True. However, I did not mean any specific model of democracy in its technical sense, but rather the disparity in leverage your elected representative has vs another district, which affects the original definition:
all eligible citizens have an equal say in the decisions that affect their lives
By that metric you can compare different democratic models, and the British-style parliamentary model results in a larger disparity of real power between elected members and hence between their districts and hence between people living in different locales than an American-style democracy. But that’s way off topic.
...the separation of powers and democracy are two distinct things. I don’t see why you think less of the former means less of the latter.
True. However, I did not mean any specific model of democracy in its technical sense, but rather the disparity in leverage your elected representative has vs another district, which affects the original definition:
By that metric you can compare different democratic models, and the British-style parliamentary model results in a larger disparity of real power between elected members and hence between their districts and hence between people living in different locales than an American-style democracy. But that’s way off topic.