europeanwesternbalkans.com 
<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2020/06/24/the-election-of-losers/>  


The Election of Losers - European Western Balkans


Florian Bieber

8-9 minutes

  _____  

One person appears to have won the election. His face was everywhere, his name 
was on the ballot, though not as a candidate, and the virtual rallies were 
dominated by him. Aleksandar Vučić is the apparent winner of Serbia’s 
parliamentary election last Sunday.

While neither running for the election and president official standing above 
party politics, it was clear that the victory of Vučić was absolute. His party 
won around 62 percent of the vote, and gaining 191 of 250 seats in parliament, 
around 76% of the seats. The large majority opens the door to constitutional 
changes that would allow the regime, like in Hungary, to tailor the 
constitution to the needs of the ruling party.

His long-term coalition partner, the Socialists and their allies gained 10.4% 
and 32 seats, and the Serbian Patriotic Alliance, the vehicle of New Belgrade 
mayor Aleksandar Šapić gained 11 seats, just passed the 3% threshold with 
3.64%. The threshold was lowered from 5% to 3% just weeks before the election 
in a transparent effort by the ruling Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) to boost 
the representation of minor parties in parliament to weaken the effects of the 
opposition boycott.

The remaining 16 seats are held by minority parties, which have a lower 
threshold. The only opposition in the Serbian parliament are two Albanian MPs 
from the majority Albanian municipalities of Bujanovac and Preševo, as the 
minority parties cooperated with the previous governments of the Progressive 
Party and Šapić also did not run against the government.

It is this resounding victory that makes the outcome a defeat for Vučić. A 
parliament without an opposition cannot serve as a fig leaf to legitimize the 
supposedly democratic rule of the president. Had more of the 21 running parties 
and groups entered parliament, such as the different far right and fascist 
groups or a few scattered democratic and reformists, the Progressive Party 
could claim that Serbia had a pluralist parliament. Now, it does not and thus 
reveals the authoritarian nature of the regime.

The opposition lost as well. While turnout was probably lower than official 
numbers, it was according to the independent monitoring NGO CRTA around 48 
percent, thus 8 to 9 percent lower than previous parliamentary elections in 
2016. This is a minor drop, that could not be claimed solely by the opposition, 
but rather also by COVID-19 and voter apathy. Clearly the main effort the 
regime has been to push up voter participation, as most irregularities CRTA 
noted focused on pushing up voter numbers and SNS official appear to have 
called potential voter on election day to pressure them to vote.

The boycotting opposition has succeeded in delegitimizing the opposition that 
participated, such as the Movement of Free Citizens headed by Sergej Trifunović 
that only gained 1.5% or the United Democratic Serbia that gained less than 
0.9%.

At the same time the opposition that boycotted is far from united. The once 
large Democratic Party has been marred by infighting, including a scuffle at 
the party headquarter on election day between different wings. Otherwise, the 
opposition is an uneasy alliance between the far right Dveri, unpopular split 
offs of the previously ruling Democratic Party and few other groups. Now out of 
parliament, cut off from funding, without a clear strategy and few 
international allies and contacts, the opposition has a rough time ahead.

The EU is the final loser in the elections. Serbia has long been hailed, 
uncritically, as the front runner in the EU enlargement. Now, it is confronted 
with a parliament that lacks a democratic mandate and a regime, whose 
authoritarian nature has become more visible.

A joint statement of the High Representive Josep Borrell and Neighborhood and 
Enlargement Commissioner Olivér Várhelyi was strikingly critical, noting 
limited voter choice and media dominance of the ruling party.

The European Parties fell, unsurprisingly along partisan lines. The Socialists 
and Progressives correctly called the elections a mockery of democracy and 
demanded a slowdown of accession, whereas Donald Tusk of the European Peoples 
Party congratulated their party family associate SNS, only noting ominously 
“more power, the more responsibility.”

The enlargement process is seriously compromised by the elections. Serbia has 
been negotiating accession for more than six years, the same period during 
which democracy and rule of law has been backsliding by every indicator and all 
organizations monitoring democracy globally, including Freedom House, 
Bertelsmann Transformation Index, VDem Institute, and Economist Democracy Index.

The EU institutions, with the notable exception of the parliament, have been 
strikingly silent on this. If the EU returns to business as usual after the 
election, it will not only encourage the further consolidation of 
authoritarianism in Serbia, but also among others in the region, including 
Montenegro and Albania. More importantly, it suggests that the EU is not just 
struggling with keeping autocrats within the EU but also during the accession 
process, when more tools are available. To confront the authoritarian drift, 
the EU needs to engage with Serbia.

Back in 2014, the EU at first ignoring the authoritarianism of the Gruevski 
government and the eviction of the opposition. Only the 2015 wiretapping 
scandal triggered more sustained EU engagement. The risk is that in Serbia the 
political alternatives will become more Eurosceptic, as they see the government 
backed by the EU and its member states and as many of the parties already today 
oppose European integration.

A renewed EU engagement requires several components, namely a meaningful 
mediation between government and opposition on how to bring the opposition back 
into the political process based on tackling some of the most serious 
democratic restrictions. Furthermore, a rule of law mission, such as the Priebe 
report drafted in 2015 by independent experts that would identify the 
shortcomings and priorities for reform, and a follow process.

The European Party families should work together on their assessment of 
democracy rather than making democracy a partisan issue in the Western Balkans. 
Bipartisan statements and mediation by MEPs from the largest European Parties 
would reduce the risk of authoritarianism being further facilitated by partisan 
rift.

Finally, the Commission, the European Parliament and the Member States need to 
consider the full range of options regarding the accession talks themselves. 
These options include not opening new chapters in negotiations, a low-level 
signal. More serious would be to evoke the imbalance clause, which has been 
part of the accession negotiations for eight years. It allows talks to the 
frozen on all chapters if not enough progress is made in regard to rule of law.

Finally, the new methodology, set up by the Commission in response to France’s 
veto over accession talks with North Macedonia and Albania offers further tools 
to put pressure on accession candidates. It allows Member States to put 
negotiations in some areas on hold and re-open closed chapters, as well as 
reassessing funding and other benefits of cooperation. The most serious option 
would entail suspending accession talks altogether.

While the latter option might be counterproductive at the moment, it would be 
good to consider some of the intermediate measures. The suspension of accession 
talks, however, has to be a credible threat unless the Serbian government makes 
some clear and verifiable steps to restoring democratic institutions. 
Considering the tools the EU has available now to insist on the core values of 
the EU in the accession talks, not using them would cement the election result 
as a lost opportunity for Serbia and the EU.

 

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/116501d64a1c%245b6c1d00%2412445700%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to