Abstract
An emerging branch of political theory, ‘the politics of dissensus’, starts out from the premise that in order to understand the politics of constitutional democracies, one needs to focus on parliamentary politics, which compromises both institutional settings and debates. Politics takes place among adversaries, and dissensus and argumentation pro et contra is the rule. The focus on the conditions for consensus in contemporary democratic theory accordingly misses the essence of politics. The politics of dissensus tends to think that the political philosophy inaugurated by John Rawls, political liberalism in particular, is too idealistic and utopian to capture real parliamentary politics. I argue that this basic objection against political liberalism is misconceived. To the contrary, the politics of dissensus and political liberalism supplement each other. The impact of my argument is that research in these disparate fields of political studies ought to enlighten each of them.
I The topic
In ‘Has Philosophy Lost Contact with People’, Willard Quine states that ‘Until the nineteenth century, all available scientific knowledge of any consequence could be encompassed by a single first-class mind’. However, ‘[t]his cosy situation ended as science expanded and deepened. Subtle distinctions crowded in and technical jargon proliferated, much of which is genuinely needed’. 1 Today, this is the situation even within the individual sciences, and the field ‘Political Philosophy’ or ‘Political Science’ – labels are inconsequential – is no exception. Reflections over theories of justice and the normative foundations of democracy, on the one hand, and parliamentary studies, on the other, are but two examples of specialized subfields within political philosophy or political science. 2 Roughly speaking, the former reflects on abstract normative principles and the latter investigates real politics as it takes place in space and time. Although new distinctions and improved technical jargon are necessary to bring political philosophy forward, specialization has its drawbacks. The great philosopher and political theorist J. S. Mill reflected on the fundamental normative principles of the ideal form of government and ways of organizing and improving the structure of and the debates within the English parliament, in one volume. 3 The situation today appears to be that the theorists who study the normative foundations of democracy find what goes on in parliaments to be more or less irrelevant to their subject, while those who study the complex organization of parliaments, and how politics unfolds in these institutions, suspect the former theorists to be out of touch with politics.
I find this tendency unfortunate from both an intellectual and a practical point of view. My attempt at a remedy is to focus on the political liberalism inherited from John Rawls and on a recent collection of essays on parliamentary studies, unified by the committed and substantial title The Politics of Dissensus [Palonen, Rosales and Turkka, 2014]. In this article, I use ‘the politics of dissensus’ and ‘political liberalism’ as markers for given theoretical conceptions. My aim is to demonstrate that despite the impression to the contrary, encouraged by the term ‘overlapping consensus’ and other reasons, political liberalism does not exclude or even unjustifiably restrict politics, and that it is consistent with the politics of dissensus’ empirical-historical and less normative approach to politics. Given that these fields are consistent and guided by dissimilar aims and conceptualizations, it seems to me that combined studies in the spirit of Mill might prove fruitful. 4 My purpose is not to evaluate the politics of dissensus or political liberalism per se, but to reflect on their conceptual relationship.
Political liberalism is here understood as a realistic utopia and, accordingly, politics is approached from the point of view of a well-ordered society. 5 Now, as is well known, Rawls wrote Political Liberalism against the constitutional background that he knew from the ‘inside’, namely that of the USA. A central feature of this constitution is that it has a strong judicial review, and consequently the principal political reasoning is paradigmatically displaced by the written verdicts of the Supreme Court. Many European democracies, England in particular, have weak, if any, judicial review and the principal political reasoning takes place in the parliament. 6 I do not view this as a problem for political liberalism, as the main point is that principal or public reason plays a crucial role in deliberative democracy, not its primary locus. 7 The assumed realistic utopia simplifies my analysis and it is justified by the fact that if it is correct that politics – as circumscribed by the collection of papers in The Politics of Dissensus – is an essential feature of democratic well-ordered societies with a strong parliamentary system, politics is present in any constitutional democracy of that kind. My main point is that political liberalism gives a model for the logic and limits of deliberation and it is not a consensus theory of politics.
I begin by introducing main features of the politics of dissensus (section II). I then show that the overlapping consensus that lies at the heart of political liberalism is not itself the result of deliberation (section III). After this, I argue that political liberalism is coherent with the view on parliamentary deliberation developed by the politics of dissensus (section IV). In the fifth section, I turn to the so-called ‘Conversational model’ of deliberation. I demonstrate that even if political liberalism accepts this model, which is a question I leave open, it does not mean that failing to reach a consensus signals that the debaters have not tried hard enough or have not been sincere, or anything like that. It all depends on one’s take on the idea of the ‘force of the better argument’. I provide some comments on the normative idea of public reason and I introduce a topic for an empirical parliamentary study that I believe would enlighten the present speculations.
II The politics of dissensus
In the introduction to their recent book, Kari Palonen, José María Rosales and Tapani Turkka boldly state that The Politics of Dissensus argues a novel perspective on the study of parliamentary politics. Although it shares the recognition and appreciation of the practices of parliamentary politics, it inverts the traditional perspective by focusing on its less obvious and less well-known aspects. Dissensus instead of consensus then becomes the raison d’être, the conceptual condition for the intelligibility of parliamentary politics.
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The passage from the introduction to The Politics of Disensus, cited above, continues: Certainly parliamentary politics is indebted to the rhetorical culture of addressing issues from opposite views and debating the alternatives pro et contra. In parliamentary procedure dissensus and debate are institutionalised: no motion is approved without a thorough examination of and confrontation among imaginable alternatives.
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Although the omnipresence of dissensus, conflict, controversy, dispute and debates in politics is widely acknowledged, they tend to be regarded in political institutions as provisional stages to be overcome in the final moment of decision-making. Our perspective turns the terms around to see final decisions as temporary de-actualizations of dissensus, whereas dissensual activities are taken as the heart of politics. Consensus is understood as a marginal case of dissensus, visible in moments such as, for instance, that it is better to agree upon some budget than none. Politics is, in other words, a quintessentially contingent and controversial activity … the guiding procedural principle of parliamentary politics teaches that the political content of a proposal can only be judged if it is examined from opposing perspectives and confronted with alternative proposals.
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Parliamentarism establishes the openness of political debating, and its relying on an irreducible plurality of perspectives has become a distinctive historical contribution to the rise of parliamentary democracy.
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III Deliberative consensus vs overlapping consensus
Rosales maintains that ‘the most salient features of deliberative democratic theory’ in Rawls’ writings are to be found in the analysis of the deliberation that takes place in the analytic tool called ‘the Original Position’ in A Theory of Justice.
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The fall-out of the deliberation is the social conception of justice labelled ‘justice as fairness’.
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As Rosales observes: The veil of ignorance means a requirement for impartial deliberation, unlikely reproducible in real deliberative processes unless adapted, but valid as procedural ideal guarantee in the formulation of a theory of justice. Discussing the ‘status of majority rule’ in legislative procedures Rawls reminds that real deliberations of ‘representative legislators’ hardly resembles the ideal process.
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Thus the discussion around associations and democracy resumed central themes of democratic theory, from citizen participation and democratic deliberation to inclusion and representativeness of the democratic process, but began reformulating them. Democratic theory largely became normative democratic theory. It focused on counterfactual considerations to devise ideal procedures of political deliberation, that way assuming the normative leaning of mainstream political philosophy. As we have seen deliberative experiments do not easily reproduce comparable conditions to those of real political debates, as they leave behind relevant aspects of parliamentary politics regulated by legislative procedures.
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After this clarification, let us turn to political liberalism.
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This is a key passage from Political Liberalism: The idea of an overlapping consensus is easily misunderstood given the idea of consensus in ordinary politics. Its meaning for us arises thus: we suppose a constitutional democratic regime to be reasonably just and workable, and worth defending. Yet given the fact of reasonable pluralism, how can we frame our defence of it so that it can win sufficiently wide support to achieve stability.
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An overlapping consensus is a consensus on a family of social conceptions of justice, where each member satisfies a given, classically liberal list of conditions.
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These conceptions furthermore ‘meet the criterion of reciprocity and recognise the burdens of judgment’.
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The criterion of reciprocity is defined as ‘when terms are proposed as the most reasonable terms of fair cooperation, those proposing them must think it at least reasonable for others to accept them, as free and equal citizens’.
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Its purpose is to ensure that all citizens ‘as free and equal, can cooperate with each other on terms all can accept’.
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In this context, the fact of reasonable pluralism implies that in a well-ordered society, the citizens hold both a reasonable comprehensive (or partly comprehensive) doctrine and a social conception of justice. The relationship between these ideas might be as strong as a deductive one or as weak as coherence.
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The basic point is that the citizens of a democratic regime work out for themselves the relationship between their understanding of the basic goods and their political views and values.
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A crucial factor for an appreciation of political liberalism is always to keep in mind that its starting point is from the inside of our common democratic tradition; all its key concepts belong to this very tradition. The citizens view each other as free and equal citizens and they adopt or form a social conception of justice that respects this liberal and political value. However, a reasonable comprehensive doctrine need not itself be liberal. It is to be expected that religious doctrines, for instance, prevail among citizens of such a regime.
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Of course, helped by fellow citizens reasoning from conjecture, one might come to realize that a reasonable liberal political conception of justice follows from, or is coherent with, one’s higher or non-political values but, again, this is not deliberation.
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At present, my moderate aim is to make clear that an overlapping consensus on a family of reasonable social conceptions of justice is not, and cannot be, the result of a deliberation, but concerns the relation between a social conception of justice and a comprehensive doctrine. In this light, it seems as if the politics of dissensus can and should appreciate the burdens of judgement and the fact of reasonable pluralism, as they provide a foundation for the fact that it is unreasonable to expect consensus in political deliberation in a well-ordered society. As a partial vindication of this assumption, I would like to cite a remark from one of the contributors to The Politics of Dissensus, Enrico Biale, who defends a complex conceptualization of compromise: In a pluralistic society that includes people with different, and sometimes conflicting, opinions, preferences, and ideals, it is reasonable to assume that there will be disagreements regarding these important issues. Moreover, although members of a pluralistic society acknowledge one another as free and equal, they do not necessarily agree on principles of justice that could provide a shared standard against which to assess political proposals or laws and policies (the input and output, respectively, of the decision-making process). Even if the citizens share principles of justice, they would disagree on their interpretation and the best way to implement these principles.
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IV Political liberalism and dissensus
In Political Liberalism, there is one comment that appears to go against the very idea of politics, in particular. It comes as the third element of Rawls’ explanation of the notion of social unity:
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Public political discussion, when constitutional essentials and matters of basic justice are at stake, are always, or nearly always, reasonably decidable on the basis of reasons specified by one of a family of reasonable liberal conceptions of justice, one of which is for each citizen the most (more) reasonable.
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fundamental principles that specify the general structure of government and the political process: the powers of the legislature, executive and the judiciary; the scope of majority rules; and equal basic rights and liberties of citizenship that legislative majorities are to respect: such as the right to vote and to participate in politics, liberty of conscience, freedom of thought and association, as well as the protections of the rule of law.
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Clearly, as Rawls observes, among regimes with free institutions, (1) varies far more than (2). With respect to our theme, we note that ‘principles governing social and economic inequalities’ are not included in the list. Therefore, even if questions of constitutional essentials are settled by consensus – which Rawls notes is not always the case, from time to time even such issues are settled by the majority – issues concerning the application of social conceptions of justice on pressing social and economic questions are seldom thus decided. The reason is clear: Whether the constitutional essentials covering the basic freedoms are satisfied is more or less visible on the face of constitutional arrangements and how these can be seen to work in practice. But whether the aims of the principles covering social and economic inequalities are realized is far more difficult to ascertain. These matters are nearly always open to wide differences of reasonable opinion; they rest on complicated inferences and intuitive judgments that require us to assess complex social and economic information about topics poorly understood. Thus, although questions of both kinds are to be discussed in terms of political values, we can expect more agreement about whether the principles for the basic rights and liberties are realized than about whether the principles for social and economic justice are realized.
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I think Anthoula Malkopoulou gives voice to a common misreading of Rawls, early and late, when she, from the perspective of the politics of dissensus, writes that: If we side with the rhetorical or parliamentary approach to deliberation, then subjective reason, perspectivism and disagreement become a sine qua non of political discussion. To the contrary, the Rawlsian and Habermasian variants of deliberative democracy are rather at odds with this idea, as they place emphasis on justice and consensus respectively. Even if they accept that a political discussion may not always lead to agreement, deliberative judgement still has a clear priority over will. But, talking to our interlocutors and expecting them to accept our opinions merely because they are ‘reasonable’ may betray a less than horizontal approach to political discussions than the deliberativists would like to admit.
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Another misunderstanding is that Malkopoulou ascribes to Rawls the idea that a reasonable person expects his or her interlocutors to agree with him or her because they are reasonable, as well. However, it is exactly the other way around. To be a reasonable person is to realize that there are limits to what can be reasonably justified to others. When serious political and moral issues are at stake, the reasonable person does not expect, but of course, she or he hopes, that other reasonable persons will agree with her or him. 57 In fact, to accept that other reasonable persons disagree with you, in the face of your well-developed and reflective arguments, is part of what makes you a reasonable person.
Now, if one takes political liberalism to imply or presuppose a consensus theory of politics, then one might think that in the comparatively rare cases where questions of constitutional essentials are not settled by public reason, one might introduce into the debate additional arguments aiming for a consensus. But no! Sometimes, as in the case of a verdict in court, one must simply leave the decision to the rulings of the majority: Thus, when there seems to be a stand-off, that is, legal arguments seem evenly balanced on both sides, judges cannot simply resolve the case by appealing to their own political views … The same holds with public reason: if when stand-offs occur, citizens invoke the grounding reasons of their comprehensive views, then the principle of reciprocity is violated. The reasons deciding constitutional essentials and basic justice are no longer those that we may reasonably expect that all citizens may reasonably endorse … From the point of view of public reason citizens should simply vote for the ordering of political values they sincerely think the most reasonable. Otherwise we fail to exercise political power in ways that satisfy the criterion of reciprocity.
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However, disputed questions, such as that of abortion, may lead to a stand-off between different political conceptions, and citizens must simply vote on the question. Indeed, this is the normal case: unanimity of views is not to be expected. Reasonable political conceptions of justice do not always lead to the same conclusion … nor do citizens holding the same conception always agree on particular issues.
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The second passage makes a point about the positive value of disagreement: [T]he ideal of public reason does not often lead to general agreements of views, nor should it. Citizens learn and profit from conflict and argument, and when their arguments follow public reason, they instruct and deepen society’s public culture.
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I am not alone in taking Rawls to be a scholar that values politics and does not want to get rid of it. This is Joshua Cohen’s apt formulation: [I]n his political liberalism, Rawls embraces the deliberative conception of democratic politics while also accepting that, even under the best circumstances we can reasonably hope for, members of a democratic society will disagree with one another about what justice requires … [P]olitics is, in the first instance, a matter of deliberation: of citizens and representatives defending laws and policies by reference to reasons drawn from a conception of justice that they might reasonably expect others to endorse.
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V The conversational model and normativity
In his chapter in The Politics of Dissensus, Manuel Toscano observes that: [T]he contemporary mainstream on deliberation and deliberative democracy follows what Gary Remer calls ‘the conversational model’. This model presents three main features: 1) deliberation is conceived as a free and open dialogue; 2) the strict symmetry of the partners, so that dialogue takes place between equals; and 3) dialogue is understood as a cooperative enterprise where only ‘the force of the better argument’ matters. (Toscano, 2014: 409)
Allow me to formulate an empirically refutable conjecture concerning parliamentary politics. Political liberalism starts out from inside our existing, but not fully well-ordered, constitutional democracies. It takes these to be the result of contingent historical processes that involve both material and conceptual factors, including a refined awareness among the members of the parliament of the kinds of arguments that are appropriate to their office. I conjecture that if one undertook a diachronic parliamentary study of the kinds of arguments used in a selected group of parliaments, say the Scandinavian ones, over a time-span of the last 50 years, one would find that they tend to become restricted to social conceptions of justice, and presented as self-standing and independent of comprehensive doctrines. Such a study would be highly instructive, and throw light on our speculations about the origin and continuous development of political liberalism and parliamentary politics.
Let me close off with a final observation. A major point behind the politics of dissensus is to push back moralism of all kinds. 67 A defender of this approach towards political philosophy could maintain that political liberalism fails in that it starts out from an ideal picture of citizens and members of parliament as rational and reasonable, and that it is therefore founded on moralistic presuppositions. This vision of a citizen and a representative, however, is not nearly as substantial as those one regularly encounters in normative political theory, be it democracy theory, contract theory, communitarianism, or critical theory in the hands of Habermas or Honneth, or Marxism. To refuse to take into account normative assumptions on the human being and better or worse forms of deliberation would be to reject normative political theory in all its branches. I do not think that the politics of dissensus is meant to be an exclusively descriptive project, for in that case, it is hard to see how it might have a bearing on the pressing political issues of the present day.
