There can be no question that American democracy is at risk. Just two years ago, thousands of insurrectionists stormed and occupied the Capitol building in a failed attempt to overthrow the result of the 2020 presidential election. They were supported by a large number of Republican members of Congress who falsely claimed that the election outcome was fraudulent. There are additional disturbing signs in evidence across the country. Angry parents storm school board and city council meetings shouting down officials demanding that books be banned and teachers be dismissed. Election officials fear for their safety as they count votes while armed protesters gather threateningly outside polling places. Republican-led state legislatures pass laws to restrict voting rights or make polling places more difficult to access. Hate crimes continue to rise, as do mass shootings. Students from both the right and left shout down invited speakers with whom they disagree. Universities feel pressure to dismiss professors or ban groups who challenge conventional viewpoints. And, as the recent <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/opinion/comment/2023/01/06/the-kevin-mccarthy-spectacle-bodes-ill-for-the-us/">debacle</a> to elect the speaker of the House of Representatives exhibited, intolerant behaviours at work in the US Congress are part of a politics so polarised by hyper-partisanship that our legislature is now alternately paralysed or dysfunctional. Against this dire backdrop, we should debunk that oft-made claim that “free and fair elections are the essence of a democracy". While important, elections are just one of the characteristics of a democracy, not its essence. More important are the values that must be cultivated and protected in order to preserve a truly democratic order. Central among these values is that <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/opinion/editorial/2023/01/10/from-washington-to-brasilia-history-is-often-written-by-the-losers/">losers must respect the outcomes of elections</a>, and that winners and groups in the majority must show respect for the rights of those who lose and those in the minority. Further, this respect leads to the protection of the rights of those who hold views that diverge from the majority and the need for winners and losers, the majority and minority, to engage in constructive dialogue to find compromise solutions to problems facing the society as a whole. This is the essence of democracy. A true democracy is never a zero-sum game in which the winners use their positions of power to silence, cancel or demonstrate intolerance for the views of those they have defeated in free and fair elections. The impulse to squash or punish those who represent divergent viewpoints is anti-democratic. It is important to maintain vigilance in cultivating such a culture because without it a democracy can wither and die. If this <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/opinion/comment/2022/05/02/the-place-of-secularism-in-indian-politics/">idea of respecting minority rights and views</a> is important in a society in which one group is clearly dominant, it is even more critical in societies that are evenly divided. It was precisely the heavy-handed abuse of their electoral victory that caused so many Egyptians to recoil from Muslim Brotherhood rule. And it is the way that the victorious far-right coalition currently governing in Israel is <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/opinion/editorial/2023/01/05/israel-must-respect-the-status-quo-at-al-aqsa/">behaving</a> to unravel the courts, rule of law, and minority rights that has caused fear and a backlash among many Israelis. If democracy isn’t zero-sum, neither is politics, especially in diverse societies. When victors overreach by imposing their ideologies or attempting to extend their power by changing the rules of the road, they weaken democracy and invite a potentially disruptive backlash from groups threatened by their behaviour. What is happening in the US today provides a case in point. In 2022, Republicans won a very close election and now hold a slight advantage in the House of Representatives. They lost ground in the Senate, and Democrats still control the White House. Given this outcome, one would think that Republicans and Democrats, quite evenly divided among the electorate, would seek compromise solutions to pressing problems facing the country – with Republicans in the House using the leverage they now have to push for compromises that reflect their views. Instead, Republicans appear to have decided to use their control of the House to <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/opinion/comment/2023/01/24/kevin-mccarthy-and-the-telling-state-of-the-republicans/">paralyse the government and demonise opponents</a>, making demands that amount to “my way, or else". The danger here is that such an approach is not only fatal to respectful discourse and compromise, but also poisons political relationships, spreading downwards to create an even more polarised electorate. The adage “politics is the art of the possible” is true, but we must also acknowledge the vital role played in a democracy by groups that passionately advocate principled positions or novel and forward-looking solutions. America’s political history is filled with examples of groups and visionary leaders who have organised around their principles and solutions, moving public attitudes and, as a result, changing the political calculations of policymakers, thereby expanding what is possible. But when political views become dogmatic – hardened, absolute and unbending, such an approach is counterproductive and self-destructive. In this environment, the bad behaviour of uncompromising extremists can be held up as “principled", while moderate voices seeking solutions are denounced for “selling out". As a result, compromise becomes impossible and democracy suffers. This, sadly, is where we are today in America. And it is putting our very democracy at risk.