SOVEREIGNTY, SELF-GOVERNMENT AND
GLOBAL GOVERNMENT
A WORLD FEDERALIST PERSPECTIVE
by John O. Sutter
J.OS.s article was a finalist in the World Utopian Essay contest- based
out of Stockholm, Sweden. The complete text here, has been printed in parts,
in the Winter and Spring 2002 issues of TDWF. It has also been printed in
full in the year 2002, number1 issue of The Federalist.
INTRODUCTION
We offer a concept of sovereignty and, derived therefrom,
views on self-determination, self-government, and ultimately a democratic,
federal system for governing the world. This reflects a Weltanschauung quite
different from one with a concept of sovereignty and its consequences still
found in many circles.
BREAKDOWN OF THE CONCEPT OF THE OMNIPOTENT
SOVEREIGN
For three centuries after the treaties of Westphalia,
as the concept of the absolute monarch was gradually eroded, the focus of
sovereignty -- the authority to rule and powers that proceed therefrom --
gradually passed from the ruling "sovereign" to the government of
his territory or even to the territory itself, especially to the nation state.
Nevertheless, while the post-Westphalian state-centered
concept of sovereignty persisted in most circles, two paradigm changes were
gradually being felt. First, the Reformation had broken the totalitarian control
asserted by the Papacy and its clergy, who had intervened not only in the
affairs of faith but also in the affairs of state and demanded absolute fealty,
claiming to be agents of a sovereign deity. Later, although the Protestant
clergy claimed to inherit the powers of their Catholic predecessors in the
secular realm, after the Renaissance restored knowledge of Greek democratic
government and the Roman Republic, the Enlightenment led to the gradual separation
of the clergy from secular affairs and helped break down the monopoly or oligopoly
in the sphere of government asserted by families of the monarchy and aristocracies.
DEMOCRATIZATIION OF SOVEREIGNTY
These socio-cultural developments contributed to the
two major revolutions of the 18th Century, which resulted in the United States
of America and the French Republic -- secular republics that discarded hereditary
rulers and established religions. In them, the authority to rule -- to establish
governments and make laws -- passed from persons at the centers of the polities
to their individual members, the citizens, namely, the People. At the same
time, a new political entity was created in America -- the federation -- to
unify and accommodate the people of a large and diverse territory, instead
of either a weak league or confederation of states (as previously in America)
or a highly centralized unitary state (as in France).
The concept of First Principles -- the sovereign authority and the legislative
power of citizens to create and alter governments, constitutions, charters
and laws (1) -- was widespread during the American Revolution. The Virginia
Declaration of Rights, largely drafted by George Mason and adopted by the
Virginia Constitutional Convention on 12 June 1776, asserted that:
"[A]ll power is vested in, and consequently derived from, the people..."
and
"[W]hen any government shall be found inadequate or contrary to [the
common benefit, protection, and security of the people, nation, or community],
a majority of the community has an indubitable, inalienable, and indefeasible
right to reform, alter, or abolish it..." (2)
Three weeks later, the Declaration of Independence by thirteen of the American
colonies, drafted by the Virginian Thomas Jefferson, proclaimed not only that
"all men are created equal" (a universal principle of equal rights),
but also:
"[G]overnments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from
the consent of the governed..." and "[I]t is the right of the people
to alter or abolish [a destructive government] and to institute new government."
Since the weak American Confederacy under the League of Friendship and Articles
of Confederation wasn't viable, James Madison and Alexander Hamilton promoted
a new federal constitution in Philadelphia in 1787. In seeking to have the
sovereignty of the people reflected in this basic document, Madison was supported
by two other delegates who promoted democracy, Mason and the Scottish-Pennsylvanian
James Wilson.
In covering letters to Jefferson, Virginia Governor Edmund Randolph, and General
George Washington in April 1787, Madison called his working paper (which became
known as the Virginia Plan) perhaps the earliest draft of "a Constitutional
Govt for the Union...to be sanctioned by the people of the States, acting
in their original & sovereign character." In the Constitutional Convention,
he and Wilson proposed that the authority of the "first branch"
of the legislature (eventually the House of Representatives) flow from the
legitimate source of all authority -- the People. Madison also insisted that
the Constitution be ratified "by the supreme authority of the people
themselves," not by the legislatures of the member states. And when a
delegate questioned on what authority could a recently independent state accede
to the new federation when that state's constitution had no provision therefor,
he responded:
"The People were in fact, the fountain of all power... They could alter
constitutions as they pleased. It was a principle in the Bills of rights,
that first principles might be resorted to."(3)
When assuming the task of drafting the first amendments to the Federal Constitution
as a Representative in the 1st Congress in 1789, Madison sought to have the
above-cited words from the Virginia Declaration of Rights inserted at the
beginning of the Constitution. However, conservative legislators watered down
the reference to the powers and rights of the People to what became the 9th
and 10th Amendments.
Barely two months after Madison's drafting, as the French populace revolted
against their perceived domestic oppressors -- the monarchy, the aristocracy,
and the clergy -- the new National Assembly promulgated the Declaration of
the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, which proclaimed:
"The law is the expression of the will of the community. All citizens
have a right to play a role, either personally, or by their representatives,
in its formation." 'dkl In both instances, exercising their sovereign
authority, the People delegated powers to governments of their communities,
including their (member) republics and the federal republican union, in the
case of the U.S.A., or to their unitary republic, as in France.
A century and a half later, in 1948, these principles were recognized in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which was approved by the United Nations
General Assembly. Article 21 states:
"The will of the people shall be the basis of the authority of government...
"Everyone has the right to take part in the government of his country,
either directly or through freely chosen representatives..."
APPLICATION OF SOVEREIGNTY TO GOVERNING THE WORLD
The notion that nation-states are sovereign continued
to dominate thought throughout the 20th Century. Consequently, at the San
Francisco Conference in 1945, the Charter of the United Nations Organization
perpetuated the example of its doomed predecessor, the League of Nations,
by basing the U.N.O. on "the principle of the sovereign equality of all
its Members."(4) The drafters of the Charter's Preamble did give a nod
to the Preamble of the United States Constitution by opening with the words
"We the Peoples of the United Nations" (reportedly made at the insistence
of an American citizens organization rather than by delegates of governments).
Yet, in practice, by perpetuating the obsolescing concept of sovereignty,
the Preamble might just as well have retained the traditional form of introducing
treaties, as in the opening words of the League's Covenant, namely: "the
High Contracting Parties." The Charter was not a democratic, nor potentially
democratic, constitution by the people(s) of the world, and it effectively
lacked the means of being transformed into one.
Another significant event was a publication at the end of the devastating
Second World War by Emery Reves, the Hungarian-born newsentrepreneur. He declared
in The Anatomy of Peace that it was time for another revolutionary concept,
a new paradigm shift in thinking, to be realized. If the people could delegate
powers to make, execute and adjudicate laws to governments of their local
communities, provinces, and nation-states, they had the same authority to
transfer some powers to a government of their global community -- the world.(5)
WORLD FEDERALIST WORLD VIEWS
Such democratic and global ideas contributed directly
in the decade of the Nineties to three major pronouncements by activists in
different groups of World Federalists. Already during World War II the Student
Federalists in the United States had called for a radically different democratic
world government. Subsequently, in 1947, several American groups merged into
the United World Federalists (now the World Federalist Association--W.F.A.).
Also in 1947 the U.W.F. and World Federalists in Canada, Western European,
and Asian countries became affiliated with the World Movement for World Federal
Government (now the World Federalist Movement--W.F.M.). However, the momentum
for a democratic federalist global campaign was soon stalled as Stalin, the
dictator of the Soviet Union, launched the Cold War by forcibly occupying
East-Central Europe and imposing Communist governments, while labeling the
World Federalists as Fascists. Fortunately, at the start of the Nineties,
Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, who himself came to advocate a form of
democratic world government,(6) brought about the ending of the Cold War (and
the inadvertent collapse of the Soviet Union and its empire in Eastern Europe).
Now, for the first time in a half-century the realization of two goals appeared
possible, namely, implementing throughout the world the 18th Century concept
of sovereignty vested in the People, and planning for the world itself to
be democratically governed.
I. In 1997, in an effort to move from the conventional wisdom that sovereignty
is absolute and lies in the nation-state, the W.F.A. issued an updated definition:
"SOVEREIGNTY--The authority to form and change the government
of a state or other political unit and to govern it in internal and external
affairs," limited by generally accepted moral principles, the civil rights
of people, customary international law, and applicable international treaties
(including the United Nations Charter. Although rulers of unitary authoritarian
states and empires may claim sovereign powers over their subject populations,
in democratic states or other self-governing political units, sovereignty
is "the legitimate authority of the citizens, who may exercise their
powers to govern (i) directly, as in small units or, more usually (ii) indirectly,
by delegating and entrusting powers to their representatives and officials
in accord with a constitution." In democratic federal systems, sovereignty
is "the legitimate authority of the citizens, who delegate, entrust,
and distribute powers among the governments of the central union, and the
member political units in accord with a federal constitution.(7)
II. A committee of the World Federalist Movement,
whose members came from a dozen countries on four continents, drafted in 1998/99
a statement of principles on Federalism and the Right of People to Self-Government.
Among the principles it proposed were:
"The source of sovereignty - legitimate
authority to govern - is the citizens, who associate together and delegate
and entrust powers outward to institutions of government in increasingly larger
communities. In a federal system, powers are distributed to governments of
communities at different levels...
"Each inhabitant may be a citizen not only of smaller communities but
also ultimately of the Earth's polity. Citizens have a right to democratic
government and to participation, either directly or through freely chosen
representatives, in the governments of their respective communities..."
"Indispensable elements of democracy include periodic free and fair elections,
by secret ballot, with universal suffrage for adult citizens and regulation
of campaign financing, equality before the law and an independent judicial
system, civilian control of the military, freedom of belief, speech, and assembly,
and free media. Also desirable are: separation of the state and religious
authorities, limited terms of office of officials (appointed as well as elected),
widely available education, the initiative, referendum, and recall, and ombudsmen
to assure accountability of officials, protect human rights and safeguard
against corruption.
"An oppressive ruler often insists that his/her regime is 'sovereign'
with license to rule the subject people, immune from 'interference in its
internal affairs' by the outside world. However, having been usurped from
the people, his/her power is illegitimate. Thus the world community through
the United Nations should feel obligated to find a means to restore to the
oppressed people their basic rights. In a democratic world federation the
rights of all groups would be safeguarded, precluding the rise of tyrants."(8)
III. A public benefit corporation founded early in
the Nineties in California primarily by World Federalists, Philadelphia II
by 2000 was promoting the National Initiative for Democracy. Following First
Principles -- the authority of the people to create, alter, and dissolve their
governments -- as exercised by the Framers of the Federal Constitution (in
Philadelphia I) and by the ratifying conventions, Philadelphia II has drafted
the Democracy Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and the Democracy Act. The
Preamble of the latter proclaims:
"We, the People of the United States inherently possess the sovereign
authority and power to govern ourselves. We asserted this power in our Declaration
of Independence and in the ratification of our Constitution through the exercise
of First Principles..."(9)
The proposed law would reform and extend the initiative
process to all jurisdictions within the United States. Comparable direct democracy
movements are at work in other countries, especially in Europe. It follows
that First Principles can be construed to apply universally.
DEMOCRACY VS. TYRANNY
Despite all the declarations of the right of people
to self-government, resistance remains great among pessimistic devotees of
Realpolitik -- both politicians and academics -- to enfranchising millions
of the disenfranchised. Apologists for oppressors repeat their shibboleth,
that their regimes, being "sovereign," may work their will on unfortunate
subjects free from outside interference in their internal affairs.
Opponents of the right of self-determination claim that if it were exercised,
violence might result. However, as observed in 1999 by a Filipino civic activist
referring to East Timor, and as asserted by numerous Americans and Europeans
in recent decades with Tibet and Palestine in mind, "[V]iolence is a
result not of the exercise of the right of self-determination but of the attempt
to suppress or deny it."(10) Finally, in certain cases of gross discrimination
and continuing violations of fundamental human rights, especially ethnic cleansing,
recognition of this as a basis for a remedial right to secession is growing.
Moreover, in 1991, not long after Idi Amin and Pol Pot wrought disaster on
their peoples with impunity, and after Saddam Hussein attacked the Kuwaitis
following his ethnic cleansing of Kurds, the Foreign Ministers of Canada,
Germany, Italy, and the Soviet Union all asserted that the world community
should take action for humanitarian purposes against such tyrants.(11)
Meanwhile, in 1999 with Slobodan Milosevic, the destroyer of Yugoslavia, still
in power, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, before the General Assembly,
called for balancing the concept of state sovereignty with individual sovereignty,
declaring:
"State sovereignty is being redefined by the forces of globalization
and international cooperation. The state is now widely understood to be the
servant of its people, not vice versa. At the same time, individual sovereignty
-- the human rights and fundamental freedoms of each and every individual
as enshrined in our Charter -- has been enhanced by a renewed consciousness
of the right of every individual to control his or her own destiny."The
core challenge to the United Nations in the next century, he continued, is
"to forge unity behind the principle that massive and systematic violations
of human rights -- wherever they may take place -- should not be allowed to
stand." We are in "an era when strictly traditional notions of sovereignty
can no longer do justice to the aspirations of peoples everywhere to attain
their fundamental freedoms." (12)
THE FUTURE
What about the future? The federation of American States
arose out of their War of Independence. The European Union -- evolving into
a European Federation -- was born from two destructive World Wars. The system
of anarchy that persists in the world today makes it difficult to take action
against perpetrators of crimes against humanity. Nevertheless, in addition
to the intermediate step of putting an International Criminal Court into operation,
the answer to world crimes -- along with solutions to global problems that
countries acting alone cannot solve -- may lie sooner rather than later in
the People of the World becoming aware of the need for, and striving to exercise
their sovereignty through, a federal system of governing the world, a system
of the People, by the People, and for the People.
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