Vladimir Putin, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi re-elected

Apr 02, 2018

Egypt’s pharaohs felt no need to ask the people’s opinions on their performance as rulers. The kings of 18th-century Europe ruled by ‘divine right’, not by the popular will. But at some point in the past century, democracy has won the argument world-wide.

By Gwynne Dyer

Last week, Vladimir Putin, the president of Russian, got himself ‘re-elected' to his fourth six-year term by a 76% majority on a 76% turn-out. This week (March 26-28) the Egytian's former general Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, was ‘re-elected' with 76% support.

Both men control the mass media in their countries, so they can be reasonably confident that most people will not be exposed to much criticism of their actions.

The charade goes even further in many African countries. At some point in the past, often after popular protests or even a revolution, term limits were imposed on the presidency, but later the man in power (it's always a man) realises that he actually wants to rule the country for life. Once again, however, abolishing the term limits is done with due ‘democratic' decorum, generally involving a state-managed referendum.

China is the latest to end term limits, making Xi Jinping in effect president-for-life, although it skipped the referendum part. Indeed, even China pretends to be a democracy, more or less, although the Communist Party must always be in the ‘leading role' and there are no direct national elections. Why do they go through all this rigmarole, when the outcome is invariably a foregone conclusion?

Egypt's pharaohs felt no need to ask the people's opinions on their performance as rulers. The kings of 18th-century Europe ruled by ‘divine right', not by the popular will (and they didn't actually ask God's opinion on their performance either). But at some point in the past century, democracy has won the argument world-wide.

It has not won all the power struggles, and many dictators survive in practice, but they are all obliged to pretend to have popular support. This is a very big change from the past, when tyrannical power was generally based on a combination of religious authority and brutal armed force. Why, and in particular why now?

The anthropologists may have an answer. It is now pretty widely agreed in their profession that pre-civilised human beings almost all lived in bands where all adult men, at least, were treated as equals, and all had an equal right to share in decision-making. They even had well-established methods for making sure that nobody got too big for his boots.

These primitive ‘democracies' all collapsed in the early stages of civilisation, when the huge rise in population (from dozens to millions in a thousand years) made it physically impossible for everybody to take part in the discussion about means and ends any more.

At the same time all the traditional social controls that kept ambitious people from seizing power failed too. You can't shame people into respecting the opinions and personal freedoms of other people if the numbers get so big that you don't even know them personally.  Result: five thousand years of tyranny.

But give these mass societies mass media, and they regain the ability to communicate with one another. It turns out, unsurprisingly, that they want to be treated as equals again. The first successful democratic revolution happened in the American colonies in 1776 because printing presses were everywhere, and over half the population was literate.

Now mass media are everywhere, and even the dictators have to pretend that they are in power by the will of the people. It will be a long time before they actually disappear (if they ever do), but they already rule less than half of the world's people, and they all have to go through a charade of democracy to legitimise their rule.

When the first results of the Russian election were coming in last week, a reporter asked Vladimir Putin if he would run again in six years' time. "What you are saying is a bit funny," Putin replied. "Do you think that I will stay here until I'm 100 years old? No." But that's what Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe's former ruler, would also have said when he had been in power for only 18 years.

In the end Mugabe stayed in power for 37 years and he was 93 and planning to run for another term when he was finally overthrown last year. Putin would be a mere 85 years old when he broke Mugabe's record, although China's Xi Jinping would have to live until he was 97 to do the same. I'll bet neither one makes it.

The writer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries

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