Neil Clark writes:
Genuine people’s power is on the retreat in Europe,
and it's under attack from those who most loudly claim to be“democrats.”
Last week we saw the unelected EU foreign policy chief, Baroness Ashton, meeting the new unelected Ukrainian “president,”Aleksandr Turchynov, who came to power following a violent overthrow of that country's democratically elected president – with the rebellion backed by the EU.
Last week we saw the unelected EU foreign policy chief, Baroness Ashton, meeting the new unelected Ukrainian “president,”Aleksandr Turchynov, who came to power following a violent overthrow of that country's democratically elected president – with the rebellion backed by the EU.
The hailing of a foreign-backed coup d’état in a
country where fresh elections were only 12 months away as a “victory for
democracy”was truly Orwellian.
The wishes of the 2 million people who marched against the Iraq war in London
in February 2003 were arrogantly dismissed, but the protesters in Maidan,
though far fewer in number, simply had to have their way.
Ukraine, though a dramatic example, is not the only European country where democracy has been suspended in recent years.
Ukraine, though a dramatic example, is not the only European country where democracy has been suspended in recent years.
In February, Matteo Renzi became Italy's third
successive unelected prime minister.
You've actually got to back as far as 2008 for the
last time an Italian prime minister was democratically chosen by the Italian
people.
From November 2011 until May 2012, Greece also had an unelected prime minister, Lucas Papademos, a former vice-president of the European Central Bank.
In Hungary, the unelected businessman Gordon Bajnai was the country's prime minister from 2009 to 2010.
You'd have thought there would have been a massive outcry about these undemocratic developments in three EU member states, but there wasn't –at least certainly not from the European elites.
What's going on? Why is democracy now on life support in Europe, that's if it isn't dead already?
The economic changes which have occurred in the last 30 years or so have played a major part.
The era of neoliberalism has seen political power shifted from ordinary people to the 1 percent.
Today, even in European countries where the prime minister has been elected, governments follow policies aimed to suit and please the all-powerful global financial elites, as they know that if they upset them, they are likely to be forced from power.
The introduction of the Euro as a single currency has undoubtedly made things worse, but even outside it, for example in Britain, democracy has been adversely affected by the impact of turbo-globalization.
The main parties of the left and right have become neoliberal and as friendly to capital as they possibly can.
At elections we're faced with a choice between parties offering hard-core austerity and privatization, slightly less hard-core austerity and privatization and reasonably hard-core austerity and privatization.
Yes, parties which offer real alternatives, such as George Galloway's Respect Party in Britain, do exist, but they are deliberately marginalized with their leaders branded as “extremists”and routinely smeared by establishment gatekeepers.
The reality is that only parties which accept neoliberalism can be considered for government and only politicians who genuflect to big business and finance capital can be considered for prime minister.
The links between big business and government keeps on getting closer and as a consequence democracy is smothered.
We saw a clear example of that in Ukraine, where the new 'democratic' administration in Kiev announced the appointment of two billionaire oligarchs to govern industrial regions in the east of the country.
From November 2011 until May 2012, Greece also had an unelected prime minister, Lucas Papademos, a former vice-president of the European Central Bank.
In Hungary, the unelected businessman Gordon Bajnai was the country's prime minister from 2009 to 2010.
You'd have thought there would have been a massive outcry about these undemocratic developments in three EU member states, but there wasn't –at least certainly not from the European elites.
What's going on? Why is democracy now on life support in Europe, that's if it isn't dead already?
The economic changes which have occurred in the last 30 years or so have played a major part.
The era of neoliberalism has seen political power shifted from ordinary people to the 1 percent.
Today, even in European countries where the prime minister has been elected, governments follow policies aimed to suit and please the all-powerful global financial elites, as they know that if they upset them, they are likely to be forced from power.
The introduction of the Euro as a single currency has undoubtedly made things worse, but even outside it, for example in Britain, democracy has been adversely affected by the impact of turbo-globalization.
The main parties of the left and right have become neoliberal and as friendly to capital as they possibly can.
At elections we're faced with a choice between parties offering hard-core austerity and privatization, slightly less hard-core austerity and privatization and reasonably hard-core austerity and privatization.
Yes, parties which offer real alternatives, such as George Galloway's Respect Party in Britain, do exist, but they are deliberately marginalized with their leaders branded as “extremists”and routinely smeared by establishment gatekeepers.
The reality is that only parties which accept neoliberalism can be considered for government and only politicians who genuflect to big business and finance capital can be considered for prime minister.
The links between big business and government keeps on getting closer and as a consequence democracy is smothered.
We saw a clear example of that in Ukraine, where the new 'democratic' administration in Kiev announced the appointment of two billionaire oligarchs to govern industrial regions in the east of the country.
It's all very different to how things were 40 and 50
years ago.
Back then, western European voters had a real choice
of alternatives: Socialism, De Gaulleism, social democracy, old-style Christian
Democracy, communism, and traditional conservatism were all on the menu for us
to choose from.
Politics was interesting as there were real
differences between the parties- and proper grown-up debate about important
issues.
Instead of bland technocrats in identikit suits,
simply doing whatever keeps Goldman Sachs happy we had charismatic, conviction
politicians who inspired their people with their visions for their country –
the likes of De Gaulle, Kreisky and Palme.
The trend was for greater democratization, not less:
in the mid to late 70s, probably, the high water mark of democracy in western
Europe, Spain, Portugal and Greece all returned to democracy after years of
dictatorship.
It's interesting to reflect on what was possible in the
pre-neoliberal era.
Forty years ago in Britain, voters elected a Labour
government pledged to bring about “a fundamental and irreversible shift in the
balance of power and wealth in favor of working people and their families.”
They succeeded in reducing the gap between rich and poor to its lowest in British history. The Labour governments of 1974-79 extended public ownership, put the top rate of income tax up to 83 percent and introduced a state earnings related second pension.
If we compare the truly socialist Labour manifesto with the far from socialist one of we can see how much things have changed. (And we shouldn't expect the 2015 Labour manifesto to be much different either).
They succeeded in reducing the gap between rich and poor to its lowest in British history. The Labour governments of 1974-79 extended public ownership, put the top rate of income tax up to 83 percent and introduced a state earnings related second pension.
If we compare the truly socialist Labour manifesto with the far from socialist one of we can see how much things have changed. (And we shouldn't expect the 2015 Labour manifesto to be much different either).
As I mentioned in my last Op-Ed piece in the 1979 Austrian General
Election, Socialist Chancellor Bruno Kreisky said he'd rather his government
run up a deficit than people lose their jobs. As a result, the Socialists were
re-elected with 51 percent of the vote.
Of course, there were flaws even before the neoliberal
era, but as a whole, governments reflected majority public opinion much more
than they do today.
This democratic age was a period of great advances for
ordinary people, who saw their living standards rise by the fastest rate in
history. In the famous words of British Conservative Prime Minister Harold
MacMillan, people had “never had it so good.”
Woe betide the European government today that dares to
“do a Kreisky” and put the interests of its people ahead of bankers
and foreign capital.
Just look at the opprobrium heaped on Hungary, whose
democratically-elected government has been trying to bring its energy sector
back into public ownership to bring down prices.
The Hungarian government received a letter from the EU
attacking its policies in October. European Union energy spokesperson Marlene Holzner
gave Hungary a lecture, warning that their plans to cut prices would deter
foreign investors: If the consumer price fails to reflect the actual price
businesses will likely not enter this market because of the expected low
profit.
Since the 1980s, and particularly in the last decade,
European politics has become Americanized.
Important topics like renationalization are deemed “off
limits” but we are allowed – in fact encouraged – to talk and debate
issues that in no way adversely affect the bankocracy or elite interests, such
as same sex-marriage reform.
As in America, we're persuaded by the elite to fight
culture wars, so that we don't have the time and energy to fight the elite.
We used to joke about how little difference there was
between Democrats and Republicans, how they were just two wings of the same
pro-big business party and be thankful that in Europe we did have more choice.
Little did we think that one day European politics
would be the same.
The EU, for all its spiel about “promoting democracy”
has, like the US's badly misnamed National Endowment for Democracy, played a
key part in destroying genuine democracy.
All over the continent people are protesting over
Troika-imposed austerity programs, but there is no establishment support for
the protestors in Western Europe, even though they have been much more peaceful
than their Maidan counterparts.
We saw a classic example of the EU's contempt for
democracy when the people of the Republic of Ireland had the temerity to vote
'No' to the Lisbon Treaty in a referendum in June 2008. Ireland was pressurized
to hold another vote, a year later.
The EU approach is if you don't vote the 'right' way,
ie the way we want, you have to keep on voting until you do. “Just look
what happens when we vote No,” bemoaned anti-Lisbon campaigner Eugene
Gorman, “They make us vote again!”
Also note the attacks on democratic non-EU member
Switzerland for having a referendum on immigration and voting for curbs. The
European elite were furious. How dare a country in Europe ask its people
directly what to do?
“The Swiss have damaged themselves with this result.
The fair cooperation we have had in the past with Switzerland also includes
observing the central fundamental decisions taken by the EU,” warned German
Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius warned that the
EU would have to review its relationship with Switzerland.
The point about the Swiss referendum is not whether we
agree with immigration curbs, but whether we believe countries have the right
to make their own decisions on this and other issues.
But today's European elite hates countries – and the
people of those countries –deciding for themselves.
In February EU Commission vice-president Viviane
Reding questioned whether British people would be able to make an “informed
decision” on EU membership.
The greatest irony is that as Europe has become less
democratic so European elites have become more vocal in lecturing others on
democracy.
“Democracy promotion” has been become a big business
at a time when people power has been snuffed out at home.
Only a radical reform of the EU, or its total
abolition, together with the ditching of the neoliberal model which transfers
political power from the ballet box to the wallet, can reverse the damaging
trends.
For if the organization which dominates Europe and the
economic system under which the continent operates is fundamentally
undemocratic, how on earth can genuine democracy exist?
"the high watermark of European democracy".
ReplyDeleteI wonder if Clark realises that his idealised depiction of democracy is sharply at odds with his self-proclaimed conservatism.
The Right-wing argument against the EU is not that it's 'undemocratic" (Britain only got universal suffrage in the 20th century and has become progressively less free and less British ever since)
The Right-wing argument against the EU is that Europe's concept of law, liberty, national sovereignty and borders is utterly at odds with Britain's and, since they cannot be reconciled, Britain will lose all the treasures that make us unique, in the merger.
Hong Kong, Gibraltar and The Falklands were never "democratic"-but that never mattered because they had British law and British liberty.
Now Britain has lost all that in exchange for a few useless Continental "Human Rights", an EU passport that means we're no longer British, and an "EU Constitution".
If there is a right-wing argument against the EU, then none of the cast of comedy characters that have represented the only permissible media faces and voices of opposition to the EU since the Major years has ever articulated it.
ReplyDeleteWhereas the left-wing case against the EU goes all the way back to the Attlee Government.
There is nothing about the EU with which the "British" (weirdly faux-American) Right could or does disagree. Not a thing.