Democracy, populism, and the political crisis in Hungary.
Schopflin, Gyorgy
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In November 2006, Eurozine published an article by Thomas von Ahn
analyzing the causes of the demonstrations in Hungary the previous
month. Among other things, von Ahn argued that Hungarian opposition
[Fidesz] leader Viktor Orban was operating a populist strategy that
sought to undercut parliamentary procedures. Here, Gyorgy Schopflin, MEP for Hungary [Fidesz-EPP] offers a response.
There are serious methodological problems with Thomas von
Ahn's analysis of Hungary's current political crisis. These
problems gravely weaken his central argument that the Hungarian
Right--of which I am a member--is teetering on the edge of an
anti-democratic, anti-parliamentary strategy. The primary flaw is that
von Ahn fails to recognize the significance of his proposition that
Hungarian society is deeply divided--in fact, it is in a state of
"cold civil war." The extraordinarily deep cleavage,
unparalleled in Europe after 1945 (though it has some analogies with
interwar Austria) is far more than a political phenomenon. It can be
described as ontological, and is about qualitatively different and
mutually exclusive visions of justice, of good and evil, of the
country's past, and, ultimately, of the "good life."
This cleavage is necessarily reflected in the Hungarian media,
which cannot, therefore, be treated as providing an objective account of
events, but as articulating opposing world-views. The best evidence for
this comes from Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany's "lying
speech" (cited by von Ahn), in which he admitted that the
government and the Hungarian Socialist Party (MSZP) "prepared"
the media and "involved" it in its work (this sentence was not
noticed by von Ahn). The passage is worth citing at length: "We
must try to take these things forward [...] prepare the leaders and
publicists of the most influential papers regarding what to expect. To
involve them in the process." (My translation) In other words, the
left wing media in Hungary, about four-fift hs of all outlets, have
become a transmission belt, doing the government's bidding.
Gyurcsany makes it amply clear that he regards this as quite normal and
that "preparing" the media is something that he and his party
will continue to do in the future.
What appears in the media cannot be used as a prima facie source,
but only as evidence of the cleavage. To quote Jozsef Debreczeni as an
objective analyst of Viktor Orban, as von Ahn does, is therefore
distinctly misleading. Debreczeni was indeed once an adviser to Orban,
but is now a committed critic. Similarly, the output of the think tank
Political Capital cannot be taken at face value, given its close links
to the government coalition. And so on. Thomas von Ahn relies heavily on
left wing news outlets, while ignoring the alternative views coming from
the Right, such as Budapest Analysis or Heti Valasz. Centre-Right
analysts such as Tamas Fricz and Andras Lanczi are also omitted. The
implication is that von Ahn's key analytical points about Viktor
Orban's strategy being populist and anti-parliamentarian are
basically reflections of the discourses of the Hungarian Left .
In consequence, von Ahn misses the deeper causes of the crisis in
Hungary and the trap that Hungary's elites, both Left and Right,
have marched into. The first of these causes is the flaw in the
institutional design of the Hungarian political system; the second is
the long-term consequences of the "soft " regime shift in
1989-90; and the third is the nature of the Hungarian project that the
country has been free to pursue since the end of the Soviet occupation.
STABILITY BECOMES IMMOBILITY
Those who designed the Hungarian political system were not persons
of Platonic detachment. They were highly motivated actors who wanted to
secure maximum power for themselves under the new dispensation. In
short, they were the leading elements of the communist nomenklatura.
Their interlocutors were the democratic opposition and other leading
intellectuals, who were wholly inexperienced in practical politics. The
outcome of their deliberations was, as von Ahn notes, a system built
around the idea of stability. Over time, however, this stability has
come to resemble immobility.
In brief, a Hungarian prime minister with a parliamentary majority
is utterly secure in power; there is no way of removing him or her as
long as that majority remains in place. This effectively relieves the
prime minister of all responsibility towards society; it is for all
practical purposes a semi-democratic system. The excessive concentration
of power in the hands of the prime minister--which was the object of the
Left 's continuous complaints during Orban's tenure--is not
hedged about by the series of checks and balances that any democratic
system needs to work properly. And in Hungary it does not work--this was
the deeper meaning of President Laszlo Solyom's message (noted by
von Ahn) that Hungary was beset by a moral crisis after the publication
of the "lying speech."
The original institutional design included the Constitutional
Court, the President, and the possibility to hold referenda as balancing
mechanisms. However, faced with the overwhelming power of the
parliament, these have proved too weak to establish an equilibrium.
Hungary's democratic system is formally built on popular
sovereignty, but in practice it has functioned on the basis of a
parliamentary sovereignty that lacks the practice of self-limitation
characteristic of, for example, the Westminster parliament. In effect,
there are no instruments by which the sovereignty of the people can be
validated.
Consequently, the Hungarian political system has become blocked,
since the basic democratic infrastructure is damaged or missing. First,
a democratic infrastructure must include multiple centres of political,
economic, and social power, including institutions that can supervise
governmental power and provide information that is supra-party
political. Since 2002, many of these have been dismantled by the left
wing government. Second, society has to have the cognitive, semantic,
and intellectual capacity to understand the workings of democracy and an
intellectual elite, free of political dependence, ready to define and
redefine the concepts and discourses through which events can be
interpreted. Currently, neither requirement is met in Hungary. Third, an
interlocking system of ethical and legal restraints on political power
has to be in place, restraints that are accepted by the political actors
and involve accountability, transparency, free expression, and feedback
between rulers and ruled. In Hungary, such restraints are either very
weak or non-existent.
What has actually evolved in practice since the Left won the
elections in 2002 is a hybrid system in which the ruling elite relies
heavily on communicative techniques to secure its re-election and
thereafter pays no attention to public opinion. All criticism, including
essential ongoing critiques of power, is rejected as, at best,
superfluous, but more oft en as ill-intentioned.
THE STREET AS A POLITICAL INSTITUTION
From this perspective, von Ahn's charges that Viktor Orban has
been indulging in "populism" and
"extra-parliamentarianism"--the narratives of the Hungarian
Left--tell only half the story. "Populism" has become a label
to stick on one's political opponents in order to discredit them.
But if one actually tries to define the concept, three possible areas
come into question: fiscal irresponsibility, xenophobia, and
mobilization of the masses while evading existing institutions in the
furtherance of political objectives. Taking these one by one:
Orban's record on fiscal responsibility is immeasurably better than
the Left 's, even if that record was eroded by promises of
expenditure made during the 2006 election campaign that would have been
difficult to fund. In fact, it was the left wing government's
policy of unprecedented overspending that Gyurcsany referred to in his
"lying speech."
Turning to the xenophobic element of populism, it was the Left (and
not Fidesz) that propagated scare stories about 23 million Romanians
coming to flood Hungary (2002) or made allegations that Slovaks were
planning to plant bombs in Budapest (2006).
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As for mass mobilization, this is a part of the standard repertoire
of European democracy and is used when the institutional system has
become unresponsive to popular aspirations and wishes. For example, in
1983, people demonstrated for months against the loi Savary in France, a
law which would have nationalized private and church schools, and which
eventually had to be withdrawn. Similarly, in 1990, Margaret
Thatcher's poll tax resulted in distinctly violent demonstrations
in the UK, and it too had to be withdrawn.
In Hungary, the blocked political system noted above, in which the
holders of power disregard or disdain popular aspirations, has turned
the street into a political institution. And by the way, is this not an
institution that also the European Left has used repeatedly? It cannot
be that a street demonstration becomes populist only when used by the
political Right.
As von Ahn notes, the demonstrations that began on 17 September
2006 were spontaneous, a gesture of disgust with a prime minister and
party whose victory in the spring elections was based on large-scale
mendacity. What Fidesz did was to give these demonstrations a political
leadership and to seek to channel them into a coherent political
objective. It would have been far more dangerous for Hungarian
democracy, for the government, and for Fidesz itself if these outbursts
had remained spontaneous. Then they would have acquired an inchoate quality in which extremism--the genuine article--would have flourished,
making the phenomenon far less manageable.
The Hungarian Left has been desperate to deny the legitimacy of the
street as an articulation of the aims of a politically significant
section of Hungarian society and has resorted to charges of
extra-parliamentary activities and warned of the danger of the
"Far-Right." Thomas von
Ahn repeats this leftist discursive strategy, as does much of the
Western press. But it is a long way from the political and sociological
reality of a deeply divided society.
WHY WESTERN MEDIA FOCUS ON THE FAR-RIGHT
The problem of the Far-Right is one that deserves further
assessment. Von Ahn gives a lot of attention to 64 varmegye (64
counties) and Jobbik, rather more than they deserve. These rightwing
extremist movements are very marginal. In every European country, there
is a Far-Right that can attract up to five or six per cent of the votes;
in Hungary, the Far-Right gets a good bit less. They may be highly
visible with their flag waving and their chanting--TV crews love them
for that reason--but while distasteful, they are politically irrelevant.
Why, then, do von Ahn and the Western media give so much attention
to such a marginal phenomenon as the Far-Right in Hungary and elsewhere?
The answer would seem to lie somewhere in the lost project of pre-1989
socialism. The collapse of communism meant that the Western Left had to
reinvent itself in order to acquire a new purpose. The concentration on
the Far-Right and on the danger of "fascism" emerged as one
such purpose. The wars of Yugoslav succession were used instrumentally
to demonstrate the "reality" of this danger, which then
allowed the Western Left to locate the Far-Right safely in
post-communist Europe. The ad hoc quality of this construct was
illustrated by the reception of the events in the aftermath of the 2006
Slovak elections, which brought the hard-line nationalist Slovak
National Party (SNS) into the ruling coalition. There was a brief
initial flurry of condemnation, but the issue was soon taken off the
agenda, not least because SNS was now an ally of the Slovak Left.
The number of rightwing extremists actively involved in the 2006
demonstrations before the parliament in Budapest did not exceed a few
hundred; on the two occasions when I was there, there were no more than
a couple dozen of them. The great majority of demonstrators were
peaceful, some of them with small children--hardly the stuff of a
Far-Right putsch. In the Hungarian case, the Left actively and
determinedly propagates the danger of rightwing extremism as a way of
securing support from the European Left, of scaring its own supporters
into line, and of maintaining its own intellectual coherence by
imagining a seriously dangerous enemy.
The superficially attractive argument that Orban's strategy
has been to launch a "coloured" revolution in Hungary (which
von Ahn considers "improbable") is flawed. Subsequent events
have proved the contrary. Orban's position has been very clearly
laid out in a series of speeches and interviews published after von Ahn
had finished gathering material for his article. What they make clear is
the sequence according to which Orban's position is constructed.
His starting position is that the MSZP won the 2006 elections on the
basis of a lie of such proportions as to make that electoral victory
illegitimate--not illegal, but illegitimate. The outcome of the local
elections demonstrates that the left wing coalition has lost its popular
base and that Hungarian society feels thoroughly betrayed. The vote of
confidence that Gyurcsany gained on 6 October 2006 makes the entire Left
complicit in the lie, and the non-response to the offer of a government
of experts simply intensifies the positions of both sides.
The trap into which the Hungarian political system has fallen
affects both Left and Right and, obviously, Hungarian society itself.
The Left understands that if it gives way, if early elections are indeed
held, it will be wiped out. The fate of the Left in Poland, which barely
scraped back into the Sejm after four scandal-ridden years in power in
2005, is taken very seriously in Hungary.
Fidesz, on the other hand, believes that the austerity programme,
while nee ded, cannot be implemented by a discredited figure like
Gyurcsany and that to fulfill its duty as a responsible opposition it
must sustain pressure on the government, otherwise its own support will
crumble. Given the blockage of the political system and the technocratic
disdain of the Left ensconced behind its parliamentary majority, there
is little more that Fidesz can do. It is powerless within the
constraints of the system, even while it knows that its supporters are
frustrated and, worse still, will be badly hit by an austerity programme
that they do not accept as legitimate. Neither can give way, each is the
prisoner of its positions and sustained in this by the other side.
THE PROJECT OF MODERNITY
The Left 's years in power have effectively derailed
Fidesz's project of modernity for Hungary. The nature of this
project has to be seen in the context of Hungary's unsuccessful
twentieth-century history, to some of which von Ahn makes reference.
Until 1914, the Hungarian elites had developed a project of modernity
that would allow Hungary--nation and society--to compete on equal terms
in Europe by constructing both the narratives and the discourses of
modernity. The model was certainly flawed--it relied too heavily on
Jacobin models of assimilating non-Hungarians without an adequate
trade-off in political rights. More seriously, it was handicapped by
deep disagreement regarding what model of modernity should be pursued.
Despite what universalists believe, there is no single universal model
of modernity--French, British, and Dutch models all vary, while sharing
a family likeness--and Hungary had to cope with the problems that all
late-comers have to face. Central in this context is the problem
identified by post-colonial theory: where should the emphasis lie--on
constructing one's own, particularist narratives or borrowing them
from the putative single universal "West?" The Treaty of
Trianon shattered the modernity project and left Hungary scrabbling for
solutions as to what a Hungarian modernity might look like. Communism
was a failure and so, for different reasons, was the 1956 revolution.
After 1989, when the opportunity for a relaunch of the modernity project
opened up, the tension between the universalists and
particularists--between those who postulate a single universal modernity
and those who want to rely on native discourses--was mapped on to party
politics. This is all the more regrettable since the dichotomy is a
false one.
The Hungarian Left claims to be the sole agent of universalism, of
being European and, indirectly, of being civilized and progressive. It
argues stubbornly in favour of individualism and the market, it embraces
globalization, and is economically determinist, paying next to no
attention to either equality or equity.
At the same time, the Hungarian Right claims to represent the best
interests of the Hungarian nation in Europe and describes itself as
patriotic and responding to the needs of society. Hence it believes in
the state as an instrument of social protection, in solidarity, and in
mutual obligation.
These are both discourses of modernity and neither can be regarded
as the sole source of what being modern means. At a deeper level,
modernity includes both universal and particular narratives of the
collective self. But in Hungary this is not accepted, with the result
that the conflict has become embedded in politics and constitutes the
basis of the "cold civil war" that is tearing both elites and
society apart.
By insisting on the validity of both universal and Hungarian
resources, Orban has tried to transcend this divide; an attempt that has
been fiercely contested by a Left that defines itself as
"Western" and insists on a monopoly on any interpretation of
what "Western" means. Hence the attacks on Orban, unparalleled
in any European democracy; hence the demonization of the Right; and
hence the insistence that Fidesz belongs to the Far-Right and therefore
is non-European. The fact that the Left strongly believes in this
discourse of demonization and energetically propagates it elsewhere in
Europe is not a reason for accepting it as an accurate depiction of
reality.
Finally, von Ahn's thesis about the instrumentalization of
history in general and of 1956 in particular clearly rests on the
assumption that there is "instrumentalized" history (which is
unacceptable, undesirable, and morally inferior) and
"non-instrumentalized" history (which is the opposite). In
other words, that somewhere out there is true, objective history, but
elsewhere politicians use and abuse history for their own ends. This
distinction is futile. All history is subjective. All history writing
involves an element of selection, which necessarily imports bias into
the description of the past. So von Ahn's charges of
instrumentalization are about something else; they are about a specific
kind of instrumentalization, one of which he disapproves. There is
nothing wrong with this. The tone, however, the tenor, and the register
of von Ahn's article imply that his text is free of bias and
subjectivity. It is not, but then nor is what I have written.
FOR FURTHER READING:
Bollmann, Felix and Ryoichi Sasakawa. Intellectual and Cultural
Change in Central and Eastern Europe: New Challenges in the View of
Young Czech, German, Hungarian and Polish Scholars. (Lang, 2007).
Kiraly, Bela K. and Andras Bozoki. Lawful Revolution in Hungary,
1989-1994. (East European Monographs, 1996).
Liang, Christina Schori. Europe for the Europeans: The Foreign and
Security Policy of the Populist Radical Right. (Ashgate Publishing,
Ltd., 2007).
Szczerbiak, Aleks and Sean Hanley. Centre-right Parties in
Post-communist East-Central Europe. (Routledge, 2006).
Gyorgy Schopflin is a Hungarian academic and politician. He is a
member of the European Parliament with the Hungarian Civic Party and
sits on the European Parliament's Committee on Foreign Affairs.