Growing up, I learned that democracy is about what most of the people want. That is what is fair. Majority rules. But in national politics, the few rule the many. Assigning each senator half of his or her state population, senators who voted to confirm Brett Kavanaugh Brett Michael KavanaughHarris faces pivotal moment with Supreme Court battle Poll: 59 percent think president elected in November should name next Supreme Court justice Feinstein 'surprised and taken aback' by suggestion she's not up for Supreme Court fight MORE to the Supreme Court represent just 44 percent of the population. Meanwhile, senators who voted against the confirmation represent the majority: 56 percent. Donald Trump Donald John TrumpBiden on Trump's refusal to commit to peaceful transfer of power: 'What country are we in?' Romney: 'Unthinkable and unacceptable' to not commit to peaceful transition of power Two Louisville police officers shot amid Breonna Taylor grand jury protests MORE, of course, won office with the votes of 63 million Americans. Hillary Clinton Hillary Diane Rodham ClintonDemocratic groups using Bloomberg money to launch M in Spanish language ads in Florida The Hill's Campaign Report: Presidential polls tighten weeks out from Election Day More than 50 Latino faith leaders endorse Biden MORE gained the votes of 66 million.

The few rule the many. Moreover, the few ruling are whiter, older, and more male than the country they represent. This is no accident or happenstance. The rulers have rigged the rules to disempower the majority. This has been a deliberate strategy of the ultrarich for years. Nancy MacLean’s recent book “Democracy in Chains” exposes the path these ultrarich political donors are using to consolidate power, through the previously unexplored archive of economist James McGill Buchanan. Buchanan knew that a functioning democracy with majority rule would lead to taxation of the wealthy minority to support public services. Buchanan, with the interests of the rich in mind, concluded that majority rule was a problem.

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Buchanan sought rules to give outsize power to the wealthy minority, and limit the power of the majority. “The problems of our times,” he said, “require attention to the rules rather than the rulers.” He also sought to distract the majority from the problems of increasing inequality by directing voter frustration at public institutions, rather than the anti-democratic rulers. “Democracy in Chains,” combined with the Jane Mayer’s seminal book “Dark Money,” expose the anti-democratic goals and stealth means of the ultrarich working to make sure that government works only for the rich, not for the majority. The Koch network of political groups is the leader in this anti-democracy effort. They also depend on keeping the true sources of funding of political campaigns secret, because sunlight on their plans would scuttle them.

If we want self-government by the many, we need to place our collective attention not only on the next election, but on changing the rigged rules that led us here. Taken together, several targeted reforms would go a long way toward bring back majority rule. To begin with, we should limit the power of mega donors and corporations to fund political candidates who then do their bidding once in office. Publicly funded elections for Congress would increase the voice of everyone without the means to spend thousands of dollars on campaign contributions, forcing elected officials to listen to all of us, not just those with large bank accounts.

Transparency for all political campaigns at the federal, state and local levels would help counter the stealth influence of the ultra rich minority by exposing their manipulations. Voters in North Dakota and South Dakota can vote yes on important transparency ballot measures next month.

To combat gerrymandering, in which politicians limit voter power by choosing their voters, states can move toward independent redistricting commissions, which are currently in place in only a handful of states. This election, voters in Colorado, Michigan, Missouri, and Utah have a chance to put a major collective dent in gerrymandering with votes to create redistricting commissions. To confront the majority hostile Electoral College system, the National Popular Vote, which is an interstate compact that is already law in multiple states, provides a path to have the president elected by popular vote without requiring a constitutional amendment.

Ranked choice voting, already in use in Maine and in multiple cities across the country, allows people to vote for their first, second and third choices, instead of settling for the lesser of two evils. It expands the range of political debate and decreases the negative attack ads so corrosive to our politics. The opponents of majority rule in the United States have been laser focused on rigging the rules of democracy so that the few rule the many. It is time for the majority to be equally focused on unrigging these rules, in order to have a country governed by all the people.

Daniel G. Newman is president of Map Light, a nonpartisan research organization that reveals the influence of money on politics and promotes reform.