Tjebbe van Tijen on Wed, 15 May 2002 14:48:42 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Reanimation of democracy after the murder on Pim Fortuyn |
Reanimation of democracy after the murder of Pim Fortuyn is the title of a prose/poem I wrote in the night after the political murder of this disputed new politician on the 6th of May 2002. The text was written in Dutch, meant for a Dutch audience that was all too aware of the circumstances and the subsequent events. Later I noticed that my non Dutch speaking friends had difficulty in understanding what happened and also I wanted them to be able to read the poetic text I wrote. So I have made a rendering of the Dutch poetic text in English, trying to keep some of it's associations. The new bilingual version of the text has been illustrated and posted on my website: http://people.a2000.nl/ttijen/Fortuyn/Fortuna.html Since the murder of Fortuyn on the 6th of May a deluge of reactions and commentaries has covered the Netherlands and it would be impossible to explain all this to a non-Dutch audience. Demonstrations, spontaneous shrines, accusations of The left being guilty, a stoppage of all political campaigns a week before national elections and today the absurd situation that one can vote for a dead man in parliament as Fortuyn, dead as he is, remains the leader of his own party. All this might have been communicated by the international press, I felt a need to give a more historical view on the events as some sort of an overture to set the mood for reading my poem. Overture Every few decades Dutch party politics seem to need a shake-up and a wake-up to re-establish the power balance of the social forces in the country, be they good or bad. Last century, just before the second World War, there was a sudden raise of the NSB (Dutch Fascist Party), right after that War the Communist Party had a very brief period of massive support which was wiped away by the upcoming Cold War. In the early sixties three new parties emerged: first the Boerenpartij (protest party of farmers fighting the rationalization of agricultural production), second the local Amsterdam Provo Party (an anarchist mocking of the parliamentary system as such), and third D'66 (Democrats 1966, a party pleading for reform of the Dutch parliamentary system with among others referenda). Some of these parties have vanished completely from the political scene (fascist NSB, Boerenpartij), others fused some of their ideas and membership with what could be called 'regrouping parties', new entities made up of bits and pieces of minor older parties, like Groen Links (Green Left, a funny fusion of former party communists, maoists, pacifists and radical christians). The last decade a very stabile political alliance between Social Democrats, free market Liberals and the reform D66 did run the country, leaving the main Christian Party (CDA) only a minor role in the opposition benches. This 'troika' is labelled 'Purple' in Dutch, the mix of the three party colors red, blue and green. This decade of 'purple' politics in the Netherlands was in itself a break with a much longer tradition of power sharing, in many cabinets, of the Social Democrats (PvdA) and the Christian Party (CDA), with one or two smaller parties added to make up a governmental majority. The needed shake-up after 'purple rule' stability of the nineties did get it's expression first at the level of local elections, with many locally initiated parties often called "Leefbaar" (liveable) and then the name of a village or town. Depending on region and town the issues raised by these parties varied, but reoccurring elements were housing, traffic problems, environmental issues and some times questions about "foreigners", be it the influx of refugees or lamentations about the lack of integration or adaption of other nations, religions and cultures in Dutch society. After the success of such 'Leefbaar' parties in some bigger cities in the mid nineties, an initiative was made to try to bundle this locally dispersed force into a national 'Leefbaar Nederland' party. Bundling of loose parts implies the use of a binding element, and little coherence could be found in the diverse assembly of many of those local parties. Also the initiators of the new 'Leefbaar Nederland' party did not sufficiently manage to formulate a coherent party philosophy or program, so they started looking for a leader, like in the old days a new nation was looking for a king to help forcing a diverse population into a unified state. Soon a king was found and crowned in the person of a columnist and commentator on Dutch social and economical affairs, a former professor of sociology at the University of Groningen, an coming out homosexual, and a provocative public debater: Pim Fortuyn. His reign of the new national party, which he was supposed to lead to the national elections on the 15th of May 2002, could be counted in days. Fortuyn's strong statements on controversial issues, like the lack of integration of Muslims in Dutch society and a needed full stop on letting in new refugees, lead to his popularity on the one and strong disapproval on the other hand. Disapproval also within the 'eclectic' structure of the 'Leefbaar Nederland' party itself, with it's base in all those local and differing 'one or two issue parties'. Though some of these local party voters could associate themselves with Fortuyn's views on 'foreigners' and 'integration', it certainly was not the highest common factor and a congress of the Leebaar Nederland party even voted against such ideas and policies. One wonders, why then Fortuyn was asked to become the leader and most public figure of this party. The answer can be given by Dutch mass media, television, radio and the writing press. Fortuyn's own position as a former columnist for a conservative weekly, his close relations with some Dutch television figures (especially on the commercial RTL channels) and most of all the irresistible attraction of his flamboyant figure that was making the rather dull Dutch political debate palpable again, made that more and more journalists were eager to have him appear, to get an interview, to have him join their debating table. Choosing and voting for Fortuyn as party leader of Leefbaar Nederland meant a secure ticket to a lot of media-exposure; it was the fastest and cheapest way to reach a mass audience. He had the charisma that the already infighting founders of this new party certainly had not. The leadership of the 'Leefbaar Nederland' party was aware of the soloist tendencies of Fortuyn and the possible incompatibility of his views with a part of the membership. At the same time they gambled, as they knew that some of Fortuyn's views could attract an even bigger electorate, as it voiced wide spread sentiments of the xenophobic part of Dutch society (it should be noted that the word 'xenophobic' means 'fear' of foreigners and certainly not 'hate' of foreigners). It was a double dealing policy trying to reach out to a wide spectrum of the electorate, both progressive and conservative, with Fortuyn as the Janus-faced priest. Fortuyn should be allowed to express his radical views on the position of foreigners and religion , but not too explicit, as it could alienated a part of the more tolerant potential electorate. But Fortuyn felt like a king, not like a constitutional monarch and continued to freely express his ideas, to make provocative statements. An article in the national daily De Volkskrant, beginning of this year, ended his leadership of the Leefbaar Nederland party. The article not only carried strong statements against "backwardness" of Muslim culture, it also announced that when Fortuyn would get in power he would close Dutch borders for all refugees. On top of that Fortuyn stated, that the change of the first article of Dutch fundamental law in 1983 forbidding discrimination ("on the grounds of religion, belief, political opinion, race, or sex or on any other grounds"), should be scrapped, as it contradicted the older and more fundamental constitutional article protecting 'freedom of expression' (article 7: "No one shall require prior permission to publish thoughts or opinions through the press, without prejudice to the responsibility of every person under the law"). Paradoxical Fortuyn made also reference, in this contested interview, to the dangers of Muslim fundamentalists in the Netherlands wanting to deny him free expression of his homosexuality. As Fortuyn refused to recall his public statements, emphasizing his own need to speak his mind, to be true to his convictions, he was relieved from his office by those he was supposed to lead. All this happened in the full light of the media, making Fortuyn into a champion of free speech, the "only one" in the nation who dared to speak his mind in public. Thrown of his throne of the 'Leefbaar Nederland' party, Fortuyn had to make his own kingdom. He turned his defeat into a victory, waving from his car at the press after he left the party meeting that had dismissed him, shouting "Watch me, I will be the next prime minister of this country". He and a small group of followers founded a new party and miraculously managed to rise again in the election opinion polls within a few weeks. First Fortuyn participated in the preceding communal elections which gave him a landslide victory in his home town Rotterdam, wiping away over half a century of social democrat rule (though other towns were less or not at all effected by the 'Fortuyn effect', like the city of Amsterdam). Right after the municipal elections some opinion polls were suggesting that Fortuyn's new national party (Lijst Fortuyn) could become the second biggest political power in the Netherlands. As the established political parties saw their potential electorate shrink by the day, they needed to target their adversary and could not escape to direct their arrows at the charismatic leader of this brand new party, that, for the rest still had a most indistinctive and unknown list of candidates. Fortuyn used strong words, in public, and strong words came back to him. The usual vocabulary, made up of names and notions related to former dictators and dictatorships, was applied to him. Possible resemblances with Hitler, Himmler and Mussolini were tested, and the old pair of scissors to cut the social tissue in two halves could be found in many people's hands: left and right, right and wrong, depending on one's position in the political power field. Fortuyn has been placed, from the beginning, at the right hand side of this imaginary cutting line, originating from the spacial position of delegates in the English Parliament and the French Assembly two centuries and more ago. Left being those who want movement and change, right those who want to fix and preserve. One may ask if society could ever be represented by such a simplified dichotomy, at best the terms 'left' and 'right' are only markers on a scale to compare opposing political forces in a particular society at a particular historical moment. One may say that in the case of the emergence of the new party of Fortuyn in the Netherlands, the meaning of the terms 'left' and 'right' were reversed: the 'right' wanting radical change and the 'left' defending their attainments. Demonic comparisons with actual political and religious figures from other countries were used by both sides in the election campaign. Fortuyn made a grotesque comparison between Bin Laden and grey haired lady Els Borst of the Democrat party who has been minister of health in the 'purple' coalition cabinets, as she failed to shorten the hospital waiting lists, which, in the vision of Fortuyn, did cost more human lives as the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center. Similar comparisons bounced back on him labeling Fortuyn as the Dutch Le Pen, Hayder and Berlusconi. Only the last comparison was not refuted by him, but that may partly be because both leaders like smart suits. Of course such labels do not really fit and do little to explain realities of Dutch society. It would be better to try and explain this society first in it's own terms. A society that has a tradition, over centuries, in hiding and covering up social differences and problems: with elaborate charity distribution systems within it's own borders and ruthless slave trade and exploitation of people in far away colonies; a country that has successfully been able to link freedom of trade with freedom of expression (in that order!); that accepted religious refugees while at the same time selling weapons or war services to the same nations people were fleeing from; a country where opposing Christian churches learned to compromise, no massive killings of Catholics once the Protestants got in power; a country that has been a republic with a prince and became a kingdom with monarchistic socialists; a country that has been unable to protect it's Jewish minority against the Nazis; that fought a nasty colonial war half a century ago in Indonesia and still did not come to terms with it (officially it is called "police actions"); a country were homosexuals could emancipate and women emancipation, in economical sense, is lagging behind; where the defeat of the proletariat by consumerism has been declared 35 years ago; where the art of repressive tolerance as a policy instrument has been flowering for decades; where the dense structure of volunteer civil organizations in all fields of life is outnumbering any political organization in it's membership; a country that tries, centuries later, to accommodate the reversed slave trade with it's thriving Surinam and Antillean communities; an over-developed country that offers great mobility to it's own citizens, who can travel wherever they fancy, but denies similar mobility to under-developed tourists; a country where many were opposing South African apartheid and the horrors of the Balkanian war, but very few would oppose the less spectacular process, just around the corner, of economical cleansing, the unsafe heavens of Dutch welfare society, the ghetto's in the making... I catch myself making crude simplifications also, while trying to explain and summarize the complexities of Dutch society. My aim was to play a sort of overture, to create a sketchy backdrop for non-Dutch people to get some understanding of the drama of the murder of the Dutch politicians Pim Fortuyn, an extraordinary event in Dutch history that has shaken this society. As we Dutch tend often to be well informed about the fate of other nations, it does not work the other way around, because of language problems and the disinterest of many Dutch to communicate their own society to outsiders. It is a very personal interpretation of the events, no claims of objectivity, but I have tried to approach all players in this drama, alive and dead, with dignity. Tjebbe van Tijen Amsterdam 15 May 2002 an hour before the voting will start ------ start of English text on the web page http://people.a2000.nl/ttijen/Fortuyn/Fortuna.html ----------- May 6th 2002, eleven days before national elections, the Dutch politician Pim Fortuyn was shot dead right after he left an interview session in national radio studios in Hilversum. The man suspected to be his murderer was caught a few minutes after and is known to be an environmental activist. Fortuyn (54 years) was a newcomer on the Dutch political scene with his own personal party. He promised to be one of the winners of the elections. One of Fortuyn's main political targets was the management of 'multi-cultural society' in the Netherlands. He wanted more adaption to Dutch standards and a severe limit of the influx of refugees. [ The Dutch name 'Fortuyn' comes from the allegorical female figure of 'Fortuna' who leads the blind, being blind herself, blown by changing winds on a pitfall road. Reanimation of democracy after the murder on Pim Fortuyn Democracy is a game for power polling prejudices voting counting; the weakest link in the chain out it goes! The one who plays this game plays with the life of others regardless of the issues raised: conservative or for change. Running from quiz to quiz: "candidate you have only so many seconds to give the right political answer";without panting. Does the TV-watcher listen at all has he anything to say or does he stay... silent? But there is a listener, an idiot who is silent and kills and right after that, is robbed of the meaning of his deed, while the blood is still warm on the street, 'the news' runs, passing him and itself. Leave the messengers out they only bring 'the news' by raising their voice somewhat rough what has thus been raised can not stay above... forever. "Politics is performed with words" is politicians' first response trying to prove their innocence; as if words cannot murder as if politicians politics is only put forth by words. One may guess the answer on this question raised: "do we choose words or deeds?" Which words? Which deeds? Again and again we need to ask not just once in a thousand and more days. We are not to blame, there is no collective guilt for political murder not society is nuts, one single person carries the burden. Then, there is that idiot whose voice was not heard but as it occurred no one could miss his deed leaving all of us with a stained street. Nevertheless, after this terrible accident, let us go into the streets and play again: Democracy as a game just for the fun of it polling pleasure voting counting and see to it that the weakest links in the chain still can participate Whoever plays this game shares life with others. Tjebbe van Tijen 7/5/2002 Tjebbe van Tijen Imaginary Museum Projects (IMP), Amsterdam Background information on: http://people.a2000.nl/ttijen/Index.html # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net