A bourgeois democracy without an elected government
Crowning a crisis unprecedented in
the history of bourgeois democracy essentially fractured Belgium has not yet
collapsed. Elections have failed to produce a government there in the country
with a history of compromises by its ruling classes. “Belgium is in a coma. The
patient is clinically dead”, said a Flemish Christian Democrat.
Failure to accommodate contending interests has come out
starkly in the bourgeois democracy with a crown. “Belgium no longer works. It
is a nation that has failed”, said Bart De Wever, leader of the New Flemish
Alliance (N-VA), the party calling for independence for Dutch-speaking
Flanders. By securing 27 seats in the 150-seat parliament N-VA appeared as the
strongest political party. In Flanders, a region of 6.5 million people that
accounts for almost 60% of the population, 45% voted for the N-VA and other
separatists.
Since the June 2010 elections, the ruling classes have produced
an unfinished political power equation that consequently generated a world
record of a country without an elected government, when economic recovery is
fragile, unemployment is hovering around 8.5%, and the euro is in crisis. On
May 19, the Chamber of Representatives adopted the 2011 budget submitted by the
unelected government. The right-wing Vlaams Belang and the Flemish and Walloon
Greens voted against the budget while the New-Flemish Alliance and the Flemish
Socialists abstained. A bourgeois practice by a government without a mandate!
Iraq, a few months back, possessed a record without a
full-fledged government for 249 days. For 353 days, between July 17, 2003 and
July 15, 2004, Cambodia was without government. In 1977, the Netherlands set
the European record of 208 days. Belgium had similar experience in October
1978-April 1979. A caretaker government ruled the country termed as an
“accident of history” by Yves Leterme four years ago. After the June 2007
election, it took nine months to produce a coalition government. Yves Leterme
now rules Belgium with decrees from the monarch although his Flemish Christian
Democrat party was routed in the elections in a country whose constitution of
1831 was considered as a model of bourgeois-liberal government.
There are dictations. Standard & Poor’s has threatened that
the country’s credit rating could be downgraded if a government is not formed
within months. Fitch has also issued almost similar threat to the third highest
debt burdened country in Europe with public debt 97.2% of annual output in
2010. But, the financial crisis, and the historic political impasse has not
deterred the unelected rulers from sending war planes to strike in Libya in the
name of “saving” humanity.
Bifurcation of the country that attracts more than 10% of all
logistical foreign investments in Europe (Ernst & Young, Barometer of
Belgian Attractiveness) into Flanders and Wallonia, that housed 75,600 persons
owning more than $1 million in 2010 of whom 750 to 1,000 were super-rich owning
more than $30 million, a 9.8% increase from previous year, (World Wealth
Report) is not a contradiction between sunset industries, mainly coal and steel
in the south, and sunrise industries, chemicals, high-tech, and services in the
north, but the dominant Flemish aspiration, a hunger of a section of a capital.
While the world dominating capitals try to trample national borders and
finalize its world-winning adventure – globalization – its one part prefers a
small corner, a contradiction within itself.
With the shift of power, economic, and consequently political,
from Wallonia to Flanders, strong Flemish separatist sentiment is unwilling to
feed the less affluent Wallonia. Actually, the section of the capital prefers
to free its hands and feet for greater gain. The Francophone Walloons prefer
unity. The French, on the other hand, would embrace Wallonia if it secedes and
likes to join France. Capitals have respective equations for further
accumulation. The question of dominance by a particular language in the
country’s socio-cultural life reflects the issue of dominance in an economy
that in terms of inward FDI flows was among the top ten ranked countries in
2009.
With one of the most productive workforce per hour worldwide,
low real estate costs, tax incentives including reduction of the effective
corporate tax rate in many cases to less than 25% and a special reduction of
80% in taxation of royalties Belgium, as Denise Rutherford, president of AMCHAM
Belgium said, “has become more attractive for U.S. investment”. (On the
occasion of the release of the organization’s 2007 investment report.) The US,
the main foreign investor, mostly has poured money in the finance and
insurance, and in chemical, automotive assembly, petroleum refining and
pharmaceutical sectors. Investment in the service sector including law firms,
accounting firms, advertising agencies, computer and management services,
public relations, and executive search firms has more than tripled since 2000.
The EU’s single-market program attracted many US law firms and lawyers to
Brussels.
Having least contradiction with the Empire in the arena of
trade and economy, and a close collaborator in the Empire’s activities in
Afghanistan, Africa, the Balkans, Iraq and Lebanon the country backs NATO’s
central and eastern European expansion. Involved with the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe Belgium contributed AWAC crews for
surveillance flights over the US. Other than the NATO and EU headquarters,
NATO’s military headquarters is also in the country.
Its early occupiers, the Romans, the Spanish, the Austrians,
the French, the Dutch, the Germans, have made the Belgians critical of any form
of authority. But capital has made the Belgian workers much efficient,
squeezing out their labor power most brutally, raising its industrial
productivity much higher than the US, Germany and Japan. US dollar produced per
hour per worker in Belgium is 55.9 while it is 51.8 in Ireland, 50.3 in Italy,
45.0 in Germany, 42.0 in the UK, 53.0 in Norway, 37.3 in Japan and 49.6 in the
US. On the other hand, International Metalworkers’ Federation informs: Belgian
worker requires working time to buy beef: 82 minutes, bread: 9 min, chicken: 21
min, fish: 84 min and milk: 4 min. Its principal trade unions either repudiate
class struggle or aim to achieve Christian principles or uphold business
interests. Its ruling classes have co-opted a section of the labor leadership,
and have sent industrial unrest to one of the lowest in the EU.
Now, in the land of “Belgian compromise”, ability to contrive
complex solutions conciliating competing concerns, a section of capital aspires
to proclaim the end of the country with the national motto “Strength Through
Unity” that once crowned a monarch invited in from the House of Saxe-Coburg
Gotha in Germany. “[W]e don’t know if it will be possible to reach a compromise
between them [the north and the south]”, said Marc De Vos, the head of the
Itinera Institute, a Brussels-based policy think tank. (Time, Jun. 14, 2010)
Vadim Prozorov, Associate Professor of History, Moscow State University doesn’t
“rule out the split of Belgium.” “If the EU suffers more than it does now and
the economic crisis affects the basis of the EU, Belgium is one of the first
candidates for the split. In such circumstances, it will be quickly discovered
that the country […] is not viable.”
On January 23, opposing possible collapse of the country,
thousands of citizens in Brussels protested against the political anarchy. On
February 17, students in Brussels, Antwerp, Liege, Bruges and Ghent tried to
resolve unresolved political contradiction by rallying in defense of their country’s
integrity. They named it “Potato Revolution”. A section of people, it seems,
stands against a section of capital. There were also other suggestions to
protest including denial to shave beard and abstain from making love. But the
reality is tough for nourishing love for the European model of federalism,
where no “national” party with activity on both sides of the linguistic line
exists, where the Christian democrats, socialists, liberals and the Greens are
divided along Francophone and Flemish lines. Actually there is no single
capital that can dominate the economy, where 73% of the work force is engaged
in the service sector and 25% in industry. With a trade union density, as
OECD’s Employment Outlook tells, standing around 54% business services offshoring
has positively influenced industry-level productivity in Belgium (1995-2004).
(Bernhard Michel, “The impact of offshoring on employment and productivity in
Belgium”, April 29, 2011)
“In Belgium, we have a split in the political system”, said Philippe Van Parijs, a philosophy professor at Catholic University of Louvain (Time, Jan. 24, 2011) The “split in the political system” of the 20th economy in the world, and the 10th exporter of goods globally, as the WTO informs, has cropped up in the field of an economy of uneven development, one of the attributes of capitalist economy. This feeds a particular form of social psychology. A February report by the US Institute of Peace says that the political elites are now fanning up tensions and exploiting linguistic differences to push a parochial political agenda. “Over the past few years, resentment has only grown between Belgium’s Dutch and French speakers. […] In some Flemish communes … children are banned from speaking French on the playground, prospective house buyers cannot purchase property if they don’t speak Dutch, and locals are encouraged to report businesses that do not employ Dutch speakers. The Flemish […] see the French speakers as feckless, inefficient and even corrupt. […] ‘[…] Belgium is one state composed of two countries,’ says Carl Devos, a political scientist at Ghent University.” (Time, Jun. 14, 2010)
“In Belgium, we have a split in the political system”, said Philippe Van Parijs, a philosophy professor at Catholic University of Louvain (Time, Jan. 24, 2011) The “split in the political system” of the 20th economy in the world, and the 10th exporter of goods globally, as the WTO informs, has cropped up in the field of an economy of uneven development, one of the attributes of capitalist economy. This feeds a particular form of social psychology. A February report by the US Institute of Peace says that the political elites are now fanning up tensions and exploiting linguistic differences to push a parochial political agenda. “Over the past few years, resentment has only grown between Belgium’s Dutch and French speakers. […] In some Flemish communes … children are banned from speaking French on the playground, prospective house buyers cannot purchase property if they don’t speak Dutch, and locals are encouraged to report businesses that do not employ Dutch speakers. The Flemish […] see the French speakers as feckless, inefficient and even corrupt. […] ‘[…] Belgium is one state composed of two countries,’ says Carl Devos, a political scientist at Ghent University.” (Time, Jun. 14, 2010)
Time asked: how long can Belgium continue to reconcile its
conflicting constituents? (Jun. 30, 2010) Requirement and ability of its
corrupt ruling class will produce the answer. Till then, Tintin, Suske and
Wiske, fox “Reynard”, lion-king Nobel, bear Bruyn and wolf Isengrim will wander
in political wilderness created by the ruling classes of the country once Marx
once dubbed “the paradise of Continental Liberalism”. The “Flanders’ fields”
that witnessed many battles is now waiting for another engagement, not less
significant than the older ones.
The dominant capital’s aspiration, Belgium- bifurcation, will
not hurt it. Break-up of densely populated Belgium, “located at the heart of
one of the world’s most highly industrialized regions and reaching 140 million
European consumers within a radius of 300 miles”, will not produce an immediate
cataclysm, but will create a intra- and inter-capital chain reaction and
political implication, and exemplify a dominant capital’s hunger and
limitation, a dwelling with opposites, of a bourgeois democracy.
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