Why this topic card matters even before it is proven
This topic card feels strongest because it answers a real democratic injury directly: many people experience governance as something done to them by professionals, parties, courts, and administrative systems they can barely touch. It feels weakest wherever civic participation is idealized and the real burdens of competence, manipulation risk, and scale are underweighted. The card is useful because it asks not whether experts matter, but how expert governance stays publicly answerable.
The problem it is trying to solve
Modern governance often relies on professional expertise, party structures, administrative continuity, and procedural distance to manage complexity. That can improve competence, but it can also produce institutions that are hard to trust, hard to challenge, and easy to experience as insulated. Ordinary publics are then left with low-information elections, reactive outrage, or broad distrust rather than durable civic participation in review and correction.
The proposed move
Use a hybrid model where expert institutions continue doing specialized work, but selected citizen panels, assemblies, or review bodies are given structured roles in examining major decisions, hearing objections, reviewing tradeoffs, and producing visible public reasoning that can pressure or check formal institutions without pretending to replace them wholesale.