<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=591>
http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=591


 <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=591> Serbian Election: 


Socialists, the Unexpected Kingmakers


by Srdja Trifkovic

 <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/wp-content/uploads/strifkovic1.JPG>
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/wp-content/uploads/strifkovic1.JPG> Srdja
Trifkovic
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/wp-content/uploads/strifkovic1.JPG> Last
Sunday night, as the results of Serbia’s parliamentary elections became
known, the country’s President Boris Tadiæ made a remarkable statement. “I
warn the parties that have lost this election,” he declared, “not to play
games with the will of the citizens and try to form a government that would
take Serbia back to the 1990s. I will not allow any such government and I
will prevent it by democratic means.” This was not just an ill-considered
gaffe in the heat of the election night: on Wednesday
<http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/05/14/europe/EU-POL-Serbia-Election.php
> he was at it again, criticizing attempts by his political opponents to
form the government and pledging to “defend the will of the people with all
democratic and legitimate means.”

The implications of Mr. Tadic’s statement are clear, and alarming:

1.      There exists a “will of the citizens” (or “people”) that is distinct
to, and in this case different from that expressed in the distribution of
mandates in the National Assembly; 
2.      The “losers”—by which he means the outgoing Prime Minister Vojislav
Koštunica’s Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS) and the Radicals (SRS)—would
plunge Serbia into wars and isolation (“back to the 1990s”). 
3.      It is within Tadic’s power as head of state to prevent the emergence
of a coalition government not to his liking, even if such a coalition were
to be supported by the majority of parliamentary deputies. 

Tadiæ’s first claim harks back to Rousseau’s volonté générale that properly
guides the decisions of a civil society, rather than the sum of their
individual self-interests, the volonté de tous. His assertion is in line
with the postmodern USA-EU understanding of “democracy,” which judges a
process democratic entirely on the basis of the “rightness” of its outcome.
His European and American mentors have long used the term “democracy” as an
ideological concept. It does not signify broad participation of informed
citizens in the business of governance, but it denotes the desirable social
and political content of ostensibly popular decisions. The process likely to
produce undesirable outcomes—a sovereignist coalition government in
Belgrade, say, or a “no” vote in the
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7378421.stm> Irish referendum on
the Lisbon Treaty—is a priori “undemocratic.” Contrary to his frankly
outrageous claim, the common good is an aggregate of private interests which
needs balancing and fine-tuning through the institutions of representative
democracy. After such outbursts it is ridiculous to misrepresent Tadiæ as a
“pro-Western democrat,” although he is certain to be thus described in a
thousand MSM reports that are yet to be written.

Tadiæ’s Democratic Party (DS) did well at the election, considerably better
than expected, but it did not “win.” With 102 deputies in the 250-seat
assembly, the Democrats will be 24 seats short of the working majority. Even
with the like-minded Liberal Democratic Party of Èedomir Jovanoviæ (14
deputies) and a couple of small ethnic minority parties (Hungarians, Sanjak
Muslims), the DS cannot reach the magic number.

The Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS), with 20 deputies,
<http://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-article.php?yyyy=2008&mm=05&dd=15&nav_
id=50249> is now the decisive factor in the equation, certain to decide the
shape of the next ruling coalition. It
<http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/main/news/10199> will likely join forces
with Koštunica’s DSS (30 deputies) and the Radicals (78) to create a
government with a slim but workable majority. Its leader Ivica Daèiæ may yet
be tempted by the DS, which is certain to make him a generous offer, but his
party leadership has warned him that any such deal would split the party. It
still includes numerous Miloševiæ loyalists who have not forgiven the
Democrats—then led by the late prime minister Zoran Djindjiæ—the delivery of
their leader to The Hague in 2001.

An agreement is already
<http://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-article.php?yyyy=2008&mm=05&dd=15&nav_
id=50251> said to be in place between Daèiæ, Koštunica and the SRS to share
power in the city of Belgrade, with the Radicals’ No. 3, Aleksandar Vuèiæ,
becoming the new Mayor. The speed and ease with which the deal was struck on
the country’s second most important government structure—with its many rich
pickings—bodes ill for Tadiæ’s hopes that the SPS may yet be swayed his way.

The pro-Western camp is
<http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2008/05/56eeeb67-c0de-4d01-9cfe-fee8ae
d63d9c.html> nevertheless trying hard. After almost a decade of relentless
political and media campaign by the DS and its allies against the SPS, after
years of public demonization of its late leader, the “Euro-reformist forces”
have suddenly discovered that the Socialists are eminently salonfaehig.
Tadiæ is now declaring that there are practically no ideological differences
between the heirs to Miloševiæ and his own followers, as they are both true
to the principles of the Socialist International. Yet less than two years
ago, when this same Socialist Party—under the same leader and with the same
program—supported Koštunica’s minority goverrnment, it was pilloried by the
Euro-reformers as a dark and temporary remnant of Serbia’s unpleasant past.

Even if he manages to cobble together yet another coalition with himself at
the helm, the biggest loser of the election is
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=241> my old friend Vojislav Koštunica.
He is a well-meaning man of principle, as we all know, and
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7285322.stm> his decision on March 8 to
“return the mandate to the people” may have been the honorable thing to
do—but in the midst of the Kosovo crisis it was neither prudent nor
conducive to the country’s best interests. Within the
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbian_parliamentary_election,_2007> previous
parliament, elected on January 21 2007, a “sovereignist” majority could have
been created with far greater ease than today. Dr. Koštunica is now paying
the price of his reluctance to part ways with the Eurofanatics and strike a
solid deal with the Radicals a year ago, as many of his friends and
supporters had urged him to do at the time and as it was certainly in his
power to do.

Serbia is now more polarized and more evenly divided, but it is nevertheless
far from having an “Euro-reformist” majority, as Mr. Tadiæ and his allies
would have us believe. His DS-led coalition and the LDP, let us repeat, have
116 deputies. That is well below the score for the SRS-DSS-led emerging
alliance, which is likely to stand firm on the defense of Serbia’s
sovereignty, territorial integrity and international legality.

After almost 8 years in the wilderness the Socialists are Belgrade’s
unexpected kingmakers. It is to be hoped that by doing the right thing now
they will atone for at least some of the many mistakes and misdemeanors of
which they were guilty while running Serbia under Miloševiæ. It is also to
be hoped that Mr. Tadiæ will respect his constitutional prerogatives and
accordingly refrain from any attempt to resist the will of the people, as
expressed by their democratically elected deputies.

 <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=591&akst_action=share-this> Share
This 

Reply via email to