The Anti-Orange Election
By Alexander J. Motyl
Moscow Times
As Ukrainians went to
the polls on January 17 to elect a new president, Western observers should
interpret the outcome in light of how the U.S. premier political scientist
distinguished between good and bad government.
Back
in 1968, in his now classic work “Political Order in Changing Societies,” the
late Samuel P. Huntington, best known perhaps for his “Clash of Civilizations”
thesis, claimed: “The most important political distinction among countries
concerns not their form of government but their degree of government. … A
government with a low level of institutionalization is not just a weak
government; it is also a bad government.” After all, concluded Huntington, “The function of government is to
govern.”
Ukraine has been a prime example of the acuity of Huntington’s insights.
Ever since the Orange Revolution of late 2004 ushered in a democratic,
pro-Western government in Kyiv,
Ukraine has suffered
from incessant infighting and deadlock that have led some observers to suggest
that it has become so weak as to approximate a failed state.
President
Viktor Yushchenko and Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, the heroes of the
revolution, never fail to sabotage each other’s policies and forge alliances
with the anti-Orange leader, Viktor Yanukovych. The destructive cycle of
sabotage and betrayal has demoralized the population, increased corruption,
strengthened the Kremlin’s position in the country and promoted “Ukraine
fatigue” in the West.
This
presidential election could break the cycle and place Ukraine on the
path to a stronger government. As most polls and analysts suggested, Yanukovych
and Tymoshenko garnered the most votes in the first round and will then face
each other in a runoff three weeks later. Yushchenko’s almost certain departure
from political prominence will immediately produce three stabilizing
Huntingtonian effects.
[1]
First, as Ukraine’s
equivalent of former U.S. President George W. Bush, Yushchenko has come to be
despised even by his supporters. Things have gotten so bad that everything he
touches is deemed a bad idea. Just as Bush didn’t deserve all the opprobrium
that was heaped upon him in his second term, so too Yushchenko isn’t quite the
incompetent leader that he’s made out to be. But perceptions matter and his
departure will refocus the public’s attention from his person to issues and
policies.
[2]
Second, Yushchenko’s relationship with Tymoshenko has become self-destructive.
He vetoes every one of her policies, and she counters by undermining his.
Regardless of who is right and who is wrong and just why these two former
allies have turned into mortal enemies, the fact is that Yushchenko’s departure
will depersonalize Ukraine’s
politics. This will clearly help lower the temperature in the country.
What
will happen if Tymoshenko wins the second round? Her party will then control
the Presidency, the Parliament and the Constitutional Court, giving her enormous
powers. Moreover, Yanukovych will likely fall from grace and his party will
almost certainly experience a deep crisis. Many Ukrainians fear that
Tymoshenko, given her large personal ambitions, will try to establish a
dictatorship, but their fears are greatly exaggerated.
Dictators
need strong and large state bureaucracies, armies and secret police in order to
rule, and Ukraine
has none of these. An all-powerful Tymoshenko will not be able to become a
dictator, but she will also have no one to blame if she fails to fix the economy
and establish a strong government.
If
Yanukovych wins, he will control the Presidency and the Constitutional Court, but Tymoshenko
will, in all likelihood, remain the Prime Minister. Their power struggle will
likely continue — at least until parliamentary elections give one or the other
an advantage in the Parliament.
But
their incentives to cooperate over policy will also be greater than at present.
There will be no third partner to court, and whether the outcome is cold war or
cold peace, some kind of detente over measures that address the economic
and political crisis is likely.
Finally,
whoever wins will likely change Ukraine’s
constitution, which as currently constructed, virtually guarantees perpetual conflicts between the President and Prime Minister.
Experts generally agree that a presidential system is worse than a
parliamentary one, but they also agree that a mixed presidential-parliamentary
system such as Ukraine’s
is by far the worst.
In
the end, a Huntingtonian interpretation of Ukraine leads to cautious optimism
about positive governmental change in the country. Establishing a strong
government in Kyiv will clearly be in Ukraine’s best interests, and it
will also help strengthen the country’s relations with the West.
The
United States and Europe could help resolve Ukraine’s strategic dilemma of
being located in the no-man’s land between a hostile Russia and a weak Europe,
while the European Union could pursue a relationship with Ukraine that is at
least as close as its relationship with Russia.
Meanwhile,
before Ukraine’s next
President takes the Oath of Office, he or she would do well to read Huntington.
Alexander J. Motyl
is a Professor of Political Science at Rutgers University in Newark, NJ