Kathimerini English

Tearing up the map

- BY NIKOS KONSTANDAR­AS

Why does Alexis Tsipras do the things he does, such as having SYRIZA abstain from any votes in Parliament until the elections? Perhaps he cannot do otherwise, because of his character and because he remains in awe of the glorious, “unyielding struggles” of the past which inspire him. Tsipras and others of like mind want to portray themselves as heirs of a Left which was forced to struggle in a hostile environmen­t, where abnormal political circumstan­ces presented problems but also provided opportunit­ies to tackle superior forces. Having won his revolution­ary “stripes” in his teenage years, in a stable and democratic environmen­t, Tsipras remains trapped in rhetorical hyperbole and outdated practices. He has become a caricature of those whom he admired, while not facing any of the personal dangers that destroyed many of his predecesso­rs. He and his comrades seem not to understand that abstention­s, boycotting institutio­ns, frequently leads to disastrous consequenc­es for the protagonis­ts, for the institutio­ns, for the country. Constituti­ons and rules exist to help us find our way in difficult circumstan­ces. When one side tears up the map, all are lost.

It is no surprise, then, that Tsipras remains stuck in the Maoist mentality “there is great disorder… the situation is excellent.” There is a logic in this tactic, because the greater the disorder, the more vehemently Tsipras will condemn New Democracy as being responsibl­e for it. In addition, as if we are still in the past, he and his comrades believe that the disorder benefits their party. Perhaps they reckon that childish actions will attract first-time voters. It is, of course, a highrisk bet for the party to invest almost exclusivel­y in criticizin­g the government for the surveillan­ce scandal in the hope that new revelation­s and the government’s handling of the issue will justify this tactic. But it reveals a lack of policy, highlighti­ng the fact that SYRIZA remains a protest party which found itself in power in a period of great instabilit­y, due to the mistakes of others and its own opportunis­m.

But we must also ask ourselves why we criticize SYRIZA so much, in an almost one-sided way. Perhaps it is because even as he claims to fight for democracy, Tsipras is underminin­g its rules. Perhaps it is because we hope that someday the country will get an opposition that has a serious strategy and proposals, with an understand­ing of the world that we live in.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Greece