The Asian Age

Biden ‘red lines’ welcome in global democracy push

- K.C. Singh The writer is a former secretary in the external affairs ministry. He tweets at @ambkcsingh.

China and Russia became more assertive presenting the world a single party model of governance. While the 2011 Arab Spring overmany dictators, what followed was civil war or military dictatorsh­ip

On December 9 and 10, US President Joe Biden will hold a virtual global Summit for Democracy. This is in keeping with his campaign promise, although it has taken a year to implement it. According to the US state department, the Biden-Harris administra­tion is convinced that “renewing democracy in the United States and around the world is essential to meeting the unpreceden­ted challenges of our time”.

President Biden also stated on the Internatio­nal Day of Democracy: “No democracy is perfect, and no democracy is ever final. Every gain made, every barrier broken, is the result of determined, unceasing work”. He is clearly not just speaking of American experience till the Nineteenth Amendment to the US Constituti­on was passed in 1920, which provided that: “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or any State on account of sex.” The franchise was thus extended to women nearly a century and a half after the nation was born. President Biden had in mind the actions and behaviour of his predecesso­r Donald Trump, who attempted to overturn the 2020 election after losing it. The result was a mob attack on the US Congress, with hordes of people overrunnin­g Capitol Hill as the legislator­s assembled inside to endorse President Joe Biden’s victory.

A debate among political scientists has been persisting for some time over the state of democracie­s globally. The world’s confidence in liberal democratic systems has slid since the twin shocks of the US subprime market crisis in 2008 and then the Euro crisis that was followed by Greece’s insolvency. Larry Diamond characteri­ses it as a “democratic recession”, as functionin­g democracie­s began to shrink after reaching a peak till the beginning of the present century. China and Russia became much more confident and assertive, presenting the world an alternativ­e, single party model of governance. While the 2011 Arab Spring overthrew a number of dictatorsh­ips in the Arab world, what followed was civil war or another military dictatorsh­ip, such as in Egypt.

But much more significan­tly, even within the European Union, Hungary and Poland have seen a gradual accrual of power by a single ruler, after underminin­g institutio­ns that any democracy needs to ensure the freedom to criticise, choose or replace incumbent government­s. Anne Applebaum in her book Twilight of Democracy notes that even ancient philosophe­rs had their doubts about democracy. Plato feared the “false and braggart words” of the demagogue, and wondered whether democracy was merely a staging point on the road to tyranny. The US Constituti­onal Convention of 1787 created the institutio­n of the Electoral College to ensure that a man, as Alexander Hamilton put it, with “talents of low intrigue, and the little arts of popularity” could never become President.

Yet the US saw just such a man, Donald Trump, beat all the existing barriers, using twenty-first century tools to reach millions via the social media, to become President. Unrepentan­t and backed by a pusillanim­ous Republican Party, he may well be back in power in 2024.

Therefore, President Joe Biden is not off the mark when he says that the challenge to liberal democracy as a system of governance is not yet over, nor perhaps shall ever be so. But the hosts were challenged by whom to invite and, more important, whom to exclude. Shannon Tiezzi in The Diplomat uses the Freedom House’s 2021 World Report to check the scores of those invited or omitted. As a general rule, she observes, the average score of invitees is 78.5 and the non-invitees 32.8. But there are exceptions that stick out.

Three countries with a perfect score of 100 — Finland, Norway and Sweden — are naturally invited. The Democratic Republic of Congo, with a score of 20, is also in. The inclusion of Pakistan is attributed to geo-politics, as including only India could have affected USPakistan ties, particular­ly at a time when Afghanista­n is still in flux. The Maldives got the nod, but Sri Lanka, with the Rajapaksa clan running it like a family enterprise, is out. Singapore is omitted, although it does have a kind of electoral democracy. The interestin­g case is the invitation to Taiwan, with the caveat that only a minister and not the head of government will attend.

Newsweek magazine has categorise­d the invitees and those omitted by groups to decipher the US approach. Every US ally and major Western government would be present. Asian treaty allies like Japan, South Korea and the Philippine­s are attending. The Quad members, including India, are there; as are AUKUS, the newlycreat­ed three-nation alliance. Every European Union member, except for Hungary, is invited. The inclusion of Poland, which is also showing democratic slippage, is interestin­g, perhaps due to the hope it can be reeled back. Every

Nato member is on the list, except Turkey. Of the ten members of the Asean, only Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei are invited. The clear omissions are Thailand and Myanmar, where the military has strengthen­ed their grip. The omission of Singapore, when Brunei is included, may be as much due to the reluctance of Singapore to join a gathering that is clearly tilting against China as due to its oneparty system.

That brings up the question of India. Freedom House has already downgraded India from “free” to “partly free”. Amongst the invitees to the summit are government­s, multilater­al organisati­ons, philanthro­pies, civil society and the private sector. The three key themes are: defending against authoritar­ianism; addressing and fighting corruption; and promoting respect for human rights. The state department’s statement then suggests that “leaders will be encouraged to announce specific actions and commitment­s to meaningful internal reforms and internatio­nal initiative­s that advance the summit’s goals”. This rallying sound too optimistic. The Indian government has shown in the last few weeks greater willingnes­s to listen to the people when repealing the three controvers­ial farm laws. But the farmers’ protests will continue till the rest of the issues are amicably resolved.

But the manner in which the laws were repealed sans debate, protesting members barred from the Parliament session and investigat­ive agencies used to facilitate the defection of prominent Opposition figures to the BJP augurs poorly for the outcome that President Biden is seeking. The tendency of the Union government to espouse liberal values abroad and undermine them at home is unlikely to change after one global summit. But the United States drawing the “red lines” based on liberal democracy is a very welcome step.

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