Then consider yourself a populist. I tend to lean slightly that way. However, I do find it hard to argue with Washington and Madison. It boils down to whether you are in favor of a democracy or a republic. There are always trade offs. If the founders wanted the will of the people to always be paramount, the Senate would have been directly elected, and elections woldn't have been staggered. Flip side is, why bother with elections at all if the elected don't follow the popular will? The answer was relatively short terms (2 years) The reason for the conundrum is that sometimes the majority is wrong. How do you deal with that fact?This isn't theory, its a very real real question.
FQ13
The fact that the majority are wrong quite often is why Hamilton, in "The Federalist" condemns "democracy" with examples of it's Greek failures and how it always led to dictatorship. I think it was Madison who said "The majority ? The majority sir, is an ass."
The way the Founders dealt with that was by giving us , not a Democracy, ruled by the whim of the masses, but a Republic ruled by LAW, The most fundamental balance was struck by strictly limiting and enumerating the powers of the Central (Federal ) Govt. while limiting who was allowed to vote by continuing the "property requirement" for eligibility. In fact, not only did they continue this British practice, at least 2 states (Ma. & S.C. ) INCREASED the amount of property required to be eligible to vote.
The Founders, particularly the Mass. contingent found them selves in an awkward position, they had roused and politicized the "rabble", Tradesmen, small farmers women and blacks, who had previously had no political voice in order to mount street protests and boycotts of English goods, and later to man the Continental Army and State militia's, After the war though they had to try to stuff the Genie back in the bottle in order to retain the support of the moneyed classes who generated jobs and trade and to prevent the mob from voting the proverbial bread and circuses. This position created an even larger dichotomy between what they SAID, and what they DID, than their hypocritical position on slavery which planted the seeds of Civil war with in the very roots of the Constitution.