"The glum reality is that, while Egyptians thirst for a taste of the democracy denied them, those who have enjoyed it much longer are finding it drying in our mouths"
This is an excellent article. As much as any professional journalist writing for mainstream media Jonathon Friedland has captured the essence of politics in the age of Collapse.
This is an excellent article. As much as any professional journalist writing for mainstream media Jonathon Friedland has captured the essence of politics in the age of Collapse.
As
the crisis gets bigger, the politicians are getting smaller
The
elections in Greece and Egypt will not determine their fate. Power
has shifted to the markets, Brussels and beyond
Jonathon
Friedland
17
June, 2012
It
used to be so simple. Voting was like driving: turn the wheel left
and the car would move left, nudge it right and it would shift right.
All that it took to effect a national change in direction was a
majority of votes. Everyone understood the idea and we called it
democracy.
This
weekend sees a profound challenge to that simple notion and it comes
in the form of two very different elections – one in Greece, the
other in Egypt. For once it is no exaggeration to say the future of
both countries hangs in the balance. In Egypt, this was billed as the
moment that would entrench last year's revolution, the high watermark
of the wider Arab awakening. For Greeks, this
is the election
that determines whether they belong in or out of the eurozone,
perhaps even whether the single currency survives or dies.
Those
stakes would be high enough. And yet it is democracy itself that is
now being tested. That's most obvious for Egyptians, currently
wondering whether there is any point in casting their ballots at all.
On Thursday the country's constitutional court – its bench packed
with Mubarak-era judges – dissolved the parliament elected six
months ago in Egypt's first free elections for more than 60 years.
The parliament was dominated by the Muslim Brotherhood, but plenty of
secular and liberal Egyptians were outraged by the dissolution, all
reaching for the same word: "coup".
They
branded this a power-grab by Egypt's military rulers who, faced with
the prospect of the Brotherhood candidate winning the presidency in
this weekend's run-off, are refusing to let go. Democracy in Egypt,
which waited so long to be born, may yet be strangled at birth. Those
2011 dreams of a swift democratic transformation, spreading from
Tunis to Cairo to Tripoli to Damascus, seem long ago and forlorn.
But
let's be hopeful, perhaps naive, and say the Egyptian military brass
relents and respects the current elections, even if that means
allowing the Muslim Brotherhood to hold both parliament and the
presidency. Even that might not be enough. A former Obama
administration official told me this week that the "international
community" would want to see several clear commitments from a
new Islamist government in Cairo: guarantees of women's rights,
minority rights and open, contested elections as well as a promise to
abide by peace agreements with Israel and so on. All those demands
are legitimate in themselves, but the underlying thinking is tricky.
It promises to work with an Islamist government just so long as that
government tones down the Islamism. It says to the Egyptian people:
"You can elect a leopard if you want, just so long as it changes
its spots."
The
Greece case is much more stark. Voters there seem determined to
oppose the current, IMF-imposed rush to austerity, either by slamming
on the brakes with a vote
for the leftist Syriza,
or by easing the pace with the conservative New Democracy party. The
question is, will they be allowed to do that? Or will the countries
of the eurozone, led by Germany, insist that any softening on
austerity automatically ushers the Greeks towards the exit?
The
point is, the answer is not in the Greeks' own hands. They are
subject to the decisions of others, over whom they have no democratic
control. Fair enough, you might say, since the Greeks are demanding
the help of others – in the form of cash to bail out their ailing
economy. But the effect is the same. For the Greeks, the ancient,
animating promise of democracy – that it allows a people to be the
master of their own fate – no longer holds.
Instead,
the Greeks' future ultimately rests not on any choice they make, but
on the preferences of Angela Merkel and a handful of others whom no
Greek can vote in or out. Even if they could, it might make no
difference. As one senior British politician puts it, if Germany and
the European commission were not imposing these demands on Greece,
then the bond markets would be doing it directly – "Merkel and
Barroso are just the public face".
This
shift of sovereignty – from national capitals to Brussels and
Berlin, and from governments to markets – is not the worst of it.
For the global economic crisis has exposed weakness after weakness in
our democratic order.
At
its most basic, western democratic governments are now almost
inherently unpopular. Severe and too-fast austerity – exacerbated
by what Gordon Brown, in
a rare intervention
on Thursday, rightly calls "Europe's one-dimensional obsession
with public debt" – cannot conceal the larger truth, also
acknowledged in Brown's op-ed, which is that wealth is steadily
shifting from west to east.
Crudely,
it means that governments whose prime task used to be giving things
to people now have to take things away from them. That makes
governments unpopular, a fact borne out by the serial toppling of
incumbents in the post-Lehman era, whether in Spain, France, Greece,
Italy, Ireland or beyond. But they have a legitimacy problem too.
Politicians suddenly look small. The big forces that shape our lives
– whether the euro or the bond markets – are increasingly beyond
the reach of any national government.
One
British frontbencher reckons this helps explain the rising resentment
of perks enjoyed by politicians: voters were ready to tolerate such
trappings when the politicians appeared to be in charge, but they
resent it when those they elect seem so impotent. Perhaps no one
would mind David Cameron sharing country suppers with Rebekah Brooks
if he were leading the country to economic recovery. But he isn't
and, despite the
latest desperate move
by George Osborne and Mervyn King, it seems as if he can't.
The
truth is, the current crisis is supranational, if not global, in
nature – yet democracy still works in nation-state-sized units. Our
governments resemble those mythical Polish cavalrymen, doomed as they
charged on horseback at German tanks, just a lance in their
hands. The old tools are too weak for the task.
The
obvious answer is collective, global action, with Monday's
G20 summit in Mexico
the moment to act. But the recent record is not encouraging. The glum
reality is that, while Egyptians thirst for a taste of the democracy
denied them, those who have enjoyed it much longer are finding it
drying in our mouths. Once seen as a universal elixir, democracy is
now found wanting, struggling to work its magic.
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