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The Voice

New democracies
published: Monday | September 27, 2004

By Gwynne Dyer, Contributor

VOTE FOR "the prettiest candidate," said Indonesia's President Megawati Sukarnoputri as the election campaign got underway, and the voters took her at her word. On September 20, they voted overwhelmingly for her former chief security minister, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who is no beauty ­ but then, neither is she, and at least, he sings very nicely. None of his campaign rallies was complete without a rendition of 'Rainbow in Your Eyes' by the former four-star general and his wife, Kristiani Herrawati. The voters loved it.

Mr Yudhoyono is actually, quite a serious man who was seen by his army colleagues as efficient and incorruptible, but even his closest adviser, Muhammad Lutfi, admitted: "This election is not about policy. This is a popularity contest, so we sell (him) like a brand image." It's enough to give you doubts about the future of Indonesia's new democracy.

It's not just Indonesia. There has been an avalanche of new democracies in the past twenty years, and there are doubts about the quality of democracy in a lot of them. At the same time, many people in these countries have become nostalgic for the sheer stability of the old regimes: in a poll conducted by the Asia Foundation last December, 53 per cent of Indonesians agreed with the statement: "We need a strong leader like Suharto (the former dictator, overthrown in 1998) ... even if it reduces rights and freedoms."

DWINDLING MINORITY

The United Nations Develop-ment Programme has calculated that 81 countries moved towards democracy in the 1980s and 1990s, and that by 2002, 140 of the world's almost 200 independent nations had held multi-party elections. The old-fashioned tyrannies are a dwindling minority, and this year will see more free elections than ever before: 110 of them, according to the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance.

Only 30 years ago, the only real democracies in Asia were India, Sri Lanka and Japan, and there were only about a dozen in Europe. The last genuine democracies in Latin America were foundering under a new wave of military coups, and the Middle East and Africa were practically democracy-free. It has been an astonishingly rapid transformation ­ which may explain why people seem so ungrateful for their liberation.

Most of the world's democracies are new, and many are still suffering from the economic upheavals that accompanied the process of democratisation. The voters are inexperienced, so demagoguery works better than in the older democracies (not that it doesn't often work in those countries, too).

DISILLUSIONMENT

There is also the disillusionment that comes when people realise that changing the political system does not solve all the country's problems. It just changes our way of dealing with them, hopefully for the better, but it's bound to take some time for the benefits to become apparent.

When a society opts for democracy, it is betting that the collective wisdom of the majority is superior to the judgement of any single powerful individual or group. That is almost certainly true in the long run, but it can be quite wrong in the short run. On the other hand, the kind of individuals who rise to power in tyrannies are even more prone to catastrophic errors of judgement.

Take Indonesia. The 30-year Suharto dictatorship, covering most of the country's independent history, delivered economic growth but siphoned off most of the profits for the benefit of a narrow elite of the dictator's cronies and collaborators. The three presidents who have governed the country in the six years since Suharto's overthrow, chosen by a Parliament where interest groups that were powerful under the old regime still had much influence, were disastrous in different ways, but all were incapable of addressing Indonesia's problems effectively.

DO-NOTHING INCUMBENT

By contrast, in the first election where Indonesians were allowed to vote for a president directly, they have rejected the do-nothing incumbent, Megawati Sukarnoputri, the not very bright daughter of independence hero Sukarno, and also the man who was tipped as her successor, indicted war criminal General Wiranto, in favour of the plodding sincerity, dogged honesty and fine singing voice of Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. The popular wisdom may not be all that sophisticated, but it probably isn't wrong, either.

Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

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