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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
Lithuania: Ruling Homeland Union suffers election collapse
By Steve James
14 October 2000
Use
this version to print
Ten years after Lithuania unilaterally declared its independence,
the ruling conservative Homeland Union has suffered a huge defeat
in last Sunday's elections. Having won close to 40 percent of
the vote in 1996, and 70 seats, Prime Minister Andrius Kubilius's
Homeland Union won a mere 8 percent and 8 seats in the 141-seat
Seimas [parliament].
With no overall winner, the leading parties were the Social
Democrats, led by ex-Stalinist Algirdas Brazauskas, who increased
their representation from 12 to 51 seats, with 31 percent of the
vote; the New Union gained 19 percent and 27 seats; and the Liberal
Union took 36 seats. Neither the New Union, led by Arturas Paulauskas,
nor former Prime Minister Rolandas Paksas's Liberal Union existed
when the last elections were held. Talks on a coalition administration
are ongoing and it is likely that the Liberal Union and New Union
will form a minority government, backed up with support from smaller
parties.
The instability shown in the electoral result reflects the
deep uncertainties in the 3.7 million population of the small
Baltic republic. Following independence, the liquidation of the
Soviet Union, the reintroduction of the capitalist market and
a mass privatisation programme the Lithuanian economy went through
a drastic collapse. In 1993, inflation reached over 400 percent,
wages fell by 39 percent and GDP fell by 16 percent. By 1996 the
situation was somewhat more stable, with inflation down to only
24 percentfar above the small increases recorded in wages
(4.1 percent) and GDP (4.7 percent). Unemployment was on the rise,
with a figure of around 7 percent. The 1996 electoral success
for the Homeland Union reflected deep hostility to the then Democratic
Labour party, which suffered an even greater eclipse than that
recently suffered by the Homeland Union.
Following the Russian economic crisis of 1998 the economy dived
again. In 1999, trade fell 19 percent and GDP fell 4.1 percent.
Electricity consumption fell 5 percent and the Lithuanian state
failed to recoup 12.7 percent of its expected tax revenues. Unemployment
rose to 11.5 percent. In power, the Homeland Union kept up the
privatisation programme of its predecessors. Between 1991 and
1998 the proportion of the workforce employed by privatised enterprises
rose from 22 percent to 68 percent. Since 1996, Lithuanian Fuels,
Lithuanian Airlines, the ports, Lithuanian Telecom and the Lithuanian
Insurance Company have all transferred majority shareholding to
private ownership.
Most dramatic was the transfer of 33 percent of shares in the
state oil refinery Mazeikiu Nafta to US-owned Williams International.
Opposition to the terms being imposed by Williams, though not
the deal itself, provoked the resignation of a series of government
ministers. Williams demanded huge state subsidies that would impact
on the already cash-starved state finances. To a certain amount
of popular acclaim, Prime Minister Rolandas Paksas was one of
those who resigned. Following the Williams deal, the Russian oil
giant LUKOil has intermittently cut off oil supplies to Mazeikiu
Naftathis in turn deepening the country's economic slump.
The dire social impact of reorganising the industrial economy
in line with market needs has been mirrored in the countryside,
where 20 percent of Lithuanians still live, (although it produces
only 8 percent of GDP). The break-up of the Soviet-era collective
farms has resulted in a small number of farmers doing rather well,
while the majority are struggling to survive. Last year, the Homeland
Union cut agricultural subsidies, triggering large-scale tractor
protests by farmers and growing support to the Farmers Party,
which advocates lower taxes on farming expenditure and cuts in
food taxes. The Farmers Party has also organised as many as 50,000
farmers to sue the government for unpaid debts. In January this
year, fuel, VAT (sales tax), social insurance, and telephone charges
all were increased.
But for all the dramatic swings between the various parties,
there are only marginal political differences between them. All
insist that privatisation must continue. All advocate continuing
Lithuania's drive to join both NATO and, in particular, the European
Union (EU), which Lithuania hopes to join by 2005. Accession talks
opened with the EU early this year and the country's entire economic
and political strategy has been effectively subordinated to satisfying
the membership criteria demanded by the EU. This means a further
opening up of the economy to venture capital, and additional cuts
in state subsidies. The currency, the lita, must be pegged to
the euro by 2001 and the tax system must be reorganised in line
with EU norms. Government debt must be cut and price controls
on staples and energy must be removed. The new government will
also be charged with pushing through infrastructure projects designed
to integrate Lithuania into the European energy and transport
networks.
To the extent that there are political differences between
the parties, these centre on some promises to increase one or
another aspect of social spending, to moderate the social impact
of these policies. The Social Democrats called for tax breaks,
and support for those suffering from the consequences of privatisation.
The New Union and the Social Liberals called for military spending
to be redirected to education. The Farmers Party favours a delay
in joining the EU.
The Social Democrats also claim to favour the state retaining
a greater shareholding in privatised enterprises, although commentators
do not give these statements much credence. More concretely, the
Social Democrats want to improve relations with Russia, much soured
after the disputes over the Mazeikiu Nafta refinery. A scandal
blew up during the campaign, when it emerged that the Vaizga oil
company, owned by the wife of the LUKOil Baltija chairman, had
donated $62,500 to the Social Democrats.
The lack of an international socialist perspective around which
to unify all those losing out in the new Lithuania is creating
conditions where the huge social tensions can take a particularly
noxious form. In April, Vytautas ustauskas of the Freedom
Union was elected mayor of Kaunas, Lithuania's second largest
city. ustauskas is a rabid anti-Semite, and Star of David
flags have been burned at his rallies. ustauskas uses the
social crisishe has organised feasts of the destitute
and marches of the homelessto promote his extreme
Lithuanian nationalist politics. Echoing patterns across both
East and West Europe where mainstream parties have embraced the
far right, ustauskas came to power with the support of the
New Union city councillors. Subsequent reports indicate that the
New Union agreed not to stand against him in the general election.
See Also:
Lithuanian
ministers resign over terms of US buyout of state oil refinery
[22 November 1999]
Europe
and the US challenge Russian domination of the Baltic states
[6 November 1999]
Eastern
Europe
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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