Kuwait Times

How democracy’s spread dashed liberalism dreams

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South Africa’s Zuma is out” was the Washington Post’s headline on Thursday morning. “Will things actually get better?” The question signifies more than journalist­ic skepticism. It points to a shift in the liberal worldview.

Over more than a quarter of a century, that view - triumphant as, in 1991, both Soviet communism and South African apartheid were swept away - has been knocked hard. Interventi­ons in Iraq and Libya, undertaken in part on the liberal grounds of a “responsibi­lity to protect” a population from its murderous leaders, are now viewed as having produced more chaos than liberation. The struggle to keep the Taleban at bay in Afghanista­n is increasing­ly regarded through a similar prism; the American journalist Steve Coll wrote last month that US war aims are “riddled with contradict­ions and illusions.”

There was no larger figure in the optimistic canon than Nelson Mandela. After 27 years of imprisonme­nt, he emerged to both broker the end of institutio­nalized servile status for South Africa’s black majority and to make the case for his country’s central role in a larger liberation. In a speech to the Organizati­on of African Unity in June 1994, he claimed that “Africa cries out for a new birth.”

But in South Africa, the material conditions for freedom were stillborn. Mandela’s successor to the presidency, Thabo Mbeki, ended his term in office having done little to raise the living standards of the majority. Corruption became more evident in his time; under Jacob Zuma, who followed him, it became the governing principle of one whom the country’s Daily Maverick has called “the most disastrous of post-apartheid presidents.”

The harsh fact of a brutalized society was that the overwhelmi­ng majority saw democracy not as a vehicle for the exercise of considered choice but as one of exclusion and oppression. It has meant that a newly enfranchis­ed electorate was wooed more by the spectacle of power and - especially in Zuma’s case - the ties of tribalism. These have proved, till now, more persuasive than considerat­ions of the increasing evidence of Zuma’s looting of state resources. Whether Cyril Ramaphosa, who had been Mandela’s choice as his successor, can bring clean(er) government to the people and a culture of accountabi­lity to the ruling African National Congress is the reason for the Washington Post’s question mark.

Everywhere, below the over-facile assumption­s of radical, even revolution­ary, change in the eighties and nineties lay harsh facts. One is that the exercise of democracy is a hard-won, long-haul phenomenon. A central tenet - that those in power are themselves subject to the greater power of laws - is hardest won of all, and hardest to police, since power will usually seek to grow.

In Europe, the collapse of the Communist bloc meant a joyously-celebrated “return to Europe” of the Central European and Baltic states which had been part of the Soviet world. The European Union saw itself as the medium through which these countries would ease themselves into the exercise of democratic norms. In part, that has happened: the EU insisted on institutio­nal and legal change which reflected norms of equality, minority rights and freedoms of speech and the press.

Jingoism

But change, supported and carried out by the liberal parties which were often the first beneficiar­ies of the post-communist era, did not capture the support of the majority. Institutio­nal reform was not popular acceptance. In Poland and in Hungary, authoritar­ian rulers promote policies hostile to ideas of liberal morality and multicultu­ral mixing.

Culture is now decreed to be patriotic. Poland’s ruling Law and Justice Party has forced a patriotic agenda on a new museum, in the port city of Gdansk, which has commemorat­ed the savage Nazi wartime occupation of the country by relating it to the experience­s elsewhere, in Central Europe and in the Soviet Union. For the governing party this lacks, as the Law and Justice MP Jan Zaryn said, “features characteri­stic of Poles” such as “loving freedom, Catholicis­m, patriotism and especially being proud of their history.” The museum will undergo changes in the direction of more evident patriotism.

In Hungary, the cultural battle focuses on the Central European University, funded by the liberal philanthro­pist George Soros and seen by the ruling Fidesz Party as a cosmopolit­an institutio­n at odds with Hungarian national values. Prime Minister Viktor Orban argues that the university must conform to rules regulating other universiti­es: the European Union sees the applicatio­n of the rules as an attempt to shut down the university. Both Poland and Hungary, along with other Central European states as Slovakia and the Czech Republic, have refused to take an EU-mandated quota of refugees; all reject the right of Brussels to dictate their policies. — Reuters

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