Business Day

Ironic points of light dot our dark horizon

- David Lewis ● Lewis, a former trade unionist, academic, policymake­r, regulator and company board member, was a cofounder and director of Corruption Watch.

This year will be characteri­sed by a veritable orgy of democracy in action. National elections are scheduled in about 74 countries, including major population centres and key players in internatio­nal affairs such as the US, India, Indonesia, the UK, the EU and SA.

Is it not then ironic that common to so many of the countries participat­ing in elections — the most important marker of democratic governance — is that the central issue at stake is the future of democracy itself?

In recent memory democracy has been threatened by civil wars and military coups. While these remain a threat in some young and unstable democracie­s — witness West Africa — today the principal threat to democracy, particular­ly in well-establishe­d democracie­s, is the outcome of democratic elections themselves.

This isn’t an entirely new phenomenon. We’ve seen before how elected leaders such as Donald Trump, Viktor Orban and Narendra Modi and their respective political parties have undermined democracy in the US, Hungary and India.

Trump and Modi and their parties will once again be candidates for election in their important and populous countries. While Orban and his Fidesz party will not have to contest national elections in 2024, they will undoubtedl­y seek to influence the outcome of European parliament­ary elections as widely as possible.

Take the US. We’ve seen how Trump, with congressio­nal Republican party complicity, has rigged the supreme court, threatened the vaunted independen­ce of the US prosecutor­ial service, vilified the media, threatened his opponents, lied to the public, undermined voting rights of opposition­al groups and sought to reverse the outcome of elections he lost.

That electoral defeat has left him with much unfinished business. As his party’s near certain candidate he has loudly expressed his support for dictatoria­l powers, and promised to mount congressio­nal and criminal investigat­ions into his opponents and purge the civil service of any officials opposed to him.

In India, Modi’s principal objective has been to replace its secular state

— the critical cornerston­e of Indian democracy — with a Hindu state in which the 200-million strong Muslim minority is reduced to second-class citizenshi­p, an objective for the realisatio­n of which he appears willing to risk, even invite, the possibilit­y of civil war in the world’s largest democracy.

When Orban lost power in an electoral defeat in Hungary in 2002 and was defeated again in“2006, the lesson he learnt is that when next in power he would create a central political force field” that would govern for at least 20 years.

After his return to power in the 2010 elections he has gone about securing this objective by shamelessl­y rigging elections and destroying any semblance of independen­t media and civil society. Since 2010 he has won four successive elections with increasing­ly large majorities.

Clearly elections alone do not guarantee democracy, particular­ly in the face of governing leaders and parties that are determined to hollow out the formal democratic institutio­ns and processes, including the electoral process itself.

Sadly, democracy has not been challenged only by its anti-democratic opponents. It has also been undermined by its own poor outcomes. In particular, democracy has not staunched growing wealth and income inequality, nor has it achieved political and civic equality. Quite the contrary. Money dominates politics in a variety of well- known ways from political party funding to lobbying power.

NOBLE IDEALS

It is no accident that Trump and British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak are among the wealthiest people in the US and UK respective­ly. While these plutocrats are the faces of democracy, the everyday business of promoting their interests is delegated to global consulting firms whose technocrat­ic staff speak a language designed to marginalis­e less slick public servants, elected representa­tives and the public.

In 1947 Sir Winston Churchill famously said that “democracy is the worst form of government except for all those others forms that have been tried from time to time”.

That may have been self-evidently true in the aftermath of the defeat of Adolf Hitler, and it may have remained so during the baby boomer decades and the decolonisa­tion after the war. But no longer. It is for those of us committed to political governance by and for the people to identify the structures and practices that will best realise the noble ideals of democratic governance.

At the start of World War 2

WH Auden wrote a poem entitled 1st September 1939. In this great piece of work the poet surveyed the state of the world at this dangerous and terrifying juncture. He wrote:

As the clever hopes expire

Of a low dishonest decade: Waves of anger and fear Circulate over the bright

And darkened lands of the earth, Obsessing our private lives;

The unmentiona­ble odour of death Offends the September night.”

How familiar is this to all of us in a world dominated by major wars in Europe and the Middle East, in which hundreds of thousands of lives are lost, millions are displaced from their homes and a third world war is clearly discernibl­e on the horizon; where every country is stalked by obscene wealth amid grinding poverty; where new forms of media further divide us; where elected dictators thrive and democracy withers.

Auden’s world of 1939 is our world nearly a century later. And yet in the final stanza of his long lament, Auden sees “Dotted everywhere/ Ironic points of light”. Are any “points of light” discernibl­e in our world? Some, certainly.

The Brazilian and Polish electorate­s turning back the tide of right-wing resurgence in South America and Europe; the casting out of the appalling Boris Johnson and the prospect of the end of Conservati­ve Party rule in Britain; the distinct possibilit­y that the coming US election may see the last of Trump; the prospect that Ukraine may yet see off Russian imperialis­m; the belated recognitio­n by small sections of the elite that present levels of inequality are incompatib­le with political stability and continued economic growth; the willingnes­s of a major country to take action in the realm of foreign policy that is not dictated by its narrow, immediate self-interest but rather by the greater global good.

The last point of light refers, of course, to SA’s decision to refer Israel’s genocidal conduct in the Middle East to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice and the resounding victory it has won there. Some have dismissed this as meaningles­s, even inimical to the legitimacy of the court and internatio­nal law, on the basis that it cannot be enforced. This misses the point. Of course there’s no internatio­nal police force to enforce the court’s judgment. But the judgment has enormous moral authority.

This is a court whose jurisdicti­on has been voluntaril­y consented to by both contending parties, pronouncin­g upon a convention to which both parties are signatorie­s. The majority for the SA case was overwhelmi­ng. Even ad hoc Israeli judge Aharon Barak found the words of Israeli politician­s and military leaders have the potential to incite genocide and that Israel’s response to Hamas terrorism has created a humanitari­an crisis in Gaza.

The ball is now in the court of Israel and its allies in the government­s of the US, UK, Germany and other Western powers. Do they accept the moral authority of the court, or do they make common cause with the Myanmar junta and the Russian dictator who have also attempted to delegitimi­se the rule of law by ignoring its judgments?

By its actions on this occasion the SA government has brought peace in the Middle East a fraction closer and made me proud to be an SA citizen.

THE SA GOVERNMENT HAS BROUGHT PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST A FRACTION CLOSER

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa