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    Home » Democracy Doesn’t Collapse Overnight, It Erodes Through Disrespect
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    Democracy Doesn’t Collapse Overnight, It Erodes Through Disrespect

    Megan BurrowsBy Megan BurrowsDecember 18, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    These days, democracy rarely collapses due to spectacle. It gradually fades, becoming less dependable under pressure but still standing, much like a bridge losing bolts one by one.

    Tone, not policy, is frequently the first to suffer harm. The system starts to absorb stress that it was never intended to handle for very long when public discourse changes from disagreement to contempt.

    Key ContextDetails
    Core principleDemocracy depends on shared norms and mutual respect
    Central vulnerabilityErosion of unwritten democratic behavior
    Foundational normsMutual toleration and institutional restraint
    Common danger signsDelegitimizing rivals, abusing legal authority
    Scholarly groundingSteven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt
    Referencehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_Democracies_Die

    Similar to the oil in an engine, respect is largely invisible when it is present but is incredibly necessary to keep rival parts moving without wearing each other down.

    Losing an election is viewed as temporary and even disappointing in healthy democracies. This acceptance is especially helpful because it gives everyone confidence that involvement is still worthwhile.

    Losing is reframed as theft when respect wanes. Compromise begins to resemble surrender, and opponents are no longer rivals but imposters. This change is remarkably similar in many political systems. Legitimacy is questioned by leaders, echoed by supporters, and subtly absorbed by institutions under pressure intended for public discussion.

    Constitutions do not contain democratic norms. Even though the rules technically permit excess, they are ingrained behaviors that teach restraint. Two of these behaviors are deemed necessary by political scientists. One is mutual toleration, which holds that competitors who win fairly have an equal right to rule.

    The second is restraint, which means that even when taking advantage of every opportunity would be both legally feasible and immediately profitable, power is used with caution. Institutions undergo character changes once these behaviors wane. Courts begin to look like tools. Instead of being places for meetings, legislatures feel more like barricades.

    It’s like a swarm of bees losing their coordination. Even though each action may seem insignificant, the overall result becomes chaotic and difficult to undo. This decline is accelerated by polarization. Moderation becomes politically costly as camps harden, and respect is characterized as weakness.

    Those who promise certainty drown out leaders who speak calmly. Outrage takes the place of persuasion, and loudness takes the place of credibility.

    Accountability deteriorates with time. Reporters are viewed as adversaries. Judges are portrayed as being biased. Instead of being a safeguard, oversight is referred to as sabotage.

    Democracy depends on the belief that the law will be upheld even when the results are painful. Every election feels existential without that trust, and patience is scarce. I recall being unnerved by how normal the situation seemed when I saw a senior official dismiss an entire voting bloc as illegitimate during a regular press briefing.

    The reason modern democratic breakdown works so well is because it seems orderly. Legislation is passed. Courts make decisions. Elections are still going on. But the material quietly evaporates. Participation persists, but confidence is drastically diminished, resulting in a system that appears familiar but acts differently.

    This change involves citizens. Voters unintentionally support a precedent that seldom stays contained when they justify norm-breaking because it helps their side. This dynamic is especially risky because, in the short term, disrespect frequently feels empowering. It enlivens supporters and streamlines narratives.

    But eventually, it makes democracy fragile. The system can no longer absorb shocks or self-correct when there is no shared baseline left. This tension is reflected in civic life. Discussions become more focused. Individuals withdraw into more intimate groups. Instead of feeling communal, public areas are tense.

    It is fatigue, not apathy, that causes participation to decline. Instead of feeling like a shared investment, democracy starts to feel like a continual emergency. It’s common to confuse civility with politeness. It is structural in actuality. It permits criticism without dehumanization and disagreement without collapse.

    By recognizing that governance is a continuous process rather than a final decision, respect makes space for mistakes and learning. Rebuilding respect is encouraging. In contrast to institutions, norms react swiftly to example and leadership.

    Others frequently follow leaders who exhibit restraint. Supporters adjust their expectations when they publicly concede defeat. History demonstrates that democracies bounce back when people demand norms that transcend the law and reward actions that foster trust rather than stoke fear.

    This is not naive optimism. It is a real-world observation based on instances where democratic systems recovered from difficult times. Decorative language does not equate to respect. Quietly supporting everything else, it is operational infrastructure.

    Once it is restored, it strengthens institutions, makes participation more significant, and makes disagreement safer. Democracy endures because enough people decide to continue operating under the same set of rules, not because everyone agrees. Respect is where that agreement starts and can start again.

    Why Democracy Dies When Respect Does
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    Megan Burrows
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    Political writer and commentator Megan Burrows is renowned for her keen insight, well-founded analysis, and talent for identifying the emotional undertones of British politics. Megan brings a unique combination of accuracy and compassion to her work, having worked in public affairs and policy research for ten years, with a background in strategic communications.

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