From the highlands to the andes muhammad idrees ahmad iss26

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From the Highlands to the Andes: The Politics of Democracy Promotion By Muhammad Idrees Ahmad The temperature on the night bus from Caracas to Mérida is uncomfortably low.Venezuelans relish the opportunity to escape the tropical heat by snuggling under their blankets during these long distance journeys. On this occasion however the atmosphere is warm with the enthusiasm exuded by some of our fellow passengers. Clad in red t-shirts bearing the symbols of Movimiento Quinta Republica (The Fifth Republic Movement) – Hugo Chavez’s political umbrella – they are still ebullient with the energy of the day’s events. The young boy on the adjacent seat seems keen to talk; his grandmother sitting next to him more focused on catching a wink of sleep. He tells me he is returning from the launch rally of Chavez’s presidential campaign which he had come along with his grandmother to attend. I had seen the rally earlier in the day. The scale was impressive and the enthusiasm infectious – the kind that is reserved only for celebrity events in Europe and America, or, more recently, for antiwar rallies. (The only Euro-American politician to achieve anything close was Ralph Nader with his super-rallies in 2000 – and he didn’t win.) Here, XLI WTMVMX MW SRI SJ GSR½HIRGI ERH TSWWMFMPMX] These people have come from all corners of the country, feeling that they are agents of their country’s destiny. They come because it matters. They come because they matter. The May 2007 elections in Scotland were similarly charged with expectation, even if

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despair more than hope furnished the impetus for change. Disillusionment with the status quo was widespread. While the Scottish Left had collapsed under the combined weight of media hostility and its own myopia, the disillusionment only increased the likelihood of a Scottish Nationalist Party (SNP) victory. For its opposition to the war, to the renewal of Trident, calls for subsidised education, and its pro-independence stance, the party was well placed to rake in votes from the remnants of the Scottish Left on top of its traditional, more conservative, nationalist GSRWXMXYIRG] *SV XLI ½VWX time in British history, the possibility of a party outside the Tory-Labour consensus winning power on the mainland seemed real. In a democracy as old as Britain one would have expected such plurality to be welcomed. Except it wasn’t, and the electorate showed little of the verve of the Venezuelan voter. Imagine this scenario: In the upcoming Venezuelan elections polls show the main opposition party with a clear lead; each one of the country’s large circulation newspapers is editorially hostile to the opposition, producing a barrage of propaganda which culminates in alarmist front page stories on election day; newspapers carry explicit instructions on voting for the ruling party; the president personally intervenes in various constituencies to dissuade citizens from voting against his party; the ballot design is confusing and, for the most part, favours the governing party and seven percent of all votes


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