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From:                   "Michael Albert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:                     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                ZNet Commentary June 27 Serge Halimi
Date sent:              Sat, 26 Jun 1999 22:07:38 +0100

Here is today's ZNet Commentary Delivery from Serge Halimi. The
attached
file is the same material in nicely formatted html so that you can
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To pass this comment along to friends, relatives, etc. please note
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Here then is today's ZNet Commentary...

------------------------------------------

The Left and European Elections
By Serge Halimi

Now we know for sure that « Europe » does not exist. At least not in the
hearts and minds of Europeans. Only two days after they concluded a war
against Yugoslavia, decided and fought by the United States, the fifteen
countries of the European Union (EU) voted together with an enthusiasm
heretofore witnessed mostly in the United States: 51% stayed out. Five
years earlier, the abstention rate ran at 43.2%. This was considered much
too high then; in 1989, the rate had been 42%; in 1994, 39%; in 1979,
37%...

The euro is born, the European Parliament less powerless than it used to
be, a war has been fought on European soil. And yet, in France, the ruling
Socialist party scored a victory with a mere 10% of the eligible voters.
In Britain, where the turnout was 23%, one in three voters ignored an
election was even taking place. Outside business offices and editorial
boards, euro-enthusiasm is decidedly hard to find.

Why should it be otherwise? If Europe were to mean something, it would
have to stand for an economic model different from the American prototype
and assert a foreign policy departing from that dictated by Washington. On
both scores, the disappointment is overwhelming as Europe gets ready to
pay the cost of reconstructing what American airplanes have destroyed in
the Balkans and as European units are set to play a leading role in
removing landmines from the region.

For a very long time, and especially during François Mitterrand's endless
presidency (1981-1995), many European socialists had been claiming that
their alignment on Washington--its diplomacy, its free-market economic
policies--was the unpleasant product of « European solidarities » largely
shaped by right-wing governments in Britain and Germany. Europe could not
be social, we were told, so long as Socialists remained a distinct
minority in Europe.

Six months ago, all that was supposed to have changed. With the electoral
defeat of Helmut Kohl's Christian Democrats in Germany, eleven out of the
fifteen European governments were controlled by left-of-center coalitions,
most notably including Greens in Germany and France and communists or
former communists in France and Italy. Consequently, the four largest
European countries became (and still are) nominally governed by the left,
whereas the exact opposite had been true two years before. Yet, as one
could have surmised, the transition from Major-Juppé-Kohl-Berlusconi to
Blair-Jospin-Schröder-d'Alema has barely changed the direction of Europe.

Americans are familiar with the fact that a shift from Bush to Clinton (to
Bush?) might not herald the dawn of a new democratic process. This may be
why so few of them bother to cast a vote. Europe used to be different.
Despite the fact that the leading socialist (or social democratic) parties
kept veering to the right, discarding most of their egalitarian ideology
in the process, the arrogance and free-market extremism of European
conservatives (such as Margaret Thatcher or Silvio Berlusconi), the damage
they could wreak on a still functioning welfare state, made electoral
competition worth its while. Hence the sigh of relief that shook Britain,
France, Italy, and Germany when, in those countries, the Right was sent
packing by the voters.

Some of these left victories, moreover, were not the product of a
marketing campaign, effective sound-bytes and « triangulation ». In
France, for example, Jospin's unexpected ousting of the right in 1997 owed
much to the huge popular mobilization which, eighteen months before, had
shaken the right's confidence that its government could enact free-market
« reforms ». When, on December 12 1995, two million Frenchmen demonstrated
against the attempt to dismantle part of the welfare state, The Economist
accurately captured the mood of the times : « Strikers by the million,
riots in the street : the événements in France over the past fortnight
make the country look like a banana republic in which an isolated
government is battling to impose IMF austerity on a hostile population ».
Indeed, the right had lost in the streets and in the factories before it
even had a chance to lose at the polls.

In the political aftermath of electoral victory, it was therefore the
left's turn to build the bridge to the 21st century and a more social
Europe. After a common market and a common currency, one henceforth needed
to worry about a common labor and environmental policy. Not much was done
in these respects, however, especially in Germany where the Schröder
government seemed hobbling from defeat to retreat. Oskar Lafontaine's
replacement by Hans Eichel had made the point painfully clear, Lionel
Jospin's sweeping privatizations would only confirm it: markets, not «
Socialist » governments, are ruling the new global economy.

Yet, a few weeks ago, European socialists proclaimed their unity; they
crafted a common 21-point manifesto in Milan; they rallied in Paris around
Blair, Schroder, Jospin, and d'Alema. And they pledged that a more social
Europe, less beholden to capital investors, would be christened by the
polls. The dream went so far as to proclaim that Clinton might lend a
hand: was not he a man of the left, too? This socialist unity and sense of
purpose survived a mere 48 hours. Three days before the election, Blair
and Schroder launched their Clintonian
 third-way » manifesto, in effect isolating Jospin (whose government
includes communist ministers). Both Blair and Schroder advocated tax
breaks and market deregulation; both vowed to preserve a « low-wage sector
». As they explained in a decidedly « new socialist » vein, « capital
markets should be opened up so that growing firms and entrepreneurs can
have ready access to finance. Overall the taxation of hard work and
enterprise should be reduced ».

The Financial Times summed it all up, unable to quite contain its glee :
 The agenda for social democracy launched by Tony Blair and Gerhard
 Schröder
says most of the right things about the market economy (...) a vigorous
capitalism with a tough but kindly face (...) The document's most valuable
contribution is to the process of building a new EU consensus, towards
minimum intervention in a free and open economy ». The « contribution »
proved brilliant... Largely because of the electoral rout of the British
Labour Party and of the German Social Democrats, both unable to mobilize
their voters around the policies the Financial Times had endorsed (in
Britain, turnout fell to 18% in Labour districts), the socialist group in
the European Parliament lost altogether 34 seats--and its relative
majority. As a result, the European People's Party (Christian Democrats /
Conservatives) has become the largest political party in the European
Parliament. The center-left can now be excused from enacting the
progressive labor and environmental policies it claimed to want although
its eleven governments did almost nothing to promote them when they could
have.

As for an independent foreign policy, things are even clearer and just as
bleak for Europe. No sooner had the war against Yugoslavia ended--a war
where, of the 2000 targets chosen by Nato, all but one were selected by US
intelligence--Javier Solana, the Nato secretary-general during the
bombing, became the first head of Europe's common foreign and security
policy. Mr. Solana is a former pacifist. He is also a socialist. But it is
a safe bet that Washington and its leftist president need not fear too
much trouble from him.

Serge Halimi
Le Monde diplomatique




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