A very notable event happened on the fourth of July.
Apart from being Independence Day in the USA it was the date of a by-election in
Gibraltar. The election was free and fair, the candidates and their parties
behaved within the norms of electoral law – and here’s the big shock, the
winning party, the GSLP, happened to be the socialist party in a coalition
Government and increased its popularity with the voters.
Whilst in Old Europe we take free and fair elections
for granted such a situation does not even hold true within the entire EU.
Likewise whilst the majority of Old Europe sees its political parties act
within the electoral norms there are other countries in the EU where vote
rigging and buying are the norms instead. And here’s the real shock: Gibraltar
has a government party entering mid-term which is more popular now with voters
than when it was elected. That situation is very unique in Europe.
So whilst democracy is seemingly safe in Gibraltar there
are worrying signs elsewhere that suggest that some countries may be becoming
ungovernable or are indeed already there.
Let us look at Egypt for example when President Mohammed
Morsi has been deposed from power in a ‘peaceful’ army coup, ‘peaceful’ being a
relative term here. There may be many reasons why Morsi was not the man for the
job or his party the one to unite Egypt. However the fact is he was elected to
the post of president in the country’s first fair and free elections in our
life time. The people of Egypt had every right to peacefully protest against
his actions and policies: but did the army have the right to remove him from
power? If we believe in democracy surely that is the job of the electorate at
the next election.
In Bulgaria the popularist GERB government resigned in
February after violent street protests over a hike in electricity prices which
few could afford and the economic state of the EU’s poorest country. In the May
general election GERB, which has links to organized crime and is notorious for
vote rigging, was returned as the largest party but its share of the vote
collapsed. It could not govern on its own so the socialist BSP which came
second joined a coalition to keep GERB out. However to do so it had to pact with the Movement for Rights and
Freedoms and the nationalist party ATAKA to rule. ATAKA is anti Turkish and
anti Roma whilst the MRF speaks for both: the MRF also has a history of vote
rigging.
Some initial mistakes
by the new prime minister brought the same protestors out on to the streets
again and even the president has now suggested that new elections will have to
be called. If so where does Bulgaria go from here? Do the protestors want GERB
back? Certainly not. Do they want a socialist government, possibly, but even
the BSP has in the past had links with its communist roots, oligarchs and
criminals. Do they want the MRF or ATAKA to govern? Hardly. So how do you run a
country when the rejected options are the most voted for parties even if vote
rigging and buying is rife? The current anti-GERB coalition is far from perfect
but it is realpolitik like it or not.
In Spain Transparency
International reports that 86 per cent of Spaniards believe their politicians
are corrupt as Rajoy wobbles under the sleaze accusations of Bárcenas. The
political and summer heat is getting much hotter for the Partido Popular Prime
Minister.
In a country where over
26 per cent of people are jobless, where if you are young you a more likely to
be on the dole than in work, where thousands have lost their homes and are
still deep in debit, where the economic crisis stumbles from bad to worse then
for how long are people going to stand idly by whilst they are ruled by crooks.
My guess is for not long at all and social upheaval will soon be upon Spain as
it is in Turkey and has been in Greece.
Italy and Portugal
could well be next.
Gibraltar was already
remarkable in that Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus and people of other
religions and none live side by side in perfect harmony in a world where that
is far from the norm. In addition to that distinction Gibraltarians can get on
with their lives safe in the knowledge they live in a stable democracy, as
solid as their Rock.
However there are
warnings for Gibraltar’s politicians and voters in what is happening around the
world. The warning to its politicians is that voters will not accept
governments that govern for themselves and not the people. The warning to its
voters is to treasure the open, free and fair democracy they enjoy and protect
it with all their might – because it is rarer and more fragile than they may
think.
(Photograph: Albert
Isola, the GSLP’s successful by-election candidate).
(The above article was
published in the London Progressive Journal on July 19, 2013 and a version
appeared in Panorama on July 17, 2013)
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