Slovakia is heading towards an early parliamentary election – to be held on 10 March – after its centre-right ruling coalition failed to reach a consensus on the eurozone bail-out funds.
Shortly after the government’s fall last October, it seemed that the EU affairs would finally dominate the pre-election campaign in the country of five million. What had never happened even before the vote of Slovak MEPs was about to come true: Slovaks would passionately discuss the pros and cons of the future EU’s fiscal treaty; they would see billboards with EU flags and quote economists on what is crucial for euro’s recovery.
As realists suspect, none of this has been the case. This time, however, not only for all the obvious reasons – the fiscal treaty is dull and hard to explain, the Slovak flag is more colourful and economic arguments are there just for a bunch of “busy and important” weirdoes.
In fact, there is one other issue that has made poor Slovaks even more furious than saving rich Greek pensioners, as some local politicians would put it. That is, corruption among local politicians. I mean Slovak politicians.
Locally, the new buzzword for corruption has become GORILLA after a secret file published on internet in late December 2011. The document allegedly reports various details of an operation conducted by the Slovak secret agency to record evidence of illegal links and contacts between businessmen and top politicians in 2005-6.
Back then, Slovakia was governed by the centre-right coalition of PM Mikuláš Dzurinda, the current Minister of Foreign Affairs and chairman of the Slovak Democratic and Christian Union (SDKU-DS), up till now the leading centre-right party. But the Gorilla file has alleged that similar corruption practises have been in place for years and carried out by virtually all existing political parties.
After an early round of denials by concrete individuals mentioned– claiming that the monkey file is a piece of badly written fiction, more trustworthy pieces of information emerged and convinced the Slovak public that although a few details might be wrong, the document is a good description of the corrupt political system.
Realising this, Slovaks got really angry and took to the streets in numbers not seen since the collapse of communist regime in 1989. On the positive note, one could appreciate a wake-up impact on the local civic movement, especially among young people previously viewed as passive and apathetic.
However, as we were moving closer to the early elections with new secret files and videos coming out almost on the daily basis, there is a growing feeling of a powerful media game forced upon all of us – financed by new potential “gorillas” that are trying to get elected on the back of the old and disclosed ones.
And so the Slovak citizens (especially those of the centre-right views) are confronted with a serious dilemma, judging whether to vote slightly amateurish freshmen parties to punish the old corrupt ones; or grate their teeth and vote on the basis of political programmes; or ignore the elections altogether thinking politicians are all the same and thereby indirectly support those elected by fellow citizens.
According to most public polls, the ex-PM Robert Fico of the Social Democratic party (SMER-SD) is about to win by a landslide. He is expected to join in coalition with the Christian democrats (KDH) or the Slovak-Hungarian party Most-Hid. The current rightwing leader SDKU-DS may struggle to make it to the parliament with some surveys suggesting their public support has plunged below the 5-percent parliamentary threshold.
Slovaks are quite pessimistic on whether they will see the Gorilla case fully investigated and its key actors punished.
Instead, we could imagine that monkeys will give way to Europe again both in a public debate and political rhetoric: the new (social democratic) government will have to save around 1.5 billion euro in less than two years to meet the new EU fiscal rules.
Indeed, in post-election Slovakia, we will quite likely see anger and protests again. Probably more on the social and economic grounds and perhaps even on a larger scale. And this too will be very European in its most recent sense.
#1 by Miki Cernak on March 7, 2012 - 4:13 pm
In many ways things are not so easy as they are apear by this blog. Reality in Slovakia is similar with situation world wide and Generation X. Generation X upgraded hardware from black and white screen to full collor wide 3D. There always had been 2 worlds in society which were smoothly overlied . But this world has deep hollow between them. Young Slovaks, and rest of the world genX, killed the Leviathan. Slovaks are people of the world. With strong communities in North America, all over Europe, even in Central and South America. With this is comming knowledge of languages and experiences. What is most common for genX is internet reformation. Guys like Fico, Christian Democrats, Dzurinda are supported by different groups: 1,Oportunists and their circles 2, Grannys democrats.
GenX see things different. What worked in the 20th century does NOT work in the 21st – mostly due to what we call the Internet Reformation. Everything that central bankers did to enrich their cronies in the 20th century has been exposed on the Internet in the 21st.
Challenges to capitalism via armed force or elections have repeatedly been tried and failed. It is time for systematic use of nonviolent action to challenge capitalism and build alternatives to it. A comprehensive nonviolent strategy involves nonviolent methods to move towards economic and social alternatives that do not rely on systems of violence.
Capitalism is responsible for an enormous level of death, suffering and wasted human potential, including everything from impoverishment of Third World peoples to boredom in factory jobs
Capitalism is sustained largely by support and acquiescence rather than force. When large numbers of people break the law, police and military enforcement can be futile or counterproductive. The fact is that most people go along with the system, even those who oppose it. The challenge is to develop a strategy that undermines beliefs in capitalism and creates momentum to bring about an ever-expanding challenge.
This is a very difficult challenge. Capitalism has shown a remarkable capacity to coopt its critics, for example in the use of the rhetoric of ‘revolution’ in advertising. Apple Computers has used the image of Gandhi spinning khadi as an advertising angle, turning Gandhi’s opposition to western-style industrialism into a corporate pitch for an opposite direction.
What Schultz get lately from Sulik is just scratching the surface. The study in Czech republic shows, that Czech republic is short 200 bilion Crowns doing business with EU. All Eastern and Southern Europe would looks the same.
http://machpetrmach.blog.idnes.cz/c/248535/Evropska-unie-nas-stoji-rocne-asi-200-miliard.html
By statistix Slovakia has 60% of productivity of Denmark, but only 17% of income.
Where money goes? EU and USA loox similar but they ain’t. Federal governement in US is collecting taxes, but then about lots of things in country as federal government. What happened here is that those named corrupted politicians like Radicova,Dzurinda and Miklos, member of nazi member prince Bernhardt founded Bilderberg group, sold Slovaks to the West in exchange for feaudal privileges.
In chess vocabulary they exposed defense to ruthles German corporations who are taking wheap and leaving bitterness for Slovaks.
Mathematically GenX will take over the world by 2020. The brutal critical critical mass is gonna be achieved and GenX is gonna be everywhere:police, military, business, politics.
We have to follow methods of Fabian Society:Non Violent- persuade-steadily…if you read between his lines and then look around you at the different generations, you will see that a revolution is brewing. But it is not brewing between democratic and totalitarian regimes. It is between generations.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-goulston-md/the-gen-x-global-revoluti_b_939658.html
We will try to change regime early, but The greatest show on the planet earth is just on the way. It is comming like a fog into The City.
#2 by skinner on March 9, 2012 - 1:28 pm
What is missing: Robert Fico expected to become the new PM was in case fo Gorila mentioned more frequently than anyone else (drinking cola)…
Slovaks have a very difficult choice which party to vote for. Old politicians all have somethin “filthy” in common and the new are mostly products of good marketing and promotion. The only trustworthy person/PM was publicly executed by Sulik in collaboration with her own party-mates.
So, what is to expect next in Slovakia? New PM will have to cut down on budget expenses and raise taxes what is not usual for left wing politics.
Maybe next year Greece (and other EU members) will have to vote for (or against) bailout of Slovakia. But that is how democracy works…