Explanations have been offered for the Brexit vote that
stunned the world’s opinion-makers. George Weigel offers his thoughts at FIRST
THINGS. He suggests that explanations in
the press are missing something.
The conventional wisdom, Weigel says, refers to: a perceived
loss of national sovereignty to a transnational organization; concerns over
current EU immigration policy and the effect of open EU borders on jobs and the
rule of law; frustrations with petty bureaucratic regulation by EU mandarins in
Brussels. Together, these amount to what’s often called the EU’s “democracy
deficit” . . .
Weigel comments:
“I’d like to suggest another, perhaps deeper, answer to the
question of the EU’s current distress, though: To put it bluntly, the
“democracy deficit” is a reflection of Europe’s “God-deficit.” Let me connect
the dots.
The founding fathers of today’s European Union—which began
as the European Coal and Steel Community before morphing into the European
Common Market and then the EU—were, in the main, Catholics: Italy’s Alcide de
Gasperi, West Germany’s Konrad Adenauer, France’s Robert Schumann. Appalled by
the self-destruction that Europe had wrought in two world wars, they sought an
answer to aggressive nationalism in economic partnerships that would bind the
West Franks (the French) to the East Franks (the Germans) so that war between
them would be inconceivable. It was a practical idea, it worked, and it was
understood to be the first step toward forms of political partnership and
integration.
The wager underlying this project, as these men conceived
it, was that there was enough of Christian or biblical culture left in Europe
to sustain democratic pluralism in a “union” of sovereign states that would
respect national and regional distinctiveness. And that Christian or biblical
“remainder” involved the Catholic social-ethical principle of “subsidiarity”:
the idea that decision-making should be left at the lowest possible local level
(as in classic American federalism, where local governments do some things,
state governments do other things, and the national government does things that
local and state governments can’t do).
“Subsidiarity” is a check against the tendency of all modern
states to concentrate power at the center—which explains why the principle was
first articulated by Pope Pius XI in 1931, as the shadow of totalitarianism
lengthened across Europe. Respect for the social-ethical principle of
“subsidiarity” also implies respect for cultural difference. And that, in turn,
assumes that human beings arrive at universal commitments—such as respect for
basic human rights—through particular experiences, not through generalized
abstractions. Or as Polish editor Jerzy Turowicz said to me twenty-five years
ago, John Paul II was a “European” because he was a Cracovian, the heir of a
particular experience of pluralism and tolerance, not despite the fact that he
came from that unique cultural milieu.
When biblical religion collapsed, as it manifestly has in
most of Old Europe and too much of New Europe after 1989, commitments to
subsidiarity and its respect for difference imploded as well. The vacuum was
then filled by a monochromatic, anti-pluralist notion of “democracy”. Embodied
in EU law and enforced by unaccountable bureaucrats and EU courts, the results
of this decayed democratic idea went far beyond idiotic regulations on the
shape of tomatoes and bananas to include a concerted attempt to impose a single
political culture in Europe, best described as the culture of personal
autonomy—the Culture of the Self. That pseudo-culture is the hollowed-out shell
of the Christian personalism that once inspired de Gasperi, Adenauer, Schumann,
and the mid-20th-century Christian Democratic parties of Europe. And its
political by-product is the EU’s “democracy deficit.”
Forty years ago, German constitutional scholar
Ernst-Friedrich Boeckenfoerde argued that the modern liberal-democratic state
faced a dilemma: It rested on the foundation of moral-cultural premises—social
capital—that it could not itself generate. Put another way, it takes a certain
kind of people, formed by a certain kind of culture to live certain virtues, to
keep liberal democracy from decaying into new forms of authoritarianism—more
pungently described in 2005 by a distinguished European intellectual, Joseph
Ratzinger, as a “dictatorship of relativism.” The Boeckenfoerde Dilemma is on
full display in the European Union, which is in deep trouble because of a
democracy deficit that is, at bottom, a subsidiarity-deficit caused by a
God-deficit.
Americans [and Canadians] would be very foolish to think
ourselves immune to a similar crisis of political culture."
George Weigel is
Distinguished Senior Fellow of Washington, D. C.’s Ethics and Public Policy
Center, where he holds the William E. Simon Chair in Catholic Studies.
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