The Breaking Point of a Republic
Editor's Note
America is in a cold civil war, a regime conflict between a ruling class that seeks to remake the country and a public that remains attached to its inherited forms of life. That conflict is not only fought through elections or policy disputes, but through deeper questions about who belongs to the political community and on what terms it is held together.
The late Roman Republic confronted a similar problem, and the results were radically destabilizing. Expanding citizenship absent shared norms and obligations introduced new pressures the system could not absorb, producing a more volatile and easily manipulated political order. Our own moment reflects a comparable widening gap between formal inclusion and the cultural and institutional cohesion that sustains self-government. In a cold civil war, questions of membership carry the full weight of regime conflict, and the consequences of answering them poorly are far from theoretical.
Americans today take for granted the notion that immigrants to the country desire U.S. citizenship. Yet the history of citizenship is not a simple story of inclusion and progress. It’s also a story of strain, of what happens when political membership expands beyond the institutions, norms, and shared commitments that once held it together. The Roman Republic confronted this problem at scale — and the consequences were rather profound.
For non-citizens living within Rome’s domain during the days of the Republic, citizenship was not always an obvious improvement. Citizens were assessed a tax based on an appraisal of their property in the census: the higher one’s wealth, the more tax one had to pay. They were also required to put their lives and time on the line, serving many years in the Republic’s armed forces. In exchange, they enjoyed the protections of law, along with the right to vote and run for office at Rome. The votes of the rich counted for far more, since they not only paid more taxes but served more extensively, and in positions of higher responsibility, in the army. Citizenship was, in practice, not a single status but a sliding scale of increasing skin in the game paired with corresponding opportunities. This “graded” system created cohesion by aligning privilege with contribution, a structure largely absent in modern egalitarian frameworks.
Rome’s founding, at a trading post on the Tiber, drew together outlaws, rejects, Latins, Etruscans, and, so the legend goes, Trojans, and citizens might be welcomed from various races, at least in theory. But citizenship remained tightly guarded for centuries. Eventually, the Romans extended full citizenship, and more often various grades of partial citizenship, to select communities for outstanding service, mainly to nearby towns in Italy.
In general, however, they preferred to keep the peoples of Italy as formally independent, non-citizen allies. In exchange for military service, these communities were left autonomous and free from regular taxation. For them, becoming citizens would have meant doing much the same fighting, paying higher taxes, and, in practice, probably not even voting or running for office, since such opportunities required one to be physically present in Rome.
This arrangement was a reasonable deal for the allies until the Romans, flush from the wealth of many conquests that the allies helped them achieve, abolished taxation—but only for citizens—in 167 BC. Grain subsidies and land distributions soon followed under reformers like the Gracchi, again reserved for citizens.
By 91, the Romans ruled over much of the Mediterranean, including most of North Africa and Spain, southern Gaul, Greece and the Balkans, and western Asia Minor. As these domains grew, foreign wars became longer, more intense, and further away, and more soldiers were needed to fill the ranks. In 107 BC, Gaius Marius dropped the property minimum for Roman citizens to serve in the army, and the poor signed up in droves for his African campaign.
By this point, Rome’s citizen rolls were close to 400,000 men, and citizenship already meant much less politically than before. Votes were more diluted, and the oligarchic elites were monopolizing elected offices on an unprecedented scale through bribery, patronage networks, and more. Here we can see a parallel: as citizenship expands and material benefits increase, its political meaning weakens, and elite manipulation becomes easier.
But the Romans of the Republic still leaned heavily on the same Italian allies who had helped them build their empire. Citizenship now brought financial benefits instead of obligations, given the tax exemption and the ever-increasing opportunities for handouts. The rich, at least, among the allies could hope for a shot at office and entry into Roman patronage networks. Thus the Italians began to demand citizenship intensely.
Students of Roman history may be familiar with how this debate sparked the bloody Social War of 91–88 BC, but they might not realize how it also led to the first great civil war in the decade that followed, which offers many lessons for our times.
The spark was the assassination of a prominent politician, Livius Drusus, in 91. Drusus had proposed a complex bundle of legislation that would enfranchise large swaths of the Italians as full citizens. Then as now, granting citizenship en masse was unpopular with the poorer citizenry, who would see their votes, government subsidies, and perhaps even their culture diluted.
In their favor, and unlike in our current situation, the candidates for mass Roman citizenship had centuries-old traditions of loyal military service to the Republic. Even though the Romans did not have a formal state apparatus or explicit demands for assimilation, there were strong incentives to learn Latin and worship the Roman gods alongside one’s ancestral gods. These allies often spoke the Roman language in addition to their native tongues.
Despite lacking a bureaucratic framework, the Roman assimilation machine was powerful. Those who did not adopt Roman language, religion, and military obligations remained outside the fold, left to secure their own opportunities and protection. Most among the ambitious and prudent saw the wisdom of assimilating as far as they could. Contrast modern multicultural systems which deliberately preserve difference and celebrate foreignness, treating shared identity as evidence of injustice.
The citizenship grants were also unpopular with many aristocrats, who stood to see their carefully cultivated voting blocs disrupted. Others, however, reasoned that if they received credit for granting this political favor to a large body of new voters, they could secure them as permanent clients and dominate politics for generations. This dynamic—using new entrants as a political base—is now deployed at industrial scale by modern politicians focused on short-term factional advantage over long-term national cohesion.
To manage the discontent surrounding his citizenship bill, Drusus included additional measures to benefit various interest groups, including expanding the Senate and distributing public land. His legislative program came to a violent end when an unknown assassin stepped from a crowd of petitioners in Drusus’ own house and plunged a dagger into his belly.
News of Drusus’ death spread quickly across the peninsula, and most of Rome’s Italian allies rose in revolt. For the next four years, the Social War saw battles rage across allied territories. The Romans ultimately resorted to mass citizenship grants to placate various tribes and bring them over to their side. By the end of the war, almost all former allied Italians possessed citizenship.
The result might seem ironic—couldn’t the war have been avoided and the same outcome achieved? But the settlement was imposed under duress, through coercion and war, rather than through a patient political process. Whether by chance or design, this introduced a dangerous instability.
It is worth emphasizing that citizenship in the classical city-states of antiquity rested on the principle that those willing to risk their lives and fortunes for the safety of the state had a right to determine its government and compete to rule in it. The American Founders understood this well and reflected it in legislation such as the Militia Acts of 1792.
In desperate times, ancient states sometimes took the extreme step of enlisting slaves to fight in defense of the city, a move that often implied granting them freedom and, at times, citizenship. The Union followed this example in the American Civil War, as did the United States in both World Wars, where non-citizens could gain expedited citizenship through military service.
On this principle, it was likely that the Italians would eventually be incorporated into the Roman franchise. But ancient politicians were no less adept than modern ones at using mass citizenship grants as a tool against their domestic rivals.
It is unclear how Drusus intended to integrate the Italians into the voting registers before the Social War. But those who ultimately admitted them during and after the conflict did so in a way that gave them hidden leverage.
Rome’s voting assemblies were structured in ways that advantaged certain classes. In assemblies convened by the consuls, the votes of the wealthy carried more weight and were counted first. The new Italian citizens were placed into the lowest-ranking tribes within these assemblies. These tribes often did not even vote, since outcomes were decided once a majority was reached. As a result, many did not bother to appear at the polls.
It wasn’t long before a leading populist exploited the latent opportunity. In 88 BC, with the Social War still fresh, Gaius Marius introduced legislation in a different assembly, one in which votes were not weighted by tribe. There, the newly enfranchised Italians could decisively shape the outcome—provided they appeared in Rome.
Marius made sure they appeared by including a provision favorable to them, which would redistribute the Italians more evenly across the voting structure. In return, he secured their support for another measure: stripping the command of a lucrative foreign war from his rival Sulla and transferring it to himself.
The Italians complied, the law passed, and the command was reassigned. To many Romans, this was an obviously destructive abuse of the constitution. But the new citizens, less rooted in Roman political tradition and fresh from conflict with the state, had fewer such scruples. A newly enfranchised population, lacking deep attachment to institutional norms, often proves more open to destabilizing policies, especially when incentivized by elite patrons.
Sulla, however, refused to accept the decision. With 20,000 veteran soldiers camped nearby, he declared that the Republic had been seized by lawless tyrants and marched on Rome. This marked the beginning of the first great Roman Civil War, which would ultimately claim more than 100,000 lives.
Opponents of mass citizenship grants are often dismissed by modern historians as reactionaries. But the immediate consequences of the Roman case suggest a more complicated picture. Newly enfranchised populations can become a political wild card, more willing to support radical policies which obviously benefit their tribe.
The Italians of the late Republic had stronger claims than many modern immigrant populations. They were more assimilated, or at least more assimilable, sharing related languages, similar religious frameworks, and long traditions of military service. Most were content to remain in their own communities rather than relocate to Rome. Even so, their enfranchisement, and the manner in which it was carried out, contributed directly to civil war.
Those who wish to stave off political volatility should take note. A cohesive political community cannot be created by legal status alone. It must be built through shared obligations, norms, and identity. When these are weak, the result is not peaceful integration but conflict; and when expansion pushes beyond the breaking point of those bonds, instability becomes all but inevitable.