“For fear of the newspapers politicians are dull, and at last they are too dull even for the newspapers.” — G.K. Chesterton, On the Cryptic and the Elliptic from All Things Considered
There once was a time where politicians felt the need to limit the number of skeletons in their closet in order to run for and stay in office. Those days, unfortunately, are behind us. In Chesterton's day (circa early 1900s), politicians were boring enough to be out of the headlines completely. Nowadays, politicians feel no pressure to behave. Whether it is due to a long track record of getting away with it or whether it is due to society no longer demanding more from their representatives, politicians do what they want without consequence. In that sense, perhaps more so than ever, our representatives represent us well. We elect what we deserve.
“When God wants to judge a nation, He gives them wicked rulers." — John Calvin
Wicked men choose wicked men to represent them. God judges wicked people by giving them over to oppressive rulers and He also judges them by convincing them that wicked men are the best men to represent them.
“And ye, O peoples, to whom God gave the liberty to choose your own magistrates, see to it, that ye do not forfeit this favor, by electing to the positions of highest honor, rascals and enemies of God.” — Abraham Kuyper, Lectures on Calvinism
Good people must manfully resist the temptation to vote for scoundrels. They must demand better of those who represent them. They must insist on a certain level of decorum. In the meantime, we may have to settle for Jehus in lieu of Josiahs. But we won't get Josiahs until we demand them.
“In any successful attack on freedom the state can only be an accomplice. The chief culprit is the citizen who forgets his duty, wastes away his strength in the sleep of sin and sensual pleasure, and so loses the power of his own initiative.” — Abraham Kuyper
In a representative government, the state may grow and swell to a wicked size, but not without the consent of the governed. The more we demand special treatment, the more we vote for wicked measures to ensure them. We vote away the rights of our neighbors in order to secure the property of our neighbors. But theft is theft, even if we vote on it and theft is theft, even if is the government who does it.