Modern debates about governance often focus on policy design, institutional competence, or ideological alignment. These approaches assume that better expertise or improved procedures can reliably produce legitimate outcomes. This paper challenges that assumption. The Governance Model Challenge, developed within the framework of Constitutional Civic Realism (CCR), argues that legitimacy does not arise from technocratic optimization or formal procedure alone. Instead, it depends on whether a system can continuously constrain organized power and prevent it from becoming unaccountable. This paper critiques the technocratic conception of state capacity as incomplete, showing how organized actors—public and private—can accumulate asymmetric advantages, reduce transparency, construct immunity, and ultimately evade meaningful oversight. In this context, increased capacity without corresponding constraint can accelerate the concentration of power rather than improve governance outcomes. In response, the paper introduces a structured evaluative framework: any governance model must demonstrate how it maintains effective, ongoing constraints on organized power across institutional, regulatory, and civic domains. Particular attention is given to the role of Organized Civic Power (OCP) in sustaining accountability between electoral and judicial cycles. By shifting the focus from optimization to constraint, the Governance Model Challenge provides a practical test for assessing the resilience and legitimacy of modern governance systems.
John Matylonek (Sat,) studied this question.