California, the Golden State, once the beacon of American progress, now offers a grim lesson in electoral incompetence. As vote-counting drags on for days and even weeks after every major election, the rest of the nation watches with a mix of bewilderment and disdain. This is not merely a logistical hiccup; it is a symptom of a deeper rot, a failure of civic competence that would have horrified the Founders. They understood that a republic, if it is to endure, must be efficient in its administration, not merely noble in its aspirations.
The usual defences are trotted out: California’s size, its mail-in ballot system, its complex ballot initiatives. But size is no excuse. The United Kingdom conducts nationwide elections with results often known within hours. India, the world’s largest democracy, manages to count hundreds of millions of votes in a single day. Why does California, the world’s fifth-largest economy, founder? The answer lies not in logistics but in culture. A culture that has grown complacent, bureaucratic, and suspicious of efficiency. A culture that prizes participation over integrity, and process over results.
The consequences are dire. Every delayed result feeds the narrative of a rigged system. Every unsolved glitch, every uncounted provisional ballot, becomes fuel for conspiracy theorists. The Left sees voter suppression; the Right sees fraud. And the centre, as always, is left holding the bag. This is how democracies die: not with a bang, but with a bureaucratic whimper.
We are witnessing the end of the American century, my friends. The Roman Empire did not fall in a day. It fell gradually, with each missed census, each delayed election, each subtle erosion of civic virtue. California is the canary in the coal mine. If it cannot get its act together, what hope is there for the rest of the union? The answer is none. We are sleepwalking into a catastrophe of our own making, and the world watches, shaking its head.
Perhaps it is time to scrap the entire system and start anew. Not with mail-in ballots and early voting, but with same-day registration, paper ballots, and mandatory national standards. The chaos of federalism has its limits. If we cannot count in a timely manner, we cannot govern. And if we cannot govern, we deserve the tyranny that follows.
So let us stop making excuses for California. Let us demand better. Let us remember that the price of liberty is not eternal vigilance alone, but also eternal efficiency. Or as the Romans might have said: ‘Vote in haste, count at leisure.’ The leisure is killing us.









