4. 4. 2005
RSS backend
PDA verze
Čtěte Britské listy speciálně upravené pro vaše mobilní telefony a PDA
Reklama
Reklama
Celé vydání
Archiv vydání
Původní archiv

Autoři

Vzkaz redakci

OSBL
Tiráž

Britské listy

http://www.blisty.cz/
ISSN 1213-1792

Šéfredaktor:

Jan Čulík

Redaktor:

Karel Dolejší

Správa:

Michal Panoch, Jan Panoch

Grafický návrh:

Štěpán Kotrba

ISSN 1213-1792
deník o všem, o čem se v České republice příliš nemluví
4. 4. 2005

The democratic deficit in Czech politics

The prime minister has experienced serious political difficulties since the media discovered his questionable "business dealings," which he remains either unable or unwilling to explain.

His popularity plummets, as does the popularity of the ruling party. So the party holds a congress where it defiantly re-elects the same discredited prime minister to continue as its leader.

What does this mean? On its face it seems incomprehensible. Why would the Social Democrats (ČSSD), when facing electoral defeat, re-elect someone who seems thoroughly discredited as their leader?

The decision hints at a serious democratic deficit in Czech politics. Maybe the ČSSD apparatchiks are saying to themselves, "We are in serious trouble, and only Stanislav Gross has the ability to lead us out of this crisis, in spite of the fact that the nation regards him as the epitome of untrustworthiness."

But the decision to re-elect Gross was more likely rooted in the party's disdain for the ordinary Czech voter. I have heard the opinion that Gross' victory was secured by ČSSD apparatchiks who voted to save not a political program but their own bureaucratic posts. This prompted former ČSSD leader Miloš Zeman to say at the March 26 congress that there were both parasites and idealists in the party. And it would appear that the parasites have won the day.

The congress was a victory for the pragmatic young managers who grew up as amoral activists of the socialist youth organization in the final years of the communist regime.

It is noteworthy that at least three main representatives of the winning faction, Stanislav Gross, Bohuslav Sobotka and Martin Jahn, come from the "1970s generation," to quote a popular Czech song. These are people who were molded by the experience of the post-1968, neo-Stalinist "normalization" period. As a result, they hold mostly right-wing views.

The congress dismissed criticism of Stanislav Gross as an alleged "manipulative attack aimed at the Social Democratic Party," and refused to contemplate what might happen if the problems of Gross, his relatives, his wife and her shady friends continue. The congress did not even properly deal with the political program of the Social Democratic Party: It ignored foreign-policy issues, the relationship of the ČSSD to the European Union, unemployment and problems in the educational system and the health service. It ignored the catastrophic incompetence of the Czech judiciary and the sorry state of the roads, including the unsolved problem of the nonexistent motorway to Ostrava. Instead, the congress praised Gross and his government for their recent economic successes and basically said that it would unquestioningly support whatever they might do in the future.

But what's the alternative? Can we now turn away in disgust from the ČSSD and hope the opposition Civic Democrats (ODS) can do better? No. The ODS seems just as disdainful of the opinions and wishes of ordinary Czech voters. ODS politicians Petr Nečas and Jiří Pospíšil have stressed on Czech television that voters cannot be trusted to make decisions about important matters. This is why the ODS will never accept the idea of holding a referendum, they said.

Czech politicians have arrogantly concluded that they are above ordinary people. But in a democracy, it is the voters who are the source of political power, and their views should be respected. When will the politicians realize this?

Originally published in Czech Business Weekly HERE

                 
Obsah vydání       4. 4. 2005
4. 4. 2005 Rudá šance! (?) Martin  Škabraha
4. 4. 2005 Nejde o to, která vláda odejde, ale o to, jaká vláda přijde Jaromír  Máša
4. 4. 2005 O hysterické reakci některých pražských studentů Jan  Čulík
4. 4. 2005 ČSSD: Škromach z vlády neodchází, politické grémium si rozdělilo kompetence Štěpán  Kotrba
4. 4. 2005 The democratic deficit in Czech politics Jan  Čulík
4. 4. 2005 Komunisté, deštné pralesy a iPody Josef  Švéda
4. 4. 2005 Nezaujímajú ma celebrity
4. 4. 2005 Začala válka o duši katolické církve
4. 4. 2005 Pravdivé lži: Terminátor americké pravice o populaci a imigraci Dominik  Lukeš
4. 4. 2005 Gross -- kamkoliv se pohne, bude to špatně Irena  Ryšánková
4. 4. 2005 Velikonoční hod Jaroslav  Hutka
4. 4. 2005 Je tohle únor 48`? Bohumil  Kartous
4. 4. 2005 Plot Hynek  Hanke
4. 4. 2005 Michael  Marčák
4. 4. 2005 Organizuje trucující prezident zákulisní puč? Štěpán  Kotrba
4. 4. 2005 Púšťanie žilou v BBC Adrian Peter Pressburg
31. 3. 2005 Moc nočních můr Adama Curtise v Bratislavě
4. 4. 2005 Američané umučili iráckého generála k smrti Bushka  Bryndová
4. 4. 2005 Michael  Marčák
4. 4. 2005 Utváranie európskej politiky Radovan  Geist
4. 4. 2005 Európa verzus Amerika
4. 4. 2005 Schválí Francie evropskou ústavu? Simone  Radačičová
4. 4. 2005 Český Aufschwung na pozadí německých omylů v evropském kontextu Miloslav  Zima
2. 4. 2005 Papež Jan Pavel II. zemřel
2. 4. 2005 Stalo se něco nečekaného? Miloš  Dokulil
2. 4. 2005 Smrt východu a vítězství good old boy Jiří  Dolejš
1. 4. 2005 Kutilové ze Svaté Hory u Příbrami Jan  Paul
1. 4. 2005 Ti, kteří přežili Dominik  Lukeš
22. 11. 2003 Adresy redakce

Czech Politics: Jan Čulík's comment in Czech Business Weekly RSS 2.0      Historie >
4. 4. 2005 The democratic deficit in Czech politics Jan  Čulík
21. 3. 2005 Free speech is ours, but don't dare use it Jan  Čulík
28. 2. 2005 Poor education leads to workplace problems Jan  Čulík
21. 2. 2005 Grossgate revisited:the conspiracy theory Jan  Čulík
7. 2. 2005 Why I don't trust some newspapers Jan  Čulík
24. 1. 2005 The Greatest Czech? Jan  Čulík
10. 1. 2005 Compassion begins at the border Jan  Čulík
13. 12. 2004 Is Czech education failing the young? Jan  Čulík
6. 12. 2004 Is political satire now out of bounds? Jan  Čulík
22. 11. 2004 The journey toward democracy continues Jan  Čulík
1. 11. 2004 Police need to listen to calls for reform Jan  Čulík
24. 10. 2004 Defensive nationalism, Czech-style Jan  Čulík
27. 9. 2004 Gross means it: politics without policies Jan  Čulík