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Democracy and
Media Double Standards
Nicolai Petro
Recent
Georgian presidential elections have been hailed as
proof of the new leadership's commitment to democracy.
While not perfect, according to OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly President and British MP Bruce George, "there
were many, many positive things that we observed and we
are proud to report on." "Georgia
tastes freedom" say the editors of the Daily
Telegraph. The New York Times described them
as a "jolt of democracy." President Bush has already
invited President-elect, Mikhail Saakashvili, to
Washington,
promising him "all-round assistance" in international
affairs.
The
western media’s enthusiasm for the Georgian elections
stands in stark contrast to their portrayal of the
Russian Duma elections just one month earlier. The OSCE
wasted no time in calling those elections "fundamentally
unfair." Mr. Putin's "stooge parties" had made the vote
a sham, according to the London Times, and in
this country influential columnist William Safire
scorned Putin "and his KGB cohort" for bringing back
one-party rule to Russia. After coolly noting that the
Putin had achieved the working parliamentary majority he
had sought, the U.S. Ambassador to Moscow pointedly
worried about "the breach of values" that was occurring
in relations with Russia.
Now,
for the record, the Georgian elections took place just
45 days after a coup d'etat in that country removed the
previously elected president, Eduard Shevarnadze.
Saakashvili, one of the coup leaders, was opposed by
five other candidates (one withdrew calling the
elections "immoral"). Not surprisingly, in this
environment of almost total political chaos and blanket
local media coverage of the success of the “Rose
Revolution,” Saakashvili managed to receive over 96% of
the popular vote!
This
thunderously democratic figure becomes even more
impressive when one realizes that two rebellious
regions, Abkhazia and Southern Ossetia, refused to
recognize the validity of these elections, while and a
third, Adjaria, reported a low 25% turnout.
Nevertheless, OSCE observers quickly concluded that
Georgian authorities had "showed the political will" to
conduct democratic elections.
Meanwhile the Russian Electoral Commission, which the
OSCE grudgingly admits carried out its job of organizing
the elections "highly professionally," has just released
an overview of the Duma election results. They reveal
that twelve national parties qualified for and received
federal campaign financing, and that the average
electoral district in Russia had nine candidates
competing. Incumbency, such a dominant factor in U.S.
elections, proved to be of little advantage to Russian
parliamentarians, 54% of whom were voted out.
Interestingly, the same Mr. George who saw the Georgian
election as proof of progress toward democracy,
denounced the Duma elections as a "regression in the
democratization process in Russia."
Confused? Don't be. This glaring double standard in
reporting simply reflects the confusion that underlies
public attitudes toward democracy, a confusion that
policy makers take easy advantage of to pursue policies
that have nothing to do with promoting democracy.
Having
found in Saakashvili a willing ally (his foreign
minister, Tedo Dzhaparidze, pointedly refers to himself
as “among the most pro-American politicians in
Georgia”), the media have anointed him the paladin of a
new and democratic Georgia. The details of how he got
there can be conveniently overlooked. On the other hand,
having decided that Putin is a threat (to democracy, to
business, to Western interests in general) no rigmarole
about democratic procedures is likely to deter us from
that view.
The
coincidence of these two elections taking place in such
a short span of time, however, nicely highlights this
double standard, and provides a rare glimpse into what
certain policy-makers mean when they talk about
"promoting democracy" around the globe. In a nutshell it
is this: if we don’t like the results then, ipso
facto, that country and its political system must
not be democratic. Democracy, in this view, has no
tangible meaning other than a result that the U.S. and
its allies approve of.
Some,
like Richard Perle and David Frum, will find such an
approach candid and refreshing. They contend that
American power should be used to extend specifically
"western values" throughout the globe. But this is not
quite the same thing as promoting democracy. Indeed, it
may actually undermine democratic values.
As many
scholars have pointed out, the popular image of
democracy is a mental construct rooted in the culture
and history of
Western
Europe
and
North
America.
As a result, it tends not only to overlook patterns of
democratic development outside that tradition, but also
to reinforce, here at home, the comforting fiction being
touted by the Bush Administration that people everywhere
seek nothing better than to emulate that peculiar form
of American democracy that is wedded to capitalism and
secularism.
Moreover, playing favorites in such a blatant manner
seriously undermines public respect for domestic
institutions, which are precisely the ones that need
support in fledgling democracies. Ultimately, it is
these institutions, not personalities, that guarantee
political stability.
Forcing
the concept of democracy to serve as a veneer for U.S.
policy will ultimately damage both U.S. interests and
democracy, further isolating the
United
States
internationally and calling into question this nation's
commitment to democratic values. Policy-makers may have
an understandable fondness for obfuscating crucial
differences, but why should the media be so eager to
follow suit?
Nicolai
N. Petro is a professor of political science at the
University
of
Rhode
Island
(USA) and author of The Rebirth of Russian Democracy
(Harvard University Press, 1995). He served as
U.S.
State Department policy adviser on the
Soviet
Union
under George H. W. Bush.
A version of this
essay also appears in The Providence Journal.
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