Another war looms in Europe: waged not with guns and tanks, but with
financial markets and EU diktats. Austerity-ravaged Greece may well be
on the verge of a general election that could bring to power a
government unequivocally opposed to austerity. Momentous stuff: that has
not happened in the six years of cuts and falling living standards that
followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers.
But if the radical leftist party Syriza does indeed triumph in a
possible snap poll in the new year, there will undoubtedly be a
concerted attempt to choke the experiment at birth. That matters not
just for Greece, but for all of us who want a different sort of society
and a break from years of austerity.
What misery has been inflicted on Greece. One in four of its people
are out of work; poverty has surged from 23% before the crash to 40.5%;
and research has demonstrated how key services such as health have been
hammered by cuts, even as demand has risen. No wonder the country has
experienced a political polarisation that has prompted comparisons with
Weimar Germany. The neo-Nazi Golden Dawn – which makes other European
rightist movements look like fluffy liberals – at one point attracted up
to 15% in the polls; though still a menace, its support has thankfully
subsided to half that.
But unlike many other European societies – with the notable
exceptions of Spain and Ireland – fury and despair with austerity has
been channelled into the ranks of the populist left. After years on the
fringes of Greek politics, Syriza only became a fully fledged party in
2012, and yet it won Greece’s elections to the European parliament
earlier this year. The latest opinion polls give Syriza a substantial
lead over the governing centre-right New Democracy party. A radical
leftwing government could well assume power for the first time in the
EU’s history.
After years of social ruin, Syriza is offering Greeks that precious
thing: hope. Although it has shifted from demanding an immediate
cancellation of debt, it is demanding a negotiated solution. It has
conjured up the example of a European debt conference to wipe away a
portion of the debt, as happened with Germany in 1953. Syriza’s
manifesto proposes that repayment of debt could come through economic
growth, rather than from budget cuts. It wants a European new deal
backed up by an investment bank; an all-out war against the tax
avoidance endemic in Greek society; an emergency employment programme; a
raised minimum wage; and the restoration of collective bargaining. In
alliance with anti-austerity forces such as Spain’s surging Podemos
party, Syriza wants the EU to abandon crippling austerity policies in
favour of quantitative easing and a growth-led recovery.
There’s one small catch: the determined opposition of the
establishment in both Greece and the EU. Greece was ruled by a
hard-right junta, the colonels’ regime of 1967-74, and there is still
clearly anti-leftist sentiment deeply embedded in the state. The police
have been infiltrated by Golden Dawn elements, with accusations that
they have tortured anti-fascist protesters. The head of the bank of
Greece has warned of “irreparable damage” to the economy if there is a
change of course. Some form of coup – even if more subtle than that
executed by the colonels in 1967 – cannot be ruled out.
Source and full story: The Guardian, 22 December 2014
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