Is democracy without elections possible? Could a lottery be better?

Para garantizar una aleatoriedad absoluta en la asignación de posiciones cívicas particularmente importantes, tenían una máquinas llamada el kleroterion.
For most people today, public elections are synonymous with democracy. However, between 508 and 322 BCE, Athenians favoured a lottery system known as ‘sortition’. They largely believed it to be more fair, representative and responsive to the public interest than elections, which are often influenced by money and can foster destructive political polarisation. In this animation, Michael Vazquez, associate director of the Parr Center for Ethics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, breaks down both the potential of lottery-based systems and their limits. In particular, he highlights an updated lottery system conceived by the US philosopher Alex Guerrero, designed to address flaws in earlier models and some of the most pressing problems in contemporary electoral politics.
https://aeon.co/videos/is-democracy-without-elections-possible-could-a-lottery-be-better
