The political balagāns (carnival)
continues with a wee-hours-of-the night coup by the Zatlers Reform
Party (ZRP) to bring Harmony Center (Saskaņas Centrs/SC) into
government and offer the post of prime minister to Valdis Dombrovskis
of Unity (Vienotība/V). Somehow I don't think this was coordinated
between ZRP and V, in accordance with an agreement between both
parties forming the “core” of any next coalition that exactly
this kind of thing would be done by mutual agreement. For a number of
reasons, the ZRP simply decided to screw its potential coalition
partner, set off a bombshell in the middle of the night and get the
whole country (or that part of it writing comments on internet
portals) up in arms.
One
reason former president Valdis Zatlers himself mentioned (and this
was hinted at when he was forming his barely three-months old party)
was to bridge the ethnic gap in Latvia between Latvians and Russians.
At least one political scientist, Iveta Kažoka, called this
“historic” and a good thing, sorta... In purely logical terms, it
makes considerable sense. Latvians and Russians face the same
economic challenges – despite some GDP growth, the country is still
way below where it was in 2007 or 2008 and will not clamber back
until the middle or latter part of the decade. Unemployment hits
Latvians and Russians equally hard. Even emigration is an issue if we
talk about ethnic Russian voters,
which means they have citizenship, a passport and are free to go look
for a better life in the rest of the European Union. Ethnic issues
are largely historical and it is the future – will Latvia have one
or not – that matters. Or so it would seem.
In reality,
ethnicity overrides any and all common causes, except in fleeting,
temporary situations, like hockey championships, where Russians and
Latvians unite behind their (heavily Russian) national team. The
issue of occupation and who or what was responsible for it (between
1940 and 1991, twenty years ago) is still emotionally pivotal and the
main reason the National Alliance (All for
Latvia/Fatherland&Freedom/Latvian National Independence Movement
–NA) will see cows flying in formation before it joins any
government with the SC in it.
It is
not clear what would happen if the SC electorate were all to agree,
not only that there was an occupation, but that they all, whether
born here or not, are occupiers, including minor children, housepets
and lawn statues of dwarfs. The NA, I am sure, would then urge them
all to go back to Russia, acting out its deoccupation
fantasies. That might have
worked in 1991 -1992, but not anymore. Besides, Russia is an
increasingly authoritarian bardak
of corruption and cronyism that even puts Latvia to “shame”.
However, a virtual deoccupation has already occurred in economic and
demographic terms – at least 300 000 people, most of them
economically active, have left the country, probably never to return
(in any permanent sense). Trouble is, only some of them are Russian.
The
other reason that Zatlers wants to have a three-party ZRP, SC and V
coalition is that it would have more than a two-thirds parliamentary
majority needed to change the constitution and allow popular
elections for president, as well as granting the new, popularly
elected presidency broader powers. Presently, the Latvian president
is largely a figurehead. Cynics say the only reason Zatlers dismissed
the parliament was in order to run for the new, more powerful office
of president a few years down the road. This is probably not true,
there was good reason to dismiss the Saeima with 94% of the
electorate approving Zatlers' move in July.
As far
as V and the coalition offer from the Zatlerites goes, it looks like
the party will fulfill a cynical name I gave it back during the
summer – izjuceklis
or something that will tear itself apart. The former Citizens' Union
(Pilsoniskā Savienība) has declared its opposition to forming a
government with SC and there is talk of some V members of parliament
quitting the party. This would leave ZRP with the other option of
forming a bare-majority government with the SC, resting on 53 votes
in the Saeima. It would also leave two inexperienced parties running
the country, at least one of which has a dubious record on being
law-abiding (voting against a search of the oligarch and Saeima
deputy Ainars Slesers' residences) and of keeping promises to its own
voters and internal partners (Nils Ušakovs has said he will boot the
crackpot neo-Communist Latvian Socialist Party out of the SC if that
is what it takes to get into the coalition).
So the
balagāns is far from
over and Latvia probably faces more years of acrimonious, bumbling
government for the next few years, perhaps followed by a possible
nationalist backlash in the regular Saeima elections in 2014.
7 comments:
> at least 300 000 people have left the country. Trouble is, only some of them are Russian.
- - -
How do you know that?
Recognizing the occupation would encourage/force the non-citizens to either naturalize or GTFO. Personally, I hope for the latter. Most that have naturalized are good, hard working people andI would never refer to them as occupiers. But those that scam, cheat, run illegitimate businesses, refuse to integrate...well, I thin that speaks for itself.
Anonymous,
We can reasonably assume that the proportion of Latvian/EU citizens of Russian ethnicity among emigrants is roughly the same as in the general population, so they are, in any case, a minority in either group. Preliminary census statistics show Latvia's population around 1.9 milllion, down from 2.2 million the last time around. So that is how you get 300 000 at least.
In that case you should have written:
Trouble is, 40% of those leaving are Russian [speakers]. Not just "some".
"In reality, ethnicity overrides any and all common causes, except in fleeting, temporary situations, like hockey championships, where Russians and Latvians unite behind their (heavily Russian) national team."
Well, this is total bullshit. We can see you are not an ice hockey fān. :)
1) Most of Russian speaking people are fans of Russian not Latvian national team. Don't remember full Riga with Russia flags when they won world championship? I clearly remember fist fights after Latvia - Russia ice hockey games, between Latvians and local Russians.
2) It's a big myth of "heavily Russian" Latvian ice hockey team. It is not true anymore, for at least last ten years. For example, in 2010 World Championship in team there was five Russians-speaking players (from 23). Look at 2010 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championships roster.
Thanks, Kristap. I stand corrected. Should listen more to my son (16) who is the big hickey fan :).
You do a great job analysing the situation in Latvia, and telling it to the world, Jusris. Unfortunately you have the same problem with "trolls" as the rest of us, their swearing and deliberate misunderstanding, reading their own misgivings into your text. Of course the issue was not whether the Russians liked the Russian or Latvian hockey team, or even whether the Latvian hoceky teasm is full of Russian rawhides? Sports is such an overheated issue.
Of course the Russians would never even consider going back to Russia. They have a far better life in Latvia. And if their political friends take over the country, they will have an even better life. For a while, until the economy tips over completely.
Are there political powers strong enough in Latvia to stop russification, do you think, och will the sleazocracy take over?
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