Why is the suffrage important in a representative democracy?
A republic may be defined as a representative democracy, or, in the popular sense of the term, simply as a democracy.
In a representative democracy such as the United States, the question of the suffrage is of fundamental importance.
The question, therefore, whether our adoption of representative democracy was a mistake, raises the preliminary question whether the consent of the members of a community is a necessary condition of good government.
Representative Government, page 199) The changes now going on in our conception of the psychological basis of politics will also re-open the discussion of representative democracy.
Throughout Europe and America, representative democracy is generally accepted as the best form of government; but those who have had most experience of its actual working are often disappointed and apprehensive.
At first sight the main controversy as to the best form of government appears to have been finally settled in favour of representative democracy.
The comparison, therefore, as to the intellectual attributes of a government has to be made between a representative democracy and a bureaucracy; all other governments may be left out of the account.
In form an oligarchy, taking this term in its best sense, it was yet a representative democracy of the archaic type.
Although oligarchical in form, the government was a representative democracy; the representative being elected for life, but subject to deposition.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "representative democracy" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.