A lot of RWs on this board keep pounding on this point, but it's not clear what they mean by it. When anyone insists "America is a republic, not a democracy," what they usually mean by it is that America is a federal state and not a unitary state -- which is both true and important, but has nothing to do with any difference between "republic" and "democracy." The United States is a democratic republic -- as opposed, to say, an aristocratic republic, like the ancient Roman republic with its more-or-less hereditary senators, or the old Venetian republic where the doge was elected but only noblemen could vote, or the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth where the king was, again, elected by the nobles assembled in the sejm. (The antebellum American states of the South were also aristocratic republics for all practical purposes, controlled by the slaveowning-landowning gentry class, to the exclusion of the majority even of whites.)
N.B.: "What the United States Constitution sets out" is not for these purposes an adequate definition of "republic."
What countries other than the U.S. are republics as opposed to democracies?
N.B.: "What the United States Constitution sets out" is not for these purposes an adequate definition of "republic."
What countries other than the U.S. are republics as opposed to democracies?
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