Home > EMU Crisis > Of Democracy and of a Different Europe

Of Democracy and of a Different Europe

I have mixed feeling about the Oki victory in Greece. The choice was between two evils: slow death by more of the same (the troika plan), or a roller-coaster ride that has a high chance of ending catastrophically for Greece and for the EMU. I would have voted no, were I Greek, but not joyfully. This said, two things I have been reading in the past days are disturbing:

  1. First, the claim that Tsipras’ rhetoric on democracy is misplaced: After all, people say, we all are democracies. Why should Greek democracy count more than the Portuguese, or the Spanish one? There is no reason, of course. Point is that Tsipras did something that is now really revolutionary in Europe, he tried – hold your breath –  to implement the platform on which he was elected. How many governments in Europe went to power promising an end to austerity, promising a “new deal for Europe”, just to retract a few months/weeks/days later and align themselves with the Berlin View that austerity is the only way? Greek democracy today should count more than democracy in the rest of Europe, because it is the only case in which voters are actually listened to by their government. This is why Syriza’s anomaly needed to be crushed, well beyond the actual content of its proposed policies. If European policy makers feel that their democracy should be as important as Greece’s, they could start by trying to do what their voters elected them for. That would certainly not hurt.
  2. The second thing that bothers me, is the convergence of the establishment and of euro-skeptical movements across Europe. Don’t be fooled by the enthusiastic adherence of many no-euro movements to the Oki campaign Their siding with Tsipras was instrumental to Grexit, turmoil, and weakening the euro itself. Something orthogonal to what Tsipras has been doing and saying in the past two years. The referendum made it clear that the establishment and the no-euro converge in trying to prove that there is no alternative to austerity in Europe. The former, because if Greece is not normalized, we would enter into a new phase in which statements and policies would have to be assessed on the basis of facts (not so favorable to austerity) rather than taken as a matter of faith. Euro skeptics need Tsipras to be crushed because this would definitely prove that the only way to get rid of austerity is to get rid of the euro altogether.

Therefore the referendum, while certainly hazardous and ill-conceived (what did the Greek people vote on, in the end?), had the great merit of exposing the hypocrisy of some commentators, and to show that the only hope for a different Europe has to be found in the struggle that an inexperienced prime minister is leading from Athens. Since yesterday, with the renewed support of his people. Dangerous times ahead, but with a small hope for change.

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  1. July 7, 2015 at 11:22 am

    One fact: Dutch PM Rutte and Mr Jeroen Dijsselbloem are both member of the Bilderberg conference. I am not sure but this may have some relevance to your post.

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  2. Mirco
    July 10, 2015 at 2:40 pm

    Do you really honestly believe that the eurozone can be made to be something different from the labour grinding, welfare smashing, economic divergence machine that it is? As a true European, I see the EZ as the greatest threat to Europe that there has ever been. There is no will to move forward to turn into something decent but the only argument for it is based on the fear of what happened if we left it. And in the meantime the economic consequences of the euro are destroying the social fabric of our countries and bringing to power more and more extremists and xenophobic parties. To save Europe we may have to understand once and for all that a deflationary fixed exchange rate arrangement is nothing particularly “european” even if it is called euro

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  1. July 11, 2015 at 12:03 pm
  2. March 13, 2018 at 10:03 pm

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