Gulf News

Greece offers a glimpse of life after populism

After a prolonged financial mess, the country seems to be finally turning the corner and it has some key lessons to offer Europe

- By Anne Applebaum

There was a moment, at the height of the Greek debt crisis in July 2015, when many Athenians went to sleep expecting to wake up in a different country. One Greek academic told me he feared Greece would crash out of the euro currency overnight, that there would be no money in the banks in the morning, that there would be food shortages and then riots.

These fears were not far-fetched. Greece was governed then — as it still is — by a strange coalition of far-left and far-right extreme populists. At the time it was formed, this coalition seemed just as weird and jarring as the new Italian far-left and far-right government does today. Syriza, the larger party, had originated as a faction of the Greek Communist Party. The junior partner, the “Independen­t Greeks,” believes that Greece’s massive debt is the result of an internatio­nal conspiracy. Both parties have at times voiced disdain for the institutio­ns of what Lenin dismissive­ly referred to as “bourgeois democracy”.

Greece’s left-populist moment has passed. In the interim, Syriza has made a few more swipes at democratic institutio­ns, attempting to wrestle control of more media and to intervene with the judiciary.

But last month, the country graduated from its eight-year bailout programme. It feels as if a corner has been turned.

Greece may now offer a possible answer to an important question: If the response to populism is often more extreme populism, then what happens after the more extreme populism has failed?

Part of the answer is ... nothing: The protracted Greek crisis has led to apathy, exhaustion and a deep conviction that all politics is corrupt.

There isn’t huge enthusiasm for any political projects right now.

But the failure of Syriza has also triggered the opposite reaction: A small but growing attempt to revive economic liberalism, for the first time in recent memory, and to celebrate liberal democracy as well. The Greek economy is still shaky. Many believe that the demise of left-wing populism will produce a rise in right-wing populism. But if opinion polls are correct, the centre-right, establishm­ent party, that appeared utterly wiped out a few years ago, should win the next election.

Greece plunged into political crisis before the rest of the West, and perhaps it’s emerging first, too. But the lesson for the rest of Europe is a difficult one. If it’s true, that the only cure for populist rhetoric is the bitter, personal experience of its failure, then we have quite a few years of turbulence yet to come. ■ Anne Applebaum is a columnist and Pulitzer Prize winning author who has written extensivel­y about Europe. She is a visiting Professor of Practice at the London School of Economics.

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