That’s what they do in the USA.
There are, in pretty much all democracies, three elements of government:
• The Executive;
• The Legislature; and
• The Judiciary.
The Americans elect all or parts* of all three.
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Our tradition is different: we elect
only the legislature.
Our ‘Executive’ is the Queen – advised by a committee of the Queen’s Privy Council, AKA the cabinet. We
inherit the sovereign but we
indirectly elect (most of) the cabinet† since, by
Constitutional convention (unwritten rules with
at least as much ‘weight’ as any written law, including the Charter of Rights and Freedoms) the cabinet is formed from members of the political party that ‘has the confidence’ of (can win votes in) the House of Commons which, also by ancient ‘convention’ is the only place where taxes can be ‘levied’ and where wars can be declared.
Our judges, like US judges, have their origins in Heny II’s ‘assize’ courts. That term (Assize Court), and ‘Court of Queen’s Bench’ survived and still survive into the 21st century.
Because judges derive their power from the sovereign (executive) and because they can literally overturn decisions of the sovereign’s legislature (remember it is “Her Majesty’s Government” and “Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition” – terms that indicate that the legislature, too, is
subordinate to an all powerful executive) they are, of necessity an
extension of the executive.
Now, our system is
evolutionary. Clearly, Queen Elizabeth’s (or Governor General Michaëlle Jean’s) real, practical powers are confined to a few, largely ceremonial matters.‡ The real power – to
require, for example, that you and I pay taxes and that we all drive on a certain (uniform) side of the road – rest with the elected legislatures. Those legislatures can, and sometimes do, deny “Her Majesty’s Government” its (her) wishes. In that case the government-of-the-day may lose the ‘confidence of parliament and Her Majesty (us, effectively) may have to find a new government – generally by having an election.**
Thus, we come (evolve) full circle. We, the people, are our own ‘all powerful sovereign.’ We pay a monarch, a governor general in our case, to look after some of the less important ‘head of state’ duties for us. A few hundred years ago we, our parliament, used to ‘select’ (indirectly elect) the monarch, too. That’s how William and Mary (1689) and the current House of Windsor (1714) (variously House of Hanover, House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and House of Windsor) came into ‘power’ or, properly, into our employ.
We govern ourselves through the legislature we elect and we, through the elected cabinet, appoint our own judges.
There are, especially for radical “
Jacksonians,” attractions to electing pretty much everything. Our system, rooted in more than 1,000 years of British tradition, can be just as ‘democratic.’
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* Originally all US judges were appointed, like all Canadian judges today, but,
circa 1850 there was something of a ‘constitutional revolt’ in the US and a corrupt judiciary was part of the problem. Electing judges, to provide ‘accountability’ to the people was seen to be the answer. Today many lower court judges (
a majority, in a majority of states) are elected.
† Provided a few ‘conventions’ are observed he prije minister ma appoint a few unelected senators to the cabinet, too.
‡ But, as we will soon see, some ceremonial vestiges remain. We do not have a government until Governor General Michaëlle Jean swears it in – making it
her government.
** But not always; if a government ‘falls’ (loses a vote of confidence) very son after a general election – say in the late winter of 2008/09 or early spring of 2009 – the GG
may decide to ask the leader of
her opposition to see if he can form a government and secure the ‘confidence’ of parliament.