
History Unplugged Podcast Ancient Athens Picked Its Leaders by Lottery for Over 200 Years. Some Think This System Should Replace Electoral Democracy
Jan 1, 2026
Terry Bourcious, a former Vermont politician and author of 'Democracy Without Politicians,' explores the intriguing concept of sortition, or lottery-based selection, as practiced in Ancient Athens. He discusses how this system effectively mitigated impulsive decision-making and corruption, contrasting it with modern electoral politics. With examples from the British Columbia Citizens' Assembly and contemporary initiatives, Terry advocates for citizens' assemblies as a means to enhance democratic representation, arguing that ordinary citizens can make more deliberative choices than elected officials.
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Athens' Lottery Democracy Revived
- Ancient Athens used sortition—random lotteries—to staff most public offices and the Council of 500 for nearly two centuries.
- Modern citizens' assemblies and juries revive sortition as an alternative to electoral politics.
Council Tempered An Impulsive Execution Vote
- In 406 BC the Assembly voted to execute six victorious generals after a storm prevented recovering lost bodies.
- The Council of 500 intervened, reviewed the case, exposed procedural illegalities, and tempered the Assembly's impulsive decision.
Vermont Legislature Lacked Renters
- Terry noticed his Vermont legislature had almost no renters despite a large renter population, revealing skewed representation.
- He concluded an actually representative body could be drawn from a phone book and deliberate differently.


