Articles: Democracy's Twin Challenges: Hans Kelsen and The Problem of Extremist Speech
Articles: Democracy's Twin Challenges: Hans Kelsen and The Problem of Extremist Speech
Articles: Democracy's Twin Challenges: Hans Kelsen and The Problem of Extremist Speech
ABSTRACT
1 ECHR, Refah Partisi (The Welfare Party) and Others vs Turkey, 31 July 2001 (Third Section).
2 ECHR, Refah Partisi (The Welfare Party) vs Turkey, 13 February 2003 (Grand Chamber).
3 Ibid, para. 99.
4 I.F. Stone, The Trial of Socrates (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1988).
5 Karl Loewenstein, "Legislative Control of Political Extremism in European Democracies I" (1938)
38 Columbia Law Review 594.
What makes the resolution of this problem such an arduous task is the
traditional conception of democracy as popular self-legislation upon which the
Court has relied to adjudicate the dispute between Refah and the Turkish
government. In a democracy conceived this way, the people are supposed to
govern themselves through the laws they enact. The people's authorship of the
laws is what renders them legitimate in the eyes of citizens who must comply
with them. The rule of law, writes the Court, "cannot be sustained over a long
period if persons governed by the same laws do not have the last word on the
subject of their content and implementation."6 Underlying the conception of
democracy as popular self-legislation is the principle of consent.7 "The orthodox
democratic view maintains that political and legal authority must," as Steven
Smith has put it, "somehow be grounded in 'consent.'"8 A law could, therefore,
only be assumed to be democratically legitimate "if it or the government that
enacted it was somehow consented to by those subject to the law."9
It may be wise to reiterate that the consent account of democracy is not a
straw man argument that tends to be relied upon in an obligatory way by
officeholders like judges at the European Court of Human Rights. The discourse
theory of law and democracy elaborated by Jürgen Habermas in his massive
Between Facts and Norms,10 for instance, is, if anything, the most sophisticated
attempt to establish that this ancient democracy conception is still relevant at the
marketplace of ideas today.11 The principle of democracy, he contends,
The demand that law be based on the assent or consent of those affected by
it does not necessarily imply that legislation must always be based on unanimity.13
It is true that a law could only be considered an actual piece of popular self-
legislation if every eligible citizen of a democratic polity could be persuaded to
adopt a legislative proposal as law. However, the circumstance that majority
14 David Held, Models of Democracy (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2nd Edition, 2002), 21.
15 Ibid, 119.
16 Loewenstein, "Legislative Control", n 5 supra, 594: "The specific difficulties in drafting and
applying such defensive measures against subversive movements and parties arose mainly
from the fact that, in not a few democracies, restriction on the guarantee of the constitutional
rights of freedom of political opinion, speech, assembly and association was deemed inconsistent
with the very foundation of democracy."
17 Jürgen Habermas, "Religious Tolerance: The Pacemaker for Cultural Rights" (2004) 79 Philosophy
5-18.
18 Ibid, 7-8.
elections. Implicit to the right of every adult citizen, either on an individual basis
or through the organized forms of political parties, to participate in the
competition for the power to make laws that govern the life of all of them is, in
other words, the right for the vanquished minority to continue its efforts to enact
its political designs for society as a whole through the process of majority
formation. The legally guaranteed right for minority members to carry on the
competition for legislative power, and the inherent right to win it at the end of
the day,20 are what constitute the key distinction between democratic majoritarianism
and the tyranny of the majority. From this point of view, democracy's enemies
could, then, be defined as those who (1) rely on the legal rights that they enjoy
in a democratic state to advocate the enactment of policies that are (judged)
irreconcilable with democratic principles as codified in national constitutions and
international conventions, and (2) are suspected to harbor the intention to shut
down the democratic competition for legislative power via which laws could be
enacted and repealed after having won that power through the same competition.
In our efforts to answer the question whether democracy can defend itself in
a self-consistent way against its enemies, we shall specifically focus on the right
to free speech. For this right, as Emilios Christodoulidis has put it, is the main
mode of participation in democratic politics.21 It is through the exercise of this
right that citizens of a democratic polity could be persuaded either to support or
to reject a particular legislative agenda at the ballot box, which in turn, implies
that freedom of speech is the primary right upon which democracy's enemies
could rely to advocate the implementation of their political designs for society as
a whole. Therefore, the insistence on centering this whole analysis on speech is,
to cite Christodoulidis once again, not intended to the exclusion of but, rather, on
behalf of other political rights of participation, for instance, freedom of association.22
20 George F. Will, The Pursuit of Virtue and Other Tory Notions (New York: Simon & Schuster, Inc.,
1982), 85.
21 Emilios A. Christodoulidis, Law and Reflexive Politics (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers,
1998), 6.
22 Ibid, 25.
23 Susanne Baer, "Violence: Dilemmas of Democracy and Law", in David Kretzmer and Francine
Kershman Hazan (eds), Freedom of Speech and Incitement Against Democracy (Dordrecht:
Kluwer Law International, 2000), 84.
24 Oren Gross, "The Normless and Exceptionless Exception: Carl Schmitt's Theory of Emergency
Powers and the 'Norm-Exception' Dichotomy" (2000) 21 Cardozo Law Review 1858.
25 James Madison, "The 51th Federalist Paper", in Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John
Jay, The Federalist Papers (New York: Bantam Books, 1982), 263.
26 Ibid: "But it is not possible to give to each department an equal power of self-defense. In
republican government, the legislative authority necessarily predominates."
27 Jennifer Tolbert Roberts, Athens on Trial: The Antidemocratic Tradition in Western Thought
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996).
28 Bert van den Brink, The Tragedy of Liberalism: An Alternative Defense of a Political Tradition
(Buffalo: State University of New York Press, 2000), 247-248, note 8; Stefan Sottiaux, "Anti-
Democratic Associations: Content and Consequences in Article 11 Adjudication" (2004) 22 (4)
Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights 585.
29 Hans Kelsen, "On the Essence and Value of Democracy", 84-109 (Belinda Cooper and Stephan
Hemetsberger trans., in Arthur J. Jacobson and Bernard Schlink [eds], Weimar: A Jurisprudence
of Crisis [Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000]).
30 Hans Kelsen, What is Justice? Justice, Law and Politics in the Mirror of Science (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1971), 23.
What right have the hundred who want to have a master to vote on
behalf of the ten who do not? The law of the majority-voting itself rests
on an agreement, and implies that there has been on at least one
occasion unanimity.33
In his theory of democracy, Kelsen also seeks to reconcile the principle that
every citizen in a democracy is politically autonomous with the fact that laws in
such a polity are usually enacted by the majority. Politically autonomous is, in
Kelsen's view, the individual who is only subject to the laws that he has enacted
himself and not to those made by others. The fact, however, is that virtually
nobody is autonomous in this sense when he or she enters the world. Everybody
is usually born into a legal order that already exists, a legal order that one, for
obvious reasons, could not have helped to create but that one is nevertheless
compelled to obey. Thus, from the very moment of their birth, citizens are
already ruled by laws that others have enacted before they have the opportunity
to enact their own laws themselves. They are, in other words, already governed
before they get the chance to be governors. In order to be politically autonomous,
each of these citizens must, therefore, have the possibility to abolish or amend
31 Robert A. Burt, The Constitution in Conflict (Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University
Press, 1992), 45.
32 Ibid, 374.
33 Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract, 59 (Maurice Cranston trans., [London: Penguin
Books, 1968]).
the legislative decisions that others have taken and that he or she does not
like.34 Or to reverse Rousseau's famous aphorism, man was not born free but
tends to be born "in chains" so his liberation must be the ultimate aim of
democratic politics.35 The essence of political autonomy, then, is not primarily the
ability to make one's own laws, but rather the capacity to replace laws that
others have made with self-legislation. Viewed from this perspective, from the
perspective of those who want to liberate themselves by changing the existing
legal order, the majority principle constitutes, Kelsen points out, the shortest
route to their goal. Under the reign of this principle, the number of votes that
those who want to achieve legal change are required to get is considerably
smaller than the number of votes that they would have to gain if unanimity were
the principle by which the game must be played. It is true that, viewed from the
perspective of democracy understood as popular self-legislation, an individual
could only be considered as really autonomous if the legal norms governing him
were enacted on the basis of unanimity. The drawback of the unanimity principle
would, however, reveal itself in a dramatic manner at the moment that
amendments to these norms must be made. It would, then, turn out that change
in the legal regime is virtually impossible to achieve if unanimous consent were
required.36
Kelsen, therefore, concludes that it is the majority principle, rather than the
unanimity principle, which is most conducive to the right to self-determination
that every citizen in a democratic state is entitled to enjoy. The fact that majority
legislation is accepted as democratic could, on the basis of this conclusion, no
longer be attributed solely to the impossibility to accomplish unanimity in
practice. The acceptance thereof may be based as well on the insight that under
the majority principle, citizens are actually more politically autonomous than
under the unanimity principle, which means that it is much easier for them to
escape from the laws that others have enacted and to make their own laws
themselves.
In the light of Kelsen's reinterpretation of the majority principle, the case
could be made that this principle should primarily be viewed as a mechanism of
liberation that enables minority members to break free from the alien will
expressed in the laws that others have imposed upon them, rather than as a
device through which the familiar ideal of popular self-legislation could be realized.
This, in turn, suggests that the legitimacy of majority legislation could be
38 Compare Kelsen, "On the Essence and Value", n 29 supra, 101: "Where the people assembles,
the presence of physical power is still too noticeable to allow more than submission to the
absolute majority, and the absolute majority cannot refrain from imposing its will on a minority
solely because it is somehow qualified. Only in parliamentary procedure is such rational self-
restraint possible as a constitutional institution. It means that the catalogue of basic rights and
rights of freedoms turns from protection of the individual from the state to protection of a
minority, a qualified minority, from the absolute majority." (Emphases supplied.)
antidemocratic speech. These laws are not enacted to perpetuate the reign of
those who are their authors, but to preserve the electoral mechanism through
which these authors themselves could be unseated by their democratic
adversaries. Precisely because the legal possibility to depose them remains
preserved, incumbent legislators can credibly maintain to have acted with self-
restraint when they decided to take recourse to speech-restrictive measures.
Democracy's enemies whose freedom of speech is being restricted may perceive
them as oppressive acts of violence, but their perception is, arguably, irrelevant
to the question whether these measures could be considered democratically
legitimate. What really counts is whether the conduct of legislators could be
rendered consistent with the principle of self-restraint in accordance to which
they have to act, in order to confer democratic legitimacy on their legislative
decisions. Since we have been able to argue that such is indeed the case, we can
conclude that the laws they have enacted to fight speech inimical to democracy
are democratically legitimate, the perception of the targeted law subjects to the
contrary notwithstanding.
39 Robert M. Cover, "The Origins of Judicial Activism in the Protection of Minorities" (1982) 91
Yale Law Journal 1287-1316.
Given the goals at the service of whose achievement the judiciary could
legitimately exercise its power in a democracy understood as legislative self-
restraint, the answer to the question as to how to justify the resistance the
judiciary must offer to legislators in their struggle against extremist speech in
order to protect the right to free speech from unwarranted encroachment can be
formulated with comparative ease: This resistance can be justified by the
institutional role of judges as defender of the democratic process and as protector
of defenseless minorities.40
John Hart Ely made exactly the same argument almost thirty years ago.41 But
the problem with his argument is that it is still rooted in the conception of
democracy as popular self-legislation, which renders it susceptible to attacks that
are based on the normative primacy of the elected legislature.42 Writing in
reference to the case law of the U.S. Supreme Court, Robert Bork, for instance,
has argued that a law prohibiting extremist speech could and should be
compared to a strategic judgment, which implicates the safety of the nation and
which,43 for that reason,
resembles very closely the judgment that Congress and the President
must make about the expediency of waging war, an issue that the
Court has wisely thought not fit for judicial determination.44
40 Cf. John Hart Ely, Democracy and Distrust: A Theory of Judicial Review (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1981).
41 Ibid, 105-116.
42 G. Edward White, "The First Amendment Comes of Age: The Emergence of Free Speech in
Twentieth-Century America" (1996) 95 Michigan Law Review 322.
43 Robert H. Bork, "Neutral Principles and Some First Amendment Problems" (1971) 47 Indiana
Law Journal 33.
44 Ibid.
45 Louis Lusky, By What Right: A Commentary on the Supreme Court's Power to Revise the
Constitution (Charlottesville: Michie Company, 1975).
46 Robert H. Bork, The Tempting of America: The Political Seduction of the Law (New York:
Touchstone, 1991), 195-196.
political dissent in general. This, in turn, means that members of the democratic
minority could continue to exercise this right in a relatively uninhibited way in
their pursuit of government power. Implicit to this argument, then, is the
demand that the judiciary vigorously protect the right to free expression of the
so-called permanent minorities whose ideas the rest of the polity finds offensive.
Due to the circumstance that their ideas are deemed objectionable by the
(overwhelming) majority of the polity's population, it is, after all, highly
improbable that these minorities could ever assemble a majority coalition by
means of which they would be able to abolish democracy in a democratic way,
which, in turn, means that there is no need to silence them.
Therefore, if legislators were only entitled to suppress speech that could
reasonably be deemed to be dangerous to the cyclic process of majority
formation via which incumbent lawmakers could be voted out of power, then it
could be argued that the judicial resistance, which they encounter in their effort
to do so, is constitutive to the democratic legitimacy of this effort. For, the
institutional resistance offered by courts of law would, to a significant extent,
ensure that the speech-restrictive measures enacted by the legislature are really
designed to preserve the process of majority formation itself, rather than to
silence the voice of disliked minorities, or to safeguard the legislative power of
the incumbent majority to which the authors of these measures usually belong.
Since the argument as outlined above requires that courts guarantee the
right of democracy's enemies to express their views in the public forum when the
expression of these views does not pose any threat to the survival of the
democratic process, it is important to point out here that the legal inclusion of
democratically repugnant views in the public debate does not imply that
democrats cannot continue to defend democracy against these views in any other
way. Within the confines of democracy understood as legislative self-restraint, it
can, after all, be said that the demand for judicial protection of anti-democratic
speech does not signify either endorsement or agreement. Democrats make this
demand, not because they somehow condone the ideas that their enemies
harbor, but because they want to prevent that the legislature's fight against
extremist speech would degenerate into a wholesale crackdown of political
dissent, upon which their own process of majority formation depends to function
properly. Since it is in the interest of democrats themselves that the speech right
of their enemies be guaranteed, they are able to forcefully insist on the legal
inclusion of extremist speech in the public debate and vigorously express their
moral disapproval of it at the same time.47 In other words, precisely because the
insistence by democrats that judges must protect their enemies' right to free
speech can be said to be primarily motivated by their desire to safeguard freedom
of speech for themselves, democrats can, without any self-contradiction, continue
their fight against speech hostile to democracy by virtually any other
communicative means that stop short of prohibition. By attempting to keep
democracy's enemies at bay in this democratic way, democrats may even be able
47 Wojciech Sadurski, "The Paradox of Toleration", in Frank Fleerackers et al (eds), Law, Life and
the Images of Man: Modes of Thought in Modern Legal Theory (Berlin: Duncker & Humblot,
1996), 387.
The Court was thus of the opinion that a legal limitation on free speech is
only constitutionally permissible if it were able to meet a test consisting of two
connected requirements. First, the speech that is prohibited must be the kind of
speech that is designed to incite the immediate violation of the law. This implies,
as the Court itself had pointed out, that "the mere abstract teaching (…) of the
moral propriety or even the moral necessity for a resort to force or violence", as
distinct from incitement, cannot be criminalized. "A statute which fails to draw
this distinction," the Court went on, "impermissibly intrudes upon the freedoms
guaranteed by the First and Fourteenth Amendments. It sweeps within its
condemnation speech which our Constitution has immunized from governmental
control."52 Second, it must be probable that the law violation, which the speech
intends to incite would immediately take place. A harmless inciter who fails to
provoke any "imminent lawless action" thus cannot be held criminally liable for
the words that he had uttered.53
48 Ibid, 388-389.
49 Brandenburg v. Ohio, 395 U.S. 444 (1969).
50 Gerald Gunther, "Learned Hand and the Origins of Modern First Amendment Doctrine: Some
Fragments of History" (1975) 27 Stanford Law Review 719-773.
51 Brandenburg, n 49 supra, at 447.
52 Ibid, at 448.
53 Gunther, "Learned Hand", n 50 supra, 729.
The relevance of the Brandenburg standard resides both in its content and in
the judicial institution that enforces it. By immunizing from the outset the
abstract advocacy of ideas against legislative suppression and by insisting that
incitement to violent action could only be punished if such incitement is likely to
provoke immediate law violation, the judiciary can prevent the legislature from
using the rather specific threat that extremist speech poses to the democratic
process as a pretext to silence political dissent in general.54
Viewed from the perspective of democracy's self-defense, it is, of course,
entirely debatable whether the U.S. Supreme Court's demand that the legislative
suppression of radically subversive speech be postponed until the moment that
an immediate danger of lawless action is likely to occur should be observed in
every democratic state. Depending on the social and historical conditions of a
particular society, the case could be made that legislators may legitimately take
recourse to speech-restrictive measures at an earlier moment in order to
eliminate the dangers that may emerge from the expression of ideas inimical to
democracy. What is evident from the perspective of the Brandenburg standard,
however, is that courts must resist the legislature's often strong inclination to nip
these dangers in the bud by means of wholesale prohibition. They ought to
demand that lawmakers provide specific reasons to explain why particular
measures are required at a particular moment in order to counter the threat
which radically subversive speech may produce.
The 2003 Refah judgment by the European Court of Human Rights in
Strasbourg can be cited here as an example of the way in which the spirit of
Brandenburg can be adapted to the political and historical conditions of societies
that are radically different from the American society.55 The reason why the
Strasbourg Court approved the decision by the Turkish government to dissolve
the radical-Islamic Refah Partisi is, as you may recall, the fact that the Court has
not only been convinced that this party had advocated policies that are hostile to
democratic principles, but also that it could actually legislate those policies via
the democratic process in the foreseeable future. If it were permitted to pursue
its aim, then this party would, in the estimation of the Court, most probably be
able to garner the support of an absolute majority among the Turkish electorate,
which would, then, free it from inevitably entering a coalition with other parties.
This monopoly of political power would, in turn, allow Refah to implement its
political agenda "without being restricted by the compromises inherent in a
coalition."56
By taking into account the high probability that Refah could actually carry out
its radical-Islamic agenda, the Court strongly suggests that the antidemocratic
content of that agenda alone does not constitute a compelling justification for its
dissolution. The true reason why Refah's dissolution is deemed justified appears
54 Gross, "The Normless and Exceptionless Exception", n 24 supra, 1845-1846. See also Vincent
Blasi, "Learned Hand and the Self-Government Theory of the First Amendment: Masses
Publishing Co. v. Patten"(1990) 61 Colorado Law Review 1-37.
55 Stefan Sottiaux, "The 'Clear and Present Danger Test' in the Case Law of The European Court
of Human Rights" (2003) 64 Zeitschrift für Ausländisches Öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht
653-681.
56 ECHR, Refah Partisi, n 2 supra, para. 108.
to be that its anticipated electoral triumph had, in the words of the Court,
transformed this party into a "sufficiently imminent" risk to the Turkish
democracy.57 "Through the incorporation of the condition of 'imminence', the
Court seems," as Stefan Sottiaux has pointed out,
In making this imminence requirement, the Court is not unduly impeding the
efforts of democratic governments to keep democracy's enemies at bay. The fact
that the Strasbourg Court could only have reviewed the decision by the Turkish
government to dissolve Refah after the dissolution of this party had taken place
indicates that the Court could not have done anything to hinder this government
when it decided that a particular measure was necessary for the preservation of
democracy in Turkey. The Strasbourg Court, or any other court for that matter,
can only evaluate in hindsight whether the measure taken had been appropriate.
This means, in turn, that contrary to what critics of Brandenburg have often
alleged, the application of this standard or similar standards does not require
courts of law to determine in advance, or to predict when, how and whether an
imminent threat to a democratic polity might occur.59 The real issue here is not
determinacy or predictability, but accountability. The judiciary, to reiterate the
point once again, always decides matters "after the fact," which means that it
does not need to answer the question whether a danger or emergency really
exists at the moment when the answer is most urgent.60 That task can be left to
the discretionary judgment of legislative agents or other government officials
who claim to have acted to safeguard the cyclic process of majority formation,
through which minority members could unseat the incumbent majority. But by
employing the U.S. Supreme Court's Brandenburg standard, or the Strasbourg
Court's Refah standard in the post eventum analysis of the situation, judges
could compel those agents to provide grounds to justify their speech-limiting
measures.61 If the judiciary were to arrive at the conclusion that these legislative
VI. CONCLUSION
The twin challenges we have to meet in this article are whether democracy
could self-consistently take recourse to legislative suppression to defend itself
against hostile speech, and if so, how to justify the judicial resistance to this
suppression in order to prevent that it would end up endangering the right to
free speech itself. We have argued that these challenges could successfully be
met, if democracy were conceived as legislative self-restraint, instead of as
popular self-legislation. The main basis upon which we have drawn our argument
is the insight that within the normative framework of the former conception of
democracy, the legitimacy of laws depends on the conduct of lawmakers, rather
than on the consent of law subjects, as is the case with the latter. This insight
has made it, in the first place, possible for us to render self-consistent laws
enacted to suppress antidemocratic speech, for we have been able to establish
on the basis thereof that the enactment of these laws does not violate the
principle of self-restraint, in compliance with which legislators have to act in
order to generate democratic legitimacy for the laws they make.
The insight that law's legitimacy ultimately depends on the self-restraint by
legislators enables us to demonstrate, in the second place, why courts could
legitimately resist the legislature in order to prevent that it would abuse the legal
competence to defend democracy against the specific threat of hostile speech to
abridge the right to free speech in general. Since self-restraint on the part of
legislators means that it must be legally possible to oust them through the
process of majority formation, we could maintain that it is democratically
legitimate for the judiciary to invalidate any piece of legislation that it deems to
be either an impermissible obstruction or an outright danger to this process.
Precisely because they are entitled to offer institutional resistance to the
legislature to safeguard the process of majority formation, judges could
legitimately deploy their power against incumbent legislators to minimize the
danger that democracy's self-defense against extremist speech would degenerate
into a suppression of political dissent, upon which the majority formation process
depends to function properly.
From the perspective of the challenges that must be addressed in this article,
we can, therefore, assert that the conception of democracy as legislative self-
restraint is superior to the conception of democracy as popular self-legislation.
Within the normative framework of the latter conception, it is not only impossible
for us to establish that laws suppressing extremist speech are laws that the
targeted law subjects could somehow have imposed upon themselves, but we
also cannot persuasively make the case for institutional resistance against the
legislature in order to prevent that the legislative competence, which should only
be used to keep democracy's enemies at bay, would be abused to silence
dissidents who do not pose any danger to the democratic state at all. Inherent to
the concept of popular self-legislation is, after all, the argument that the people
impose laws upon themselves through the agency of their elected legislators,
which, in turn, makes it extremely difficult, if not impossible, to make the case
for the resistance that the non-elected judiciary may offer to them in order to
prevent the abuse of democracy's right to self-defense. Precisely because
election by the people is what gives legislators the right to make laws, they will
always possess a decisive legitimacy advantage over non-elected judges, within
the normative framework of democracy as popular self-legislation. Laws that
they enact will, therefore, always appear to be democratically legitimate
beforehand, whereas the judicial invalidation of legislation always tends to make
an undemocratic impression at first sight. Legislators, however, would no longer
be able to enjoy this advantage if democracy were understood as legislative self-
restraint. For, in that case, they would have to generate the legitimacy of the
laws they enact through their own conduct, which makes it much easier for us to
defend the resistance that courts must offer to them in order to protect the right
to free speech, when the legislative abridgement of this right is not considered to
be necessary to preserve the cyclic process of majority formation, by means of
which, incumbent legislators could be voted out of power.