held,

how the political parties and parliamentary groupings are formed and how

laws are drawn up and voted and applied, it is easy to understand what

has already been proved by universal historical experience: even in the

most democratic of democracies it is always a small minority that rules

and imposes its will and interests by force.

Therefore, those who really want ‘government of the people’ in the sense

that each can assert his or her own will, ideas and needs, must ensure

that no-one, majority or minority, can rule over others; in other words,

they must abolish government, meaning any coercive organisation, and

replace it with the free organisation of those with common interests and

aims.

This would be very simple if every group and individual could live in

isolation and on their own, in their own way, supporting themselves

independently of the rest, supplying their own material and moral needs.

But this is not possible, and if it were, it would not be desirable

because it would mean the decline of humanity into barbarism and

savagery.

If they are determined to defend their own autonomy, their own liberty,

every individual or group must therefore understand the ties of

solidarity that bind them to the rest of humanity, and possess a fairly

developed sense of sympathy and love for their fellows, so as to know

how voluntarily to make those sacrifices essential to life in a society

that brings the greatest possible benefits on every given occasion.

But above all it must be made impossible for some to impose themselves

on, and sponge off, the vast majority by material force.

Let us abolish the gendarme, the man armed in the service of the despot,

and in one way or another we shall reach free agreement, because without

such agreement, free or forced, it is not possible to live.

But even free agreement will always benefit most those who are

intellectually and technically prepared. We therefore recommend to our

friends and those who truly wish the good of all, to study the most

urgent problems, those that will require a practical solution the very

day that the people shake off the yoke that oppresses them.