No left turns
Last week’s parliamentary endorsement of the Greek bailout deal prompted sighs of relief in some quarters, but on the streets of Greece the popular mood was predominantly disconsolate, and understandably so.
After all, it came less than eight months after the Syriza coalition was voted into power on the strength of its anti-austerity platform. What’s more, it was just last month that voters overwhelmingly rejected, in a snap referendum, the bailout conditions proposed by the EU.
They had actively been encouraged to do so by a government that promptly caved in to the demands of Greece’s creditors. The consequence is austerity on steroids and what’s effectively a surrender of Greek sovereignty, with bureaucrats from Brussels micromanaging policy down to details such as the shelf life of pasteurised milk and what constitutes a loaf of fresh bread.
The Syriza-led government has also felt obliged to sign up to crossing what it had decreed as red lines, such as pension cuts and the large-scale privatisation of state assets, with the bulk of the proceeds going straight to the creditors, most prominently German banks. It is hardly a coincidence that many Greeks see Germany as the primary promoter of their distress (just as it was seven decades ago).
Meanwhile, even the International Monetary Fund, a member of the troika to which Athens is beholden, sees the bailout conditions as untenable without a substantial write-off of Greek debt — which Syriza has long implored but Germany has thus far rejected. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras lost sufficient support among Syriza MPs in last week’s parliamentary vote to necessitate a vote of confidence, whose result could in turn entail a snap election.
There are indications that Mr Tsipras retains a substantial degree of popularity despite his betrayal of the hopes he helped to sow and the principles he expounded, mainly on the valid basis that he at least strove to the best of his ability to change the EU’s mind, and relented only when he realised it was a hopeless enterprise.
If an election does indeed take place within the next couple of months, the results will be interesting to follow. There is a strong likelihood that a sizeable chunk of Syriza will break away, and it will be intriguing to see how Mr Tsipras distinguishes himself from his predecessors this time around.
It would be a mistake, however, to view the EU’s neo-colonial enterprise in Greece exclusively in terms of hostility towards the political direction it chose in January. This is meant to be a lesson for anyone who contem-plates deviating from the neoliberal orthodoxy.
Among the more obvious targets is the Spanish electorate, which displayed a certain independence of mind in recent municipal elections. Some of the indignados who were protesting against austerity on the streets of Madrid and Barcelona now populate the town halls of these and other cities. The hope in Brussels must be that the Greek example will serve as a deterrent to Spanish voters inclined to follow their hearts and minds in the parliamentary elections later this year.
In Britain, meanwhile, panic has gripped the political class and much of the media over the prospect of left-wing backbencher Jeremy Corbyn emerging as the leader of the Opposition Labour Party. The vaguely socialist, anti-austerity agenda he espouses would, we are reminded ad nauseam, indefinitely exclude Labour from power. Some of those who regurgitate this argument may be well-intentioned, but their intellect is clearly constrained by the brainwashing of the Thatcher and Blair years.
They find themselves unable to even imagine a world in which Mammon is not the supreme deity, sustained primarily by the profit motive — or more specifically, a Britain in which Labour needn’t position itself as Tory-lite in order to aspire to a parliamentary majority. In doing so, they ignore the fact that Mr Corbyn’s platform has found a resonance beyond dyed-in-the-wool Labourites, and enthused many who would normally have been disinclined to bother with politics.
More broadly, it’s pertinent to remember that the West has long been dedicated to snuffing out challenges to capitalism whose appeal, it feared, may prove infectious. The so-called domino theory was instrumental in the war against Vietnam. The Cuban revolution was undermined in large part because of its potential as an exemplar. There are innumerable other examples, from Guatemala to Iran, but in Greek context perhaps it is most pertinent to recall that the eventually successful attempt to overthrow Salvador Allende in Chile relied initially on “making the economy scream”.
Former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis has helped to popularise the notion that 21st-century coups rely on banks rather than tanks. It is yet to be proved though that resistance — on the streets as well as through the ballot box — is futile.
By arrangement with Dawn