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How Europe views the American electoral crisis
By Ulrich Rippert
30 November 2000
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Three weeks after the American election, with the conflict
still raging over who will be the next US president, concern is
growing in Europe that a continuing power vacuum in Washington
could destabilise the entire world situation.
For several days after the election the European press for
the most part made mocking comments about the sloppiness of the
election and the manipulation of votes in the home of democracy.
Too often in the past, American politicians had paraded themselves
as the world standard for democracy and justified military operations
in other countries with talk of establishing democratic norms.
Subsequently, however, more cautious voices began to be heard
raising the question: what is the significance of such a crisis
in the centre of world power? The next president of the
US will be a king without a country, wrote Stefan Kornelius,
the long-time Washington correspondent of the Süddeutsche
Zeitung, who now heads the foreign office of the newspaper.
Under the headline Power Without Mandate, Kornelius
opined that the near-even vote tally for both candidates meant
Bush or Gore would take office in the knowledge that the
other half of the population has rejected him. He concluded,
They lack any clear mandate.
The division of the country, expressed in the bitter conflict
between the candidates, would be mirrored in dozens of duels
throughout the country, Kornelius wrote. Since the impeachment
campaign, he continued, the fanaticism of which American
politics is capable was common knowledge.
Kornelius went on to predict that should the extreme
situation emerge of a Republican president working
with a Republican congress ... there would be more than a few
Republicans who would see the single-party majority in the legislative
and executive branches as a free ticket. Interest groupsheaded
by the gun lobby and the religious rightwould call in their
debts from a president for whose election they made sacrifices
and maintained a low profile.
The conservative newspaper Die Welt wrote that after
the most dramatic election night in living memory the awareness
grew that this could be just the beginning of something
enormousa constitutional crisis whose reverberations
would go well beyond those arising from the Watergate scandal.
Reading the Die Welt article by Uwe Schmitt, one got
the impression that the author had gone to his bookshelves to
read a few paragraphs on the American Civil War and the origins
of the US Constitution. He ascribed the establishment of the electoral
college system to the fears of the Southern slave states of the
majority of the mob, and finally posed the question: was
anything impossible today in America? What began on Wednesday
night could become the second American revolution, he warned.
Evidently shocked by his own estimation of the situation, Schmitt
in a number of subsequent articles has emphasised the strengths
of American democracy, assuring his readers that it will stand
up to the present crisis.
Behind the façade of normal diplomatic activity, the
majority of European heads of state have pinned their hopes on
an election victory for Democrat Al Gore. Particularly in London,
Berlin and Rome the Clinton-Gore administration is regarded as
a political role model. But the so-called third way
is also favoured in other European capitals. Pointing to the supposed
success of the American economy, European countries have systematically
dismantled their social welfare systems, while at the same time
attempting to avoid large-scale social conflicts and maintain
the existing parliamentary framework.
Although the destruction of social services in most European
countries still does not measure up to the extent of the devastation
in the US, a situation has emerged at a political level that parallels
developments in the United States. A privileged social layer,
whose wealth has mushroomed over the past few years as a result
of stock market trading and speculation, is attempting with all
its might to exert its political influence, demanding the elimination
of what remains of the social security system in Europe.
It is therefore understandable that the ruthlessness exhibited
since election night by the Republican candidate, who is bent
on gaining the White House by any and all means, has met with
broad approval from conservative parties throughout Europe. On
the night of the election, when the media for a time prognosticated
a Republican victory, the head of the right-wing Christian Social
Union in Germany, Michael Glos, issued a statement designed to
exploit the US election for domestic purposes. Calling the victory
of Governor Bush a clear signal, Glos declared, It
puts a stop to the turn to the left in the Western democracies.
The British newspaper Sun, part of the global media
empire of Rupert Murdoch, was even more blunt. In its opinion
a Bush victory would serve to destabilise the comfortable
club of left-wing heads of government. The Sun has
published one article after another repeating in frenzied tones
Republican charges that Gore and the Democrats are seeking to
steal the election.
Concerns about a Bush victory among European heads of state
are not restricted to worries about a dramatic growth in the domestic
political influence of conservatives and right-wingers; they also
fear a change in American foreign policy. Statements by Republican
candidate Bush and his advisors indicating a retreat from international
political obligations have been carefully noted. In particular,
Bush's suggestion that he might order the withdrawal of American
troops from the Balkans, because it was demoralising for soldiers
and officers to spend their time escorting children to school
or kindergarten instead of fighting, has raised the question
of how far an incoming American government would be prepared to
respect international obligations and agreements.
In this respect, the reaction in Russia is of particular interest.
While in its official statements the Kremlin exercises diplomatic
caution, the predominant standpoint within the political elite
is that Bush should be supported because the Republicans favour
a more narrowly defined nationalist orientation. A victory for
Bush is seen as leading to a weakening of the geopolitical offensive
of the US, with advantages for Russia.
Typical was a commentary published October 30 in the Russian
weekly Expert. On foreign policydespite their
warlike gesturesthe Republicans remain pragmatists and traditionalists,
the journal wrote. It continued: According to their plans,
there is to be no step-by-step dismantling of the sovereignty
of other states or the transformation of the world into a multicultural
salad'. One can expect Al Gore to try and out-trump the globalist
Clinton, and it is likely that under his rule the US and NATO
would threaten to finally assume the role of world policeman
and world teacher'. In the event of a Bush victory, however, the
Americans will concentrate more on their own national interests
and refrain from continually attempting to teach the rest of the
world how they should live. It is possible to get something going
with such people.
This is also the opinion of left-wing circles in Russia. A
short time ago Boris Kargalitsky spoke of his participation in
the Prague protests against the International Monetary Fund and
said, In various states there are agents of globalisation
and they can be dangerous for us. Referring to the American
elections, he continued, For us, the Democrats are more
of a threat.
An echo of this argument is to be found in the German daily
newspaper Junge Welt, which before German reunification
functioned as the official organ of the East German Stalinist
youth organisation and now regards itself as a left-wing paper.
Two days before the election, Rainer Rupp wrote an article with
the title: The lefts in the German Federal Republic and
the USAGore or Bush is more than a choice between the frying
pan and the fire. The article stated: Against the
background of foreign policy restraint by George W. Bush, it is
even more astonishing that Al Gore, the candidate of the transnational
companies, who is intent on intervening everywhere as a world
policeman, is favoured by the German left. This is probably bound
up with the arch-conservative social positions of Bush. But that
is something for the Americans themselves. Washington's foreign
policy, on the other hand, is something which affects us all.
This expresses a thoroughly narrow-minded, nationalist point
of view that displays not the least interest in the fate of the
American working class. The Stalinist and ex-Stalinist left
in Europe opposes the only viable path for American workers to
defend their social conditions and democratic rightsa break
from both parties of American capitalism and the building of a
mass party of its own, based on socialist policies.
The outlook of Kargalitsky and Rupp also ignores the fact that
a Bush government in America will encourage and strengthen the
most reactionary forces in Europe and worldwide. Above all, however,
such an estimation is based on a thoroughly mistaken view of the
likely changes in American foreign policy under Bush and Cheney.
The withdrawal of the US from international obligations does
not mean any lessening of American interference in world politics,
and certainly does not point to a reduction in military activity.
Quite the opposite! Under a Bush government American foreign policy
would likely take even less notice of the interests of European
governments and other partners than has been the case up until
now. Instead, under Bush, America would likely tend to orient
its policy to its most immediate and narrow national interests.
One thing is for certain, whichever candidate ultimately ends
up in the White House, military adventures will increase and differences
between the Great Powers will grow.
See Also:
US Elections
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