As the Indian election shows, the big money won't let the people win

by George Monbiot

Published in the New Statesman (May 27 2004)

Democracy in India lasted for five days, two hours and eight minutes. 
Between the resignation of Atal Behari Vajpayee and the resignation of
Sonia Gandhi, the state belonged to the people.  Then the lost property
was returned to its owners.

It's not that Sonia Gandhi was a woman of the people.  She was the heir
to a corrupt dynasty whose domination of Indian politics owes everything
to sentiment and nothing to sense.  She stood, it seems, simply to keep
the family name in play, in order to permit her children to inherit the
ancestral title.  But the people chose her for what she was not.  She
was not Mr Vajpayee, the prime minister who had used religious conflict
to disguise his wider war against the poor.  She was not the government
whose officials had boasted of India's new "five star culture", which
told the people that India was "shining", but forgot to mention that it
was shining only on the elite.  She was choosen to govern because she
had promised, in her patrician way, "to do something for the poor".

But the voters who chose her were in turn voted down by a more powerful
electorate.  Sonia might have pulled out anyway, but she had little
choice when the financial markets announced that she was unfit to rule. 
They appointed the former finance minister Manmohan Singh to take her
place.  The Economist magazine reports that when he was nominated, "the
Bombay exchange rapidly recovered from its fright. And well it might.
Whereas the BJP [Vajpayee's party] were always reluctant reformers, Mr
Singh is the genuine article, a man who understands better than any
other leading Indian politician the scope of what still needs to be done.
This needs to include plenty more privatisation." <1>

In the world's largest democracy, democracy has been prohibited.  The
same can now be said of almost every nation on earth.  The owners of
property have reasserted their right to rule.

Take the US.  In the Guardian this week, Martin Kettle praised John
Kerry's "softly softly" campaign to win the presidency.  "Militant"
opinion in the US might want him "to tear into Bush not just on Iraq but
on the Middle East, on civil liberties, on inequality, on the
environment and on the spiralling government deficit ... but Kerry is
proving smarter than all these people think". <2>  His "wily" strategy
is to win the election by sitting back and waiting for Bush to fall into
the traps he has set for himself.

Now it may well be true that Kerry can win by these means.  But this
raises a question which Kettle neither asks nor answers: what then is
the point of John Kerry?  What use is an opposition which refuses to
oppose?  Which won't even discuss the issues on which the election is
supposed to be fought?  The obvious answer of course is that the point
of John Kerry is to get rid of George Bush. Which suggests that the only
point of the election after that will be to get rid of John Kerry.

The real reason why Kerry won't discuss the issues Kettle lists or, for
that matter, any issues at all, is that the powers behind the powers in
the US forbid both meaningful discussion of policy in public places and
meaningful dissent in private places.  This, of course, is why Kerry is
the Democratic nominee, rather than someone who represents that portion
of the electorate which isn't married to heiresses and didn't learn its
politics at Yale's Skull and Bones club.  He could have offered the
citizens of America free healthcare, but only if he was prepared to lose
the support of the medical companies which will help to fund his
re-election.  He could have voted against the decision to attack Iraq,
but only if he had been prepared for Fox News, the Wall Street Journal,
the Washington Post and every other major media outlet to ensure that he
never again dared to show his face in public.  John Kerry is the product
of a system which has reduced democracy to a spectator sport.  Democracy
is the means by which the elite resolves its trifling differences while
the rest of us look on.

You may ask how it came to this, but that would be the wrong question. 
Democracy is one of those things, like science and shipping, which the
West wrongly claims for itself.  Among the indigenous people of West
Papua, the Amazon and East Africa, I have seen more sophisticated
democratic systems than our own, or those of ancient Greece.  They have
always been there.  Until, as Rousseau had it, civil society was founded
by the man who first enclosed a piece of land, announced that it was his
and found people simple enough to believe him, the unenclosed peoples
are likely to have made their decisions collectively, and, we can assume,
more or less equally.

But the systems we now call "democracies" are those constructed by the
propertied classes of civil society.  And they were constructed to keep
the lower orders out.  The Greeks denied the vote to women and slaves. 
Even Rousseau was determined to exclude the women.  Mary Wollstonecraft
wanted to bring the women in, but kick the servant class back out. 
James Madison, as Noam Chomsky has shown, urged that to prevent the poor
from voting for a redistribution of wealth, the state should "select a
portion of enlightened citizens, whose limited number, and firmness,
might seasonably interpose against impetuous councils". <3>  The US
Senate, he argued, must be composed of men whose purpose was "to protect
the minority of the opulent against the majority". <4>  It is hard to
think of a better description of the upper house in 2004.

In Britain we suffer from the worst of two eras.  We have a
pre-democratic body of law designed to uphold the property rights of a
feudal landed class (some protesters I know were recently charged under
the justices of the peace act, 1361) augmented by the post-democratic
demands of global capital.  In 1997, the Conservatives were left
wondering why Rupert Murdoch had backed Blair, when they were prepared
to offer him everything he wanted.  But Murdoch understood that the
Tories were already in the bag, and would stay there unbidden.  If he
supported them, he might own the government, but not the opposition.  By
backing Labour, he would keep the entire political system in his pocket.

>From time to time a genuinely popular government, like Nelson Mandela's
ANC or Lula's Partido dos Trabalhadores, will win the popular vote and
stay in office.  But it will retain power on one condition: that it
compromises with capital (Mandela's failure to pursue a coercive land
reform programme, Lula's capitulation to the IMF) until it differs from
a government of the propertied class only by being a passive rather than
an active partner in exploitation.  Ever since the fall of the Berlin
Wall (and for quite a while before that), the triumphalists of the West
have insisted that democracy is impossible without capitalism.  It
should surely be pretty obvious by now that democracy is impossible in
the presence of capitalism or, for that matter, any system which permits
the concentration of wealth.

Just where this leaves the people of civil societies, I am not quite
sure.  As someone who has spent much of his life arguing for an
extension of democracy within and beyond those societies, it leaves me
feeling profoundly depressed.  It suggests that all the stories we have
told ourselves about our system of government and the outcomes it is
meant to deliver are false.

http://www.georgemonbiot.com/

George Monbiot's book The Age of Consent: a manifesto for a new world
order is now published in paperback.

References:

1. No author, 22nd May 2004. India's election: Who, me? The Economist

2. Martin Kettle, 25th May 2004. Bush can't win this election now. Kerry
can only lose it. The Guardian.

3. James Madison, 1787. Contribution to the constitutional convention
debates. The text of this passage is online at
http://www.adena.com/adena/usa/rv/rv011.htm

4. Noam Chomsky, 20th May 2004, pers comm. Also cited in David Barsamian,
no date. The Common Good. Interview with Noam Chomsky .
http://members.freespeech.org/printed/


See also "Democracy in Latin America: Great for Investors; Not So Good
for People" by Saul Landau, Counterpunch (May 22 2004)
http://www.counterpunch.com/landau05222004.html




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