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Belgium: Leterme government lurches from crisis to crisis
By Paul Bond
27 May 2008
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It took Belgian Prime Minister Yves Leterme nearly nine months
to establish his coalition government after last summers
general election. It has taken barely two months to prove that
it cannot resolve any of the political problems facing Belgium.
Leterme managed to stave off an immediate crisis two weeks ago,
whilst setting up further confrontations between the countrys
regions.
Belgium has been in political turmoil since last Junes
elections. Letermes right-wing Flemish Christian Democrats
(CD&V) won in alliance with the moderate Flemish nationalist
New Flemish Alliance (NVA), defeating the Flemish Liberal Party
(Open VLD) of sitting Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt.
Leterme had campaigned on extending regional autonomy. In practice,
this means cutting the richer Dutch-speaking north of the country,
Flanders, from the poorer French-speaking south, Wallonie, as
demanded by Flemish nationalists. Such constitutional changes
would require a two-thirds majority, which Leterme did not have.
Because of these proposals, Leterme was unable to build a coalition
among Walloon Liberals and Christian Democrats. They saw it as
a step towards secession, which would have devastating economic
consequences in the francophone region.
Emboldened by Letermes proposals and the chaos surrounding
the coalition negotiations, Flemish nationalists became more intransigent
in their demands for greater autonomous powers. In the absence
of an agreement, King Albert II called on the ousted Verhofstadt
to form an interim government.
The dispute ran on until this March. There was increased urgency
to form a government in order to agree a new budget under difficult
economic conditions. Verhofstadt, in his capacity as interim premier,
announced that there was no money in the public purse for any
new budget initiatives. Public debt ran at 87 percent of GDP in
the last full year of Verhofstadts premiership. A new government
was required constitutionally to pass the new budget, but the
interim government conducted budget talks ahead of the coalition
being established.
To achieve a coalition, Leterme had to manoeuvre on constitutional
questions. He referred the question of regional reform to a special
parliamentary panel, which will report in July. This removed the
contentious discussion from the immediate coalition negotiations,
but has not satisfied any of the parties.
Francophone politicians are still anxious about further extensions
of regional autonomy, which could drastically cut Wallonies
income from federal taxation. Flemish nationalists are unhappy
at what they see as a retreat from the regionalist agenda. Gerolf
Annemans of the extreme-right separatist Vlaams Belang (Flemish
Interestformerly Vlaams Blok) accused Leterme of setting
demands for Flanders and then dropping them. Where previously
VB had been treated as an extremist pariah, their positions are
increasingly part of the mainstream of Flemish regional politics.
Bart de Wever of the NVA said, We will see in July whether
enough has been done, a position also being taken by Letermes
own party. Walloon parties have expressed unhappiness at levels
of representation within the Cabinet.
The NVA, the other big winner last June, withdrew from the
coalition. Leterme was eventually able to obtain a majority vote
of confidence with a five-party coalition. The CD&V was joined
by its Walloon sister party the CDH, the Francophone Socialist
Party (PS), the Open VLD, and their Walloon sister party the MR.
The fact that Leterme has brought back into government the very
party voted out of office in June indicates the desperation of
the Belgian ruling class, while the mutterings of discontent even
during the vote of confidence underscore the instability of the
coalition. The debate on the budget, which was supposed to be
facilitated by the coalition, has merely exacerbated the political
tensions.
Leterme pledged to raise pensions and cut taxes to the lowest
paid, promising investment in health care, the environment, and
security. The agreement on Letermes proposals for examining
constitutional reform enabled the budget talks to be concluded.
The budget includes 340 million for new measures, including
raising the lowest pensions by two percent, guaranteeing income
for the elderly, and raising the income ceiling for the retired.
It is unclear how much of this is actually affordable, given Verhofstadts
warning and recent criticisms that the interim government did
not reserve sufficient funds to finance the costs of an ageing
population.
The budget was calculated on forecasts of three percent inflation.
The Central Bank forecast inflation of 2.9 percent, but finance
minister Didier Reynders has this week said inflation could hit
3.5 percent with rising prices domestically and across the Euro
zone. Reynders warned that rising food prices globally, and its
impact on poorer citizens, would affect budgets, and he predicted
revisions of budget targets for 2008 in many countries.
He also said that the credit crunch would start to bite in the
Euro zone in the second half of 2008, as the crisis spread internationally.
We have seen a distribution of risk from the US to the entire
world, he said.
It is against this economic background that Flemish nationalists
are seeking to cut themselves loose from subsidising the poorer
Wallonie.
Belgiums delicately-balanced state structure is organised
into Regions and Communities. There are three Regions: Flanders,
Wallonie, and the Brussels Capital Region. There are three Communities:
Dutch, French, and German-speaking. Brussels is a predominantly
French-speaking city close to the language border, and within
the Dutch-speaking province of Brabant. Around Brussels is a bilingual
electoral district, Brussel-Halle-Vilvoorde/Bruxelles-Hal-Vilvorde
(BHV).
Constitutionally, each region is administered by one language
group, so people living in Flanders vote only for Dutch-language
parties. In BHV, however, voters have the option of voting for
candidates from either language group. For the last 18 months
Flemish politicians have been demanding an end to this situation.
Their calls for BHV to be split into two would break Brussels
links with Wallonie, and deny the substantial minority of tens
of thousands of francophone voters there the possibility of voting
for francophone parties or using French in any official context.
The dispute has been getting more and more acrimonious. In
January 2007 the Flemish regional authorities refused to appoint
francophone mayors in the wealthy municipalities of Linkebeek,
Wezembeek-Oppem and Kraainem. Although the municipalities have
francophone majorities they are in Flanders, and the regional
authorities insist that Dutch should be used for official business.
Of Linkebeeks 5,000 inhabitants, 86 percent are francophone.
The town hall was bricked up in the dispute. Bilingual roadsigns
are regularly being defaced. The Council of Europe has recently
sent envoys to investigate local rights to participate in local
autonomy.
In Liedekerke, a furore arose over the town councils
insistence on the Flemish nature of the town. Not
only must all business and schooling take place in Dutch, but
children who cannot speak the language can be barred from school
outings such as swimming classes. Local VB councillor Johan Daelman
has used this as an argument against francophone African immigrants.
It is no surprise that the separatist Daelman draws the conclusion
that the best answer is to divide the country. All
of the Flemish parties have adapted to VBs separatism. Flemish
interior minister Marino Keulen of the Open VLD was quick to annul
the Liedekerke decision on school outings, but he has also expressed
annoyance at Flemish subsidies to Wallonie. As Marc Mertens, Liedekerkes
secretary, pointed out, the regional authority-controlled sports
association Bloso can also send home children who do not understand
Dutch. One of Keulens officers, Steven Vansteenkiste, was
widely quoted complaining about a francophone veto, and the amount
of money going from north to south.
Brussels is critical for all regionalist political agendas.
Every proposal for dividing the country seeks to retain control
of the capital. Even the Flemish separatists of VB propose giving
it specific language status in order to maintain it as part of
their claimed territory. Olivier Maingain of the Walloon nationalist
Francophone Democratic Front (FDF) has said that the enlargement
of Brussels and its attachment to Wallonie must be the price of
any division of BHV. This echoes proposals by Joëlle Milquet
of the CDH last year that Flemish municipalities south of Brussels
be added to the citys area, thus linking it to Wallonie.
Much of the impetus for the division of the country has come
from Letermes own party. The CD&V issued Leterme with
an ultimatum that they would lead a vote of no confidence against
him if he was unable to obtain the agreement of francophone parties
to the proposals. According to some sections of the Belgian media,
party leaders had been close to a deal to delay the debate in
order to pass the budget, but it was opposed by the CD&V.
Two weeks ago Leterme finally won a majority in parliament
to delay any further regional debate in order to pass the 2008
budget. Immediately afterwards, in the early hours of the morning,
the CD&V again filed a motion to prevent French-speakers in
BHV from voting for francophone parties. Francophone politicians
invoked a constitutional device to put the bill on hold for 120
days. Leterme hopes to include proposals for BHV in his broader
package of regional devolution, due on July 15.
There was a sigh of relief from some sections of the Belgian
ruling class that, in the words of Le Soir, the worst
has been avoided. This seems unwontedly optimistic. Any
legislation can definitely be passed by the Flemish majority in
the lower house. The CD&V had not been won over by Letermes
talk of the broader package of reforms, and the MR, CDH, and PS
have all promised to break Letermes coalition should he
go ahead with the division of BHV. At best Leterme has won a reprieve,
but it hardly suggests he can resolve the crisis. As a headline
in De Morgen put it, Next crisis on July 15.
Leterme is pursuing exactly the politics that created the present
crisis. There has been a rightward lurch in Belgian politics over
the last period. Before the BHV vote one analyst noted that Belgian
politics is now polarised. Caroline Sagesser said that all
the Flemish deputies are forming one block against all the French-speaking
deputies, and we have not had this situation in federal Belgium
until now. She described it as an escalation of the antagonism.
The situation is becoming increasingly volatile. Marc Mertens
is not alone in believing that Belgium is finished and will
become superfluous. The BHV dispute, he believes, will come
to be seen as the start of the war between the Flemish and
French-speakers.
There can be no resolution of the Belgian crisis within the
existing political system, which bears direct responsibility for
creating and promoting the nationalism, regionalism and inequality
we see today. The crisis in Belgium emphasises the urgent necessity
for a socialist programme to unite the working class internationally
and combat the poisonous growth of nationalism and regionalism.
Only such a programme can unite Belgian workers, not just across
language barriers within Belgium, but with their class brothers
and sisters across the continent in building the United Socialist
States of Europe.
See Also:
Without new government,
Belgium faces threat of break-up
[7 December 2007]
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