The Washington Post, January 29, 2001
It has been fashionable in recent years for political analysts
to cluck reprovingly at U.S. efforts to promote free and fair elections abroad.
Elections in shaky democracies may produce illiberal leaders, they warn, or
ignite ethnic conflicts or simply fall apart. Naive Americans, their argument
goes, should stop trying to export their fascination with elections to inhospitable
climes.
Yet last year something interesting happened: Elections were the key steps
in democratic transitions on several continents. Mexico was one clear case.
The election of Vicente Fox to the presidency and the transfer of power after
the 70-year rule of the Institutional Revolutionary Party was a breakthrough
for democracy there. A gradual process of political liberalization dating from
the late 1980s paved the way for this historic change, but it was the successive
presidential elections themselves -- in 1988, '94 and above all last year --
that gave structure and focus to the process of change.
In Serbia, Slobodan Milosevic made the classic blunder of the isolated strongman
-- underestimating the depth of opposition and believing he could use elections,
manipulating them as need be, to legitimate his continued rule. After challenger
Vojislav Kostunica was denied victory in the first round, the country rose up
against Milosevic and within two weeks drove him from power. Again, the elections
were only part of a longer process of democratic ferment, but they served as
a critical turning point.
Former Peruvian president Alberto Fujimori sought to extend his authoritarian
rule into a third term by strong-arming Peru's national elections of last April.
His main opponent, Alejandro Toledo, withdrew from the second round of a badly
flawed process, and the normally cautious Organization of American States described
the elections as neither free nor fair and the regime as "sinister."
Fujimori's electoral shenanigans galvanized his domestic opposition and the
international community, setting in motion a legitimacy crisis that led within
several months to the collapse of his presidency.
Ghana's December elections brought a peaceful, orderly end to the 20-year
rule of President Jerry Rawlings, a regime that started as a dictatorship but
gradually evolved into something more democratic. As in Mexico, the willingness
of the ruling elite to carry out a gradual political liberalization set the
stage for a democratic transition. But elections were the defining moment.
With U.S. foreign policy in transition, and amid renewed debate about the
wisdom of America's trying to promote its values abroad, these four cases highlight
another important fact: While pro-democratic outcomes in all four countries
were principally the work of domestic political actors, the United States played
a positive, facilitating role in each.
Bringing Mexico into the North American Free Trade Agreement created a broader
context of integration that reinforced pressure on the Mexican political elite
to move ahead with liberalization. U.S.-funded efforts to aid Mexican nongovernmental
groups promoting a clean election helped ensure the integrity of the process.
In Serbia, U.S. pressure on many levels, including wide-ranging support for
civic and political activists, added to the mix of political forces that brought
down Milosevic.
After years of supporting Fujimori because of his cooperation in the drug
war, the U.S. government finally turned against him. U.S. aid to Peruvian human
rights groups and other civic organizations bolstered democrats at key moments.
A first-ever U.S. presidential visit to Ghana in March 1998 gave heft to U.S.
support for the delicate process of democratic transition there. A small but
sustained aid program for the Ghanaian electoral commission strengthened the
electoral process.
The jury is still out on whether the democratic tide that swept through the
world in the past two decades is receding or still rising. But the record of
the past year reminds us that elections do have a valuable place in the process,
even with the risks and shortcomings they often entail. And with appropriately
modest expectations but genuine commitment, the United States has a critical
role to play in helping out.