sebastian on Tue, 25 Apr 2017 11:26:23 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> The meaning of Macron (short answer: none) |
When I was reading your conversation, I couldn't help but in my mind begin to substitute the political parties with football clubs, and their managers for the candidates. Is Real still alive, now that Barca has taken a beating? Did we all underestimate Juventus? Will Chelsea trash Arsenal? Are we going to remember Guardiola as one of the greatest managers in history? Is the false nine on the verge of disappearing? And how will Bayern fare with Ancelotti? The problem with politics is not just politics: it's the language of politics as well. The people have spoken? It doesn't sound like that. All that is being spoken is sports reporting: debating the performances of parties and their disappointing results, their failing strategies and their tactical errors, the missing team spirit and the poor showing of their superstars. But in reality, there are no trends. Macron's 8.7 million votes, over Mélenchon's 7.1 million, don't mean anything, in a country of 66 Million. There are no winners, other than the no vote. Abstention - not being willing, registered, or allowed to vote - is the only significant phenomenon in democracy today: It beat both Clinton and Trump, both Remain and Leave. What does the no vote articulate? I have no illusions: it articulates nothing, not even the desire not to be governed. But lets account for all the things that, by remaining silent, the no vote refuses to say: That Macron is a "French Obama", "best compared with Canada's Justin Trudeau", whose "meteoric rise has few comparisons", other than with "the looks of an actor in a Truffaut movie". That Mélenchon's and Hamon's votes combined "would have been enough to take the left to the second round", to take another beating or be ripped to pieces. That "the French Left will vote Macron in May", that "May will trash Corbyn in June", or that come July, we will think of Obama "as one of the greatest presidents the U.S. ever had." That after the collapse of the Bush dynasty, and after the Clinton disaster, our hopes are with a "possible forthcoming Michelle". That 100 days into Trump, the Left must know that "you don't win elections unless you come across as capable of governing". If it was true that "we need a pragmatist realist left", then the only realism left would be to abstain from all of the above. To be pragmatic would mean to insist that neither today nor "in hindsight", any of it matters. We've been watching a semi-final with Mélenchon, Macron, Fillon and Le Pen, we've been following this game for too long, it has no future, and almost everyone knows this. Nobody is waiting for September, for the "mother of all social democracies" to make a stunning comeback, produce another nailbiter, or suffer another devastating loss. You may still hope for Schulz to win, but he won't, because nobody is in need of additional evidence that there will be no surprises. You may still think of yourself as Marxists, but Merkel and Schäuble have long disowned you: There is no alternative, and elections change nothing. # 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: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: