Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Most authoritarian rulers make democratic reforms not because they suddenly believe in democracy, but because they see they can’t hold total power as society changes. Three main things force this: everyday people’s values shift so they demand freedom; wealthy elites stop supporting the regime because it harms their interests; and new groups (students, workers, independent news, informal networks) grow stronger and challenge the state. These changes often build up over time and can even be sped up by the regime’s earlier success, so clever rulers sometimes grant political reforms to keep some power.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: Find the passage's explicit statement of why authoritarian rulers undertake reforms. The author says reforms are not driven by democratic conviction but by a desire to avoid losing power as social changes make authoritarian rule unsustainable. Key supporting lines: 'Most authoritarian rulers...do so not out of any intrinsic commitment or conversion to democratic ideals, but rather because they foresee or recognize that certain changes and mobilizations in civil society make it impossible for them to hold on indefinitely to absolute power.' and 'their only hope of retaining some power in the future is to match these democratic social changes with democratic political changes.'
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage6.Given the information in the passage, authoritarian rulers who institute democratic reforms decide to do so on the basis of which one of the following principles?
Correct Answer
E
E is correct because the passage explicitly states that rulers undertake democratic reforms pragmatically to preserve or retain power in the face of social changes. Support: 'Most authoritarian rulers...do so not out of any intrinsic commitment...but rather because they foresee or recognize that certain changes and mobilizations in civil society make it impossible for them to hold on indefinitely to absolute power.' And: 'the more astute or calculating of authoritarian rulers will recognize this and realize that their only hope of retaining some power in the future is to match these democratic social changes with democratic political changes.' These lines show the motive is maximizing/retaining long-term political power.
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