What if the biggest threat to democracy isn't a bad Prime Minister... but the idea that we need one at all?
This book makes one argument, and it will not let you look away from it:
Every strongman who has ever broken a democracy walked in through a door we built for him.
We didn't get here by accident. We designed our systems to hand enormous power to a single office - and then we act shocked when that office gets misused. The Consensus Republic asks the question almost no one in politics is willing to ask out loud:
What if we simply... removed the office?
No Prime Minister. No single ruler at the center of the world's largest democracy. Instead - a radically redesigned Parliament that actually governs, a President reimagined as a constitutional referee instead of a figurehead, and a mechanism so simple it's almost embarrassing no one tried it before: laws can be sent back up to three times, forcing power to explain itself instead of just wielding itself.
It sounds impossible. Until you realize - it's not utopian. It's engineering. A blueprint for a republic where no single person, party, or faction can ever again hold 1.4 billion people hostage to their ego.
This isn't a book about left or right. It's not about which leader is good or bad. It's about a question that outlives every election:
Why do we keep building democracies that depend on finding a good person - instead of democracies that don't need one?
Read it. Argue with it. Then hand it to someone you trust - because the most dangerous thing about this book isn't its answer.
It's that once you read the question, you can't unread it.
The Consensus Republic - the book daring to imagine democracy without a throne.