Thousands of demonstrators
trying to topple Hong Kong’s legal ruler C.Y. Leung and set terms for the 2017
election symbolize a new political trend: Whichever constitutional way a ruler
has been brought to power, ability to continue might depend on the consent of
the social media-connected populace forcing its will onto the streets. That at
least has been the case with Mohamed Morsi of Egypt and Ukraine’s Vladimir
Yanukovych. Leung is untainted by corruption, yet even if he continues, his
effectiveness has been badly compromised.
In the past two years, a
political trend has emerged that takes legitimacy of government into perilous
and unchartered territory. Democratically-elected leaders of culturally diverse
countries such as Egypt, Thailand and Ukraine have been overthrown by street
protests.
Within weeks of an elected
government coming to power in newly independent South Sudan, the country
collapsed into violence. War has flared up again in Iraq where the finest minds
in international development working with unlimited funds have failed to stop
conflict.
And most recently,
protesters in Hong Kong, which enjoys a swathe of freedoms and high standards
of living, are demanding to choose their own leader, despite not even being a
sovereign state.
Since the end of the
Cold War, the broadly accepted method of delivering authority to a government
has been through voter choice at the ballot box. In the case of dramatic change
such as the overthrow of Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak or Libya’s Muammar el-Qaddafi,
the what- next question has been answered by the holding of elections, often
under a new constitution and the watch of international observers.
But as a safety valve
against discontent, elections now fail to do their job. The new reality is that
tenure in office is set not through an agreed electoral cycle, but by ability
to keep protesters off the streets.
The pact between
government and citizens, therefore, is being determined by far more obscure
elements, drawing us back to 1762 when Jean-Jacques Rousseau coined the phrase
“The Social Contract.” This challenged the right of monarchies to rule and
emphasized that power should be in the hands of that indefinable entity of the
state, whose architecture would be decided by an equally indefinable force — the
will of the people.
“Each of the recent
protests are different and respond to different issues,” says John Morrison,
author of “The Social License,” which examines how organizations acquire and
lose legitimacy. “But some clearly relate specifically to what might be called
‘political license,’ attempts by populations to renegotiate the social contract
granted to specific governments — or at least to make such governments more
accountable.”
Constitutions are
written to define this contract. Elections are held to determine the will of
the people through majority vote. So why now is this being so readily torn
apart?
The cases largely fall
into two categories. One, such as Iraq and South Sudan, involves societies with
deep, historical mistrust where the use of Western-style elections has failed
to build fair institutions. The result has been catastrophic.
The other is more
complex, involving educated and comparatively wealthy stakeholders whose
societies are mentored Western democracies.
The Ukrainian
constitution, for example, states that the president is elected for a
“five-year term on the basis of universal, equal and direct suffrage, by secret
ballot.” Yanukovych lasted four years, until February 2014.
Egypt’s provisional
2011 constitution provided for a secret ballot and a presidential term of four
years. Street protests and a military coup ended Morsi’s tenure after a year.
Thailand’s Prime
Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, elected in a landslide with wide support among
the poor, was deposed after less than three years, again after protests
followed by military intervention.
Hong Kong’s chief
executive should serve until 2017, but until this weekend protesters wanted him
out now. Their main objection is his support for a clause written into their
Basic Law, a constitution published 24 years ago — before many of them were
born: The ultimate aim, it states, is to elect the chief executive “by
universal suffrage upon nomination by a broadly representative nominating
committee in accordance with democratic procedures.”
The nominating
committee, seen as a vetting mechanism used by the Communist Party of China, is
at the heart of their discontent. The committee follows the constitution, but
devalues the implicit promise of respecting people’s wishes expressed in the
words “universal suffrage.” One-person, one-vote is not enough as the
protesters doubt that Beijing as vetting authority has Hong Kong’s interest at
heart.
Two elements appear to
be behind this current wave of discontent around the world.
First is what has become
known as social media. As technology and communications improve such media
become more powerful.
“Social media connects
protest to both internal dissent and the wider world, independently of
mainstream media and any biases of limitations that may have,” says Richard
Sambrook, former BBC director of news. “And as a pure means of self expression
it gives meaning, momentum and unity to what might otherwise be individual acts
of smaller protest.”
Second — and most
importantly — Western leaders have diminished the rule-of-law by supporting
some protests, notably in Egypt and Ukraine where the elected governments were
seen to pose strategic threats. Morsi represented Islamic extremism and
Yanukovych symbolized an anti-Western Russia pushing influence too far.
The West could have
taken a lead, pointing out that creating a strong democracy is a long, messy
process; high levels of corruption and mismanagement are inevitable in the
early stages, and the best way forward is to follow the constitution and
exercise choice at the next election.
Instead, it opted for
immediate strategic interests against the very values of fair governance it
advocates.
The track record so
far in this trend for changing governments has not been good.
Ukraine has lost
Crimea and fights a separatist war. There are car bombings in Egypt where
human-rights activists say repression is now worse than in the days of Mubarak.
A military government controls Thailand. There is war in Iraq, Libya, South
Sudan and others.
Hong Kong remains on a
knife-edge.
One strain running
through the protests is that while knowing whom or what they want to overthrow,
there is a lack of clarity about which system or individual is a viable
alternative.
Hong Kong protesters
are demanding elections carried out to “international standards.” But those
standards are far from clear.
Britain’s prime
ministers have no direct electoral mandate. US presidents are chosen by
indirect election, state by state, via the procedurally intricate Electoral
College system. Neither, it seems, would satisfy demands in Hong Kong.
And with $38,000 GDP
per capita and world-class transport, education and health systems, Hong Kong
shows this is as much about dignity and control as it is about living standards
and money.
A quarter of century
ago, after the end of the Cold War, Western-style democracy was given free rein
to prove its worth, and there have been notable successes, mostly in Europe and
Latin America. But such governance may have reached a stage where both mentors
and those campaigning for it are at a loss as to where the end game lies.
Democracy, after all,
represents hope and fairness. For democracy to be a system of government, there
must be adherence to the rule-of-law, and the West’s support for the abrupt
tearing up of constitutions destroys benchmarks of governance. The way forward
is precarious.
Rousseau’s social
contract also had a problematic track record. It began with the concept that
the will of the people would create a stable foundation for future government —
27 years later came the French revolution, the guillotine, mass killings and
military rule by Napoleon.
In that story are
echoes of the Arab Spring, Iraq, Ukraine and — although too soon to tell —
possibly Hong Kong.
Humphrey Hawksley is a
BBC correspondent specializing in development.
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