Skip to main content

Democratic Orthodoxy

The established, institutionalized set of beliefs about democracy that dominate political discourse—the often-unexamined assumptions that elections confer legitimacy, that representation works, that majority rule is just, that democratic procedures produce good outcomes, and that liberal democracy is the end of political history. Democratic orthodoxy includes commitments: that voting is the primary political act, that citizens are informed and rational, that elected officials represent their constituents, that checks and balances prevent tyranny, that democracy and capitalism are compatible, that alternatives to democracy are authoritarian. Like all orthodoxies, it provides a framework for political understanding, but it functions as ideology—making particular democratic arrangements seem natural and inevitable, obscuring democracy's limitations (exclusion, inequality, corporate power, voter manipulation), and delegitimizing critiques that question whether current institutions are truly democratic. Democratic orthodoxy determines what political arrangements are considered "legitimate," what reforms are "realistic," and who counts as a "good democrat" versus a threat to democracy.
Example: "He couldn't see how campaign finance makes a mockery of representation—not because he'd examined the evidence, but because democratic orthodoxy had made him believe that elections automatically produce democracy. The orthodoxy's power is making the form feel like the substance."
by Dumu The Void March 17, 2026
mugGet the Democratic Orthodoxy mug.

Liberal Democratic Orthodoxy

The established, institutionalized set of beliefs that define mainstream liberal democracy—the often-unexamined assumptions about elections, representation, rights, and the relationship between liberalism and democracy. Liberal democratic orthodoxy includes commitments: that elections confer legitimacy, that representation works, that rights protect freedom, that liberal and democratic values align, that liberal democracies are fundamentally just, and that the liberal democratic model is the end of political history. Like all orthodoxies, it provides a framework for political understanding, but it can function as ideology—making liberal democratic arrangements seem natural and inevitable, obscuring their limitations (exclusion, inequality, corporate power), and delegitimizing alternatives. Liberal democratic orthodoxy determines what counts as "democratic" versus "authoritarian," what political arrangements are "legitimate," and who counts as a "real" democrat versus a threat to democracy.
Example: "He couldn't see how liberal democracies might themselves be sites of oppression—not because he'd examined the question, but because liberal democratic orthodoxy had made critique of democracy itself unthinkable. The orthodoxy's power is making its objects immune to fundamental critique."
by Dumu The Void March 17, 2026
mugGet the Liberal Democratic Orthodoxy mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email