Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

bigpicture HAS DEMOCRACY LOST GROUND OVER THE YEARS?

- IAN BREMMER Ian Bremmer is the president of Eurasia Group and GZERO Media and author of Us vs Them: The Failure of Globalism The views expressed are personal

In China, 30 years ago, an audacious public protest in the capital’s central square pushed China’s autocrats to the brink, and when the Soviet Union imploded, the ruling party’s most relentless critic became Russia’s president and dominant political figure. Ascendant America had no serious rival. In Europe, West welcomed East. Among the world’s most advanced countries, there seemed little left to fight over. The end to a century of conflict appeared to ensure democracy had carried the day.

History had other plans. Today, most liberal democracie­s are more polarised than they’ve been in decades, and voters in the United States, Britain, France, Italy, Mexico, Pakistan, and Brazil have rejected establishe­d political players in favour of hoped-for sweeping change. Political common ground between political parties in these and other countries is disappeari­ng. According to Freedom House, a rights advocacy group, public trust in government stands at record lows.

Donald Trump’s America couldn’t be much more bitterly divided. The European dream of convergenc­e and ever-closer union faces serious challenges from within that EU, particular­ly from Italy, Poland, and Hungary. In rising China, meanwhile, President Xi Jinping, has consolidat­ed power on a scale not seen since Mao and committed his country to an authoritar­ian, state-capitalist economic model. Many government­s and citizens around the world see China as a source of security, stability, and opportunit­y while Europe and America represent political dysfunctio­n and public disgust with government.

How much ground has democracy lost in recent years? On the one hand, governing institutio­ns in Europe, the United States, and other advanced industrial democracie­s are extraordin­arily resilient. The checks on power they provide help societies withstand shocks. In the United States, opposition lawmakers, the courts, the media, and the bureaucrac­y have all pushed back against Trump’s restless push to get his way. In Britain, parliament has put the breaks on Brexit plans that members don’t want. In Western Europe, there are no elected leaders who can be sure their government­s are built to last. Even in younger democracie­s like Turkey, Poland, and Hungary, bureaucrac­ies, courts, journalist­s, opposition parties, and voters can still call elected populists to account.

The recent history of Greece demonstrat­es democracy’s resilience. This country has endured an economic depression that hit harder and lasted longer than even the Great Depression of the 1930s in the United States. In response, a relatively new political party of the far left (Syriza) won power. But far-left or not, Syriza has kept promises to work with European institutio­ns and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund to restore confidence in the country’s future.

But that’s not the whole story, because even if democracy endures in countries where it’s deeply entrenched, new technologi­es, particu- larly in communicat­ions and the harvesting of personal data, can help prevent democracy’s spread to other countries. From Tiananmen Square to Soviet collapse to the fall of government­s in the early days of the Arab Spring, many advances in communicat­ions technology would make it impossible for autocrats to remain in charge.

There are important areas of discontent within China. Among the most significan­t is Xinjiang in China’s northwest, historical­ly populated by a Muslim Uighur minority that has faced systematic political and economic discrimina­tion and forced ethnic assimilati­on. Violent unrest in the region once led the Chinese government to shut down the Internet across that region. Today, Chinese officials use advances in facial recognitio­n technology and big data to identify potential “troublemak­ers” and reduce the risk of large-scale public demonstrat­ions. These and other surveillan­ce technologi­es available to the Chinese and Russian government­s are fast becoming more widely available.

Democracy, like technology, evolves. No one can say with confidence that any autocrat will govern for life. But for many government­s around the world, lasting authoritar­ian rule is becoming a more realistic option.

THE HISTORY OF GREECE

DEMONSTRAT­ES DEMOCRACY’S RESILIENCE. IT HAS ENDURED AN ECONOMIC DEPRESSION THAT HIT HARD AND LASTED LONG

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