Kakistocracy ( ) is government by the worst, least qualified, or most unscrupulous people.
The word was coined as early as the 17th century and derives from two Greek words, (κάκιστος]], ) and (κράτος]], ), together meaning .
Therefore we need not make any scruple of praying against such: against those Sanctimonious Incendiaries, who have fetched fire from heaven to set their Country in combustion, have pretended Religion to raise and maintaine a most wicked rebellion: against those Nero's, who have ripped up the wombe of the mother that bare them, and wounded the breasts that gave them sucke: against those Cannibal's who feed upon the flesh and are drunke with the bloud of their own brethren: against those Catiline's who seeke their private ends in the publicke disturbance, and have set the Kingdome on fire to rost their owne egges: against those tempests of the State, those restlesse spirits who can no longer live, then be stickling and medling; who are stung with a perpetuall itch of changing and innovating, transforming our old Hierarchy into a new Presbytery, and this againe into a newer Independency; and our well-temperd Monarchy into a mad kinde of Kakistocracy. Good Lord!During the period of the French Revolution, the term was used by detractors of Robespierre's government; Abraham Gotthelf Kästner did it in 1800.Abraham Gotthelf Kästner, Sinngedichte und Einfälle. Erste Sammlung, Frankfurt-Leipzig, 1800, p. 82. Italian author Vittorio Alfieri used the word "kakistocrazia" (kakistocracy) in 1797, as a sarcastic distortion of "aristocracy", to lament the end of the Republic of Venice invaded by Napoleon's army.Vittorio Alfieri, Opere postume, XI, London (really Firenze), 1804, p. 93
English author Thomas Love Peacock used the term in his 1829 novel The Misfortunes of Elphin, in which he explains that kakistocracy represents the opposite of aristocracy, as aristos (ἄριστος) means "excellent" in Greek. In his 1838 Memoir on Slavery (which he supported), U.S. Senator William Harper compared kakistocracy to anarchy, and said it had seldom occurred:
American poet James Russell Lowell used the term in 1876, in a letter to Joel Benton, writing, "What fills me with doubt and dismay is the degradation of the moral tone. Is it or is it not a result of Democracy? Is ours a 'government of the people by the people for the people,' or a Kakistocracy rather, for the benefit of knaves at the cost of fools?"
The term gained popularity during the first Trump administration, going viral in 2017 when used by then-MSNBC host Joy Reid and again following an April 2018 tweet by former CIA director John Brennan. The term has been used by commentators at numerous news outlets, political publications, and books to describe the first presidency of Donald Trump.
In late 2024, Chicago mayor Brandon Johnson's administration was described as a kakistocracy in National Review.
The term was named word of the year by The Economist in 2024.
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