Bunuan answers that "like any other organizations, there can be some bad people, and it's the workers' job" to vote carefully for their leaders.
It seems paradoxical, but just because people can vote for their leaders does not mean they can hold those leaders accountable.
You wonder how the Iraqis who have not fled that tortured country feel about these expatriates voting for their leaders.
Schumpeter thought that the electoral masses are incapable of political participation other than voting for their leaders.
Elections are done in a democratic way, making the students to vote for their leaders.
They want to be in a free and democratic Iraq where they can vote for their leaders and have a democratically accountable Parliament.
Greece, and later, Ancient Rome voted for their leaders for many generations.
We get to vote for our political leaders, and we aren't shot down in the streets, as the demonstrators in Tiananmen Square were.
"President Mobutu didn't ask the people to vote for their leaders," he said.
As Iraq and now Palestine have shown, letting people vote for their own leaders doesn't necessarily produce a government that other powers want.