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People often say they support “the rule of law,” but the phrase can become so familiar that we stop asking what it means.

The rule of law does not simply mean that a society has laws. Every society has laws. Dictatorships have laws. Theocracies have laws. Police states have laws. A government can pass thousands of statutes and still be unjust if those laws mainly serve power rather than restrain it.

In the classical liberal sense, the rule of law means that public power is exercised only according to public, known rules that also bind those who wield power.

That is the central idea: the rule of law is not only about controlling citizens. It is about controlling power.

1. The law applies to everyone

A rule-of-law society begins from the principle that no person or institution stands above the law.

This includes politicians, police, judges, bureaucrats, regulators, public agencies, private citizens, corporations, activists, and ordinary voters. The law recognizes different roles and responsibilities, but it does not create a class of people exempt from ordinary legal limits.

The same principle runs in the other direction. No one falls beneath the protection of the law. An unpopular person is still protected. A disliked minority is still protected. A political opponent is still protected. A person accused of wrongdoing remains protected by process until guilt is established.

Equality before the law does not mean everyone has the same wealth, status, history, talents, or circumstances. It means the law recognizes citizens as citizens, rather than sorting them into favoured and unfavoured classes.

2. The state acts under legal authority

The state has powers ordinary citizens do not have. It can tax, arrest, regulate, prosecute, fine, imprison, seize property, restrict movement, and use force. Some of those powers are necessary. A society without courts, policing, public order, or contract enforcement will not remain free for long.

But necessary power is still power.

The rule of law requires government to justify its actions by law. A public official cannot rely merely on usefulness, popularity, safety, urgency, or good intentions. The relevant question is: what legal authority permits this action, and what limits govern that authority?

Without that requirement, law becomes something government applies to others while remaining above meaningful restraint itself.

3. Laws are public and knowable

People cannot obey laws they cannot know.

For law to guide citizens, it has to be public, accessible, and clear enough that ordinary people can understand what is expected of them. Modern legal systems are complicated, and not every rule can be simple. Even so, citizens are not governed well by hidden standards, secret procedures, vague commands, or rules that only become clear after punishment begins.

Vague law expands official discretion. It allows officials to decide later who counts as guilty, which makes citizens dependent not on law itself, but on the judgment, mood, ideology, or priorities of those enforcing it.

A rule-of-law society makes legal duties knowable before citizens are punished for violating them.

4. Laws are general, not targeted

Law is built around principles rather than enemies.

A general law applies across cases. It does not exist merely to punish a disliked person, silence a faction, reward an ally, or create special treatment for a favoured group. When law becomes too targeted, it stops functioning as law and starts functioning as political power in legal form.

This does not mean law never distinguishes between situations. Criminal law treats theft differently from murder. Tax law treats income differently from gifts. Public safety law treats dangerous conduct differently from ordinary conduct.

The problem is not distinction. The problem is arbitrary distinction.

A rule-of-law society distinguishes between laws grounded in general principles and laws used to protect friends or punish enemies.

5. Due process matters

Due process means that the state cannot simply accuse, condemn, and punish. There has to be fair procedure.

At minimum, a person knows the accusation, has a chance to respond, faces evidence rather than rumour, and is judged by an impartial process. The more serious the possible punishment, the more important these protections become.

Due process is sometimes treated as a loophole or a technicality, especially when the accused person is unpopular. But due process is most important when it is least popular.

Under the rule of law, punishment follows lawful process rather than public anger, political convenience, bureaucratic shortcut, or moral panic.

6. Courts and remedies exist

Rights are weak if citizens have no way to enforce them.

A rule-of-law society has independent courts and meaningful remedies when government exceeds its authority. Citizens have some lawful path to challenge unlawful action, whether through courts, appeals, judicial review, legislative oversight, public inquiries, ombudsmen, or other accountability mechanisms.

No institution is perfect. Courts can be slow, expensive, inconsistent, or wrong. But without some independent body able to say to government, “You have gone too far,” legal rights become largely decorative.

The rule of law depends not only on written promises, but on mechanisms that allow citizens to test whether those promises have been kept.

7. Emergency powers remain limited

Emergencies are real. Wars, disasters, riots, pandemics, and public-order crises can require government to act quickly. A rule-of-law society does not pretend that ordinary conditions always apply.

But emergency power arrives with urgency attached. The public is told there is no time for normal limits, ordinary procedures, or careful objections. Temporary extraordinary powers may sometimes be justified, but under the rule of law they remain lawful, limited, proportionate, reviewable, and temporary.

A crisis does not erase legal restraint. Crisis is precisely when legal restraint becomes most necessary, because fear makes people more willing to grant power without limits.

Rule of law versus rule by law

The distinction between rule of law and rule by law is useful.

Rule of law means law restrains power.

Rule by law means power uses law as a tool.

An authoritarian government may have courts, police, regulations, official procedures, and legal language. It may pass laws constantly. But if those laws mainly protect the regime, punish enemies, control speech, excuse officials, or make citizens dependent on arbitrary discretion, then the society is not governed by the rule of law in the liberal sense.

The question is not simply whether laws exist. The question is whether law stands above power, or whether power bends law to its own purposes.

A woman stands between stone columns holding scales of justice, with a sword resting on a stone table nearby, symbolizing law restraining power.

Law is not merely what power writes down. Rule of law means power itself is bound.

In summary

The rule of law means that society is governed by public, general, knowable, and fairly applied laws rather than arbitrary power.

It means the law binds the state as well as the citizen. It requires legal limits on government, equality before the law, due process, independent review, and meaningful remedies when power is abused.

It does not mean every law is wise. It does not mean every court is right. It does not mean government can never act. It means that even necessary government action must remain under law.

Rule of law is not merely having laws.

Every tyranny has laws.

Rule of law means law restrains power.

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