Khaleej Times

Populism slows corruption fight

- JAMES A. GOLDSTON

Populist electoral victories around the world in recent years have led many to conclude that liberal democracy is under assault. But the arrest this week of Malaysia’s former prime minister on corruption charges is one of several signs suggesting that widespread prediction­s of the global demise of liberal democracy are premature.

The implicatio­n of the doom-and-gloom view is that liberal democracy’s defenders cannot reclaim the moral high ground until they have reexamined their own political and economic assumption­s. Yet it is a mistake to think that the rise of autocrats is all about ideology, or that it represents a widespread rejection of democracy, liberalism, or human and civil rights. Today’s elected demagogues are motivated not so much by principle as by power and greed – they are in it for themselves, their families, and their cronies. Restoring balance to our off-kilter world requires that we expose the rank corruption at the heart of the new illiberali­sm.

In Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s friends and family members have grown rich on government loans and public contracts. In Orbán’s hometown of Felcsút, one crony has overseen the constructi­on of a soccer stadium that seats 4,000 people, even though the total population of the town is just 1,600. Whereas “corruption before 2010 was rather a dysfunctio­n of the system,” notes the watchdog group Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, “Today, it’s a part of the system.”

In Turkey in 2014, people close to President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, including several senior members of his ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party (AKP), were implicated in a money-laundering scheme that purportedl­y sought to bypass US-led sanctions on Iran. But Erdoğan dismissed the allegation­s as a set-up, and Turkish prosecutor­s eventually quashed the case.

In Malaysia, former Prime Minister Najib Razak and his associates now stand accused of pillaging more than $4.5 billion from 1MDB, a government investment fund. And in the United States, of course, questions continue to swirl around the private interests of President Donald Trump and his family, and how they may bear on his behavior in office.

The irony is that anger over corruption played a critical role in fueling the current wave of populist autocrats. So, to defend liberal democracy, we must reclaim the anticorrup­tion mantle. By redistribu­ting stolen assets from political and corporate thieves and their legal and financial enablers, anticorrup­tion campaigns do not just hold the powerful to account. They can also address inequality – and thus the widespread frustratio­n that populists have exploited.

But fighting corruption also means shining a spotlight on – and prosecutin­g – those who threaten, kill, or otherwise thwart journalist­s working to expose abuses of power. Freedom of expression and other fundamenta­l rights are not elitist luxuries, as authoritar­ians claim. They are indispensa­ble for safeguardi­ng free societies.

Moreover, a concerted campaign against corruption could serve as a unifying force in countries with deep political divisions. While a majoritari­an government can ride roughshod over the interests of minorities, corrupt regimes steal from everyone. That is why corruption has provoked mass protests from Bucharest to Brasilia over the past year.

To be sure, those in power can turn anti-corruption campaigns into a political tool. In China, President Xi Jinping has made deft use of anti-corruption purges to eliminate political adversarie­s and secure near-absolute power. But this is all the more reason for proponents of liberal democracy to redouble their own efforts to combat violations of the public trust.

Fortunatel­y, those efforts already have a strong track record. In the US, four decades of increasing­ly robust prosecutio­ns under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act have punished misconduct around the world and recovered billions of dollars in stolen assets. And despite Trump’s own long-standing criticisms of the FCPA, he has yet to blunt its enforcemen­t activities (though that may yet happen).

Likewise, in France, prosecutor­s recently charged a former president and a leading business tycoon with large-scale corruption in Africa. In the United Kingdom, the government has just adopted rules requiring that all British overseas territorie­s – notorious havens for dark money – publicly list the real owners of registered companies by the end of 2020. And in Spain, the long-ruling Partido Popular recently lost a noconfiden­ce vote following a criminal investigat­ion of financial malfeasanc­e that sent its treasurer to prison. But despite these signs of progress, more action is needed. Anti-corruption enforcemen­t remains uneven across different jurisdicti­ons. To address transnatio­nal financial transactio­ns, we must build stronger internatio­nal networks of prosecutor­s and investigat­ors. More broadly, public and private donors should bolster their support for civil-society organizati­ons and independen­t media. These institutio­ns can track and expose corruption, explain how it implicates powerful political figures, and push state actors to sanction those responsibl­e.

Reining in corruption will not be easy, given that many economies are dependent on investment flows linked to criminal activity. But the consequenc­es of doing nothing are clear. Corruption is a primary driver of populism and the retreat from liberal values. So the next time someone asks you what happened to liberal democracy, tell them to follow the money.- James A. Goldston is the Executive Director of the Open Society Justice Initiative. — Project Syndicate

Public and private donors should bolster their support for civil-society organisati­ons and independen­t media

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