

Gianna Englert, "Democracy Tamed: French Liberalism and the Politics of Suffrage" (Oxford UP, 2024)
6 snips Oct 15, 2025
Gianna Englert, Associate Professor at the University of Florida, delves into the tension between liberalism and democracy in 19th-century France. She intriguingly argues that the concept of 'political capacity' was aimed at preserving democracy while limiting voting rights. The discussion features key thinkers like Benjamin Constant and François Guizot, examining their views on meritocracy versus hereditary privilege. Englert also contemplates lessons from historical debates for today's challenges in liberalism and democracy.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Liberalism Vs. Electoral Democracy
- Nineteenth-century French liberals saw liberalism as an institutional philosophy and democracy as an electoral arrangement that could threaten liberal freedoms.
- They feared that unfiltered popular choices might erode protections like individual rights and stable institutions.
Political Rights As Earned Capacity
- 'Capacité politique' treated political rights as earned prerequisites rather than universal entitlements.
- Liberals argued voting must be limited to those who displayed external signs of political capacity.
Constant's Middle Path
- Benjamin Constant combined opposition to both Jacobin radicalism and reactionary aristocracy and shaped early French liberalism.
- He argued for pluralism, direct elections, but a limited franchise as a temporary filter against revolutionary excess.