Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1331044
13 maltatoday | WEDNESDAY • 20 JANUARY 2021 OPINION Amelia Hadfield Amelia Hadfield is Head of Department of Politics at the University of Surrey IN the wake of the shocking events in Washington, DC, the EU's foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, published a blog lad- en with sound and fury, beseeching Eu- ropeans to heed the "wake-up call for all democracy advocates around the world world" and to "stand up immediately to every violation of the independence of democratic institutions". Many Europeans have felt downcast about the precipitous slide away from cardinal values, including democracy, in- stigated under President Donald Trump since his 2016 election. Egged on by the continued egregious allegations by Trump of election fraud, a large body of his sup- porters seized the opportunity to sur- round and ultimately break into the Cap- itol Building while members of Congress endeavoured to approve the results of the 2020 election. Europeans are still trying to figure out what happened. Was this flashpoint merely an opportunity for an ill-informed group of violent Trumpites to further ex- press their anger, or was it a localised ex- ample of deep-seated discontent that has taken permanent root in America? And is it only in America that people have been duped by their leader? A fair bit of duping has been occurring too in some European nations, inflicting serious dam- age to its democratic credentials. For Borrell, democracy itself is at stake, both as a value, and mode of government. He too argues that there is a need to "fight harder against disinformation". Faith in democracy must be found anew and and those European institutions in which de- mocracy rests must be defended. This means fighting back against governments in EU countries that have turned away defiantly from democracy towards uncon- strained populism and authoritarian rule. Tech is too big For Věra Jourová, European Commis- sion vice president for values and trans- parency, the problem is simple. In Europe and America alike, "people have simply lost trust in democratic institutions". Re- building that trust means taking aim at a few key antagonists: big tech and social media, lax regulations, unethical coding, and unaccountable algorithms. If these seem rather unlikely enemies of the state, for Jourová, they represent the building blocks of digital accountability that make up democracy in a digital age. Without them, neither freedom of expres- sion nor the ability to eradicate disinfor- mation and fake news campaigns can be guaranteed. Jourová suggests that the European de- mocracy action plan – a broad roadmap of how 2021 Europe can galvanise faith in democratic governments – should be un- derwritten by sharper use of new rules and regulations, including an ongoing plan to curb tech monopolies. Problems at home Europe is going to need something really substantial to rebuild trust in democracy at home. While Biden is fighting to rebuild his country, the EU needs to accept that it has permitted some perfidious descents of its own in both its domestic and foreign policy. In Poland, EU leaders and institutions alike have tolerated or even wilfully ig- nored how Jarosław Kaczyński's incon- gruously named Law and Justice party has eroded a whole series of norms, including the independence of the judiciary. In Hun- gary, the Fidesz party under Viktor Orbán has exercised breath-taking examples of undemocratic governance, from snuffing out freedom of the press, independent ac- ademic institutions and NGOs, and mis- appropriation of EU funds. Romania and Bulgaria are exhibiting similar erosions of democracy, rule of law and good governance. Externally, from lacklustre attitudes to Belarus and its own near neighbourhood, to exclusively inter- est-based dealings with China and Russia, the "pragmatic turn" appears to have tak- en precedence, rather than balance, with the EU's former canon of value-led foreign policy designs. Optimists, however, may argue that there's no time like the present. Trust in democracy at home, and soft power aboard, is at rock bottom. What better time to turn with unflinching eye and re- newed zeal to addressing the torn fabric of European democracy? To call out the false prophets. To sanction the offenders. To remedy the transgressed. A good place to start might be the Eu- ropean People's Party group in the Euro- pean Parliament, which ought to expel the Fidesz party from its membership instead of just repeatedly suspending it. Next could be the European Council, which must start insisting that EU funds will on- ly be available to nations who uphold the rule of law, thus ensuring that no Europe- an leader can act with impunity. In their global dealings, European lead- ers must speak and act more strongly. Shouting down Trump wasn't that diffi- cult, especially towards the end. What is more challenging will be ensuring that Eu- rope's bilateral deals with China and Rus- sia – and indeed the US under Biden – all resolutely promote democracy as a global value, and its role as the keystone of liberal internationalism. The same applies in its dealings with key global clubs, including the UN (and the World Health Organiza- tion), NATO and the G20. Too idealistic? Certainly, no liberal state or organisation can ever operate wholly on the basis of liberal principles. There will always be pragmatism and even hypocri- sy in how national communities choose to govern as liberal democracies. The point is simply to keep at it. Even flawed liber- al democracies – simply by continuing to operate and seasonally rededicating them- selves to their founding ideals – provide the opportunities for the very struggles that return us to healthy democratic prac- tices. Do it right, and both the US and Europe will be on surer footing through the diffi- cult times ahead in 2021. Fail to do it, and the entire governing philosophy of west- ern liberal democracy will carry a mortal wound well into the middle of the century. Unrest in the US has prompted soul-searching in Europe Hungary's Viktor Orban is becoming a problem for the European Union