yitwail wrote:prosecutors in the UK, unlike District Attorneys in the US, aren't elected, are they?
No, prosecutors in the UK are not elected, as you say. Like the Director General of the BBC, they are appointed by the UK central government, which usually waits until retirement to replace office holders with someone more to their liking.
The current UK DPP - Director of Public Prosecutions - pops up in the media every-so-often, to remind us that a high acquittal rate, is not a bad thing, if those defendants are innocent. Sound like he could not say that in most parts of the US, and remain in post?
yitwail wrote:over here, they tout their conviction rate when running for reelection, and plea bargains raise the conviction rate.
Democracy has its limits, as you say. Can't help thinking that limit is stupidity (of voters).
These statistics are far too easy to fiddle, and too many people are taken in by (for example) a government that has cut the cost of its own workers, by redefining post office clerks as no longer government employees. Looks to me like government in the US and UK are up to this sort of thing all the time.
The 20th Century had only one war between democracies (UK & US v Finland, 1944). Democracy has a good record, but it is by no means perfect.