If one side in a democracy no longer plays
by the rules, it would be foolhardy to assume that democratic means will
suffice to protect one’s interests
A friend once told a gathering of young
Taiwanese in Washington, D.C., that Taiwan’s democracy was like a firewall
protecting the nation against external — and internal, I might add — threats.
No truer words were said, but what can Taiwanese do when the firewall is
breached, when those whose intentions are antithetical to its spirit turn it
against itself in an attempt to cut it at the root?
I’m all for democracy, and I come from a
country that takes immense pride (albeit in less flashy fashion that its
neighbor to the south) in its democratic achievements. Democracy is undoubtedly
the least bad instrument we have at our disposal to distribute power, resolve
disputes, and have a shot at justice. Over the years as a journalist, I have
observed Taiwan’s young democracy at work, both at the surface and deep within
the marrow, and I now have reason to fear for its future.
One thing that academics and politicians
alike often forget is that democracy isn’t an end state, a fait accompli, a
line that, once crossed, automatically and irretrievably confers upon those who
have crossed it perpetual status as a democracy. Rather, democracy is a work in
progress along a spectrum. Just as important as the title, or the regular
holding of elections, is the quality of that democracy, which touches on
everything from government responsiveness to public grievances to the removal
of corrupt individuals, regardless of their political affiliation.
Given its qualitative nature, it follows
that democracy can evolve just as it can backtrack, and it can also once again
cross over that line into something that is no longer democratic.
This begs the question: What can the
citizens of a democracy do when those in power, or those who would usurp it,
become undemocratic? Firewall notwithstanding, democracy has its limits, and
can hardly succeed if one side — the more so if it is the most powerful, or the
wealthiest — doesn’t play by democratic rules. What good is democracy if
citizens expire all legal processes, all democratic means, to prevent
injustice, only for the authorities to go ahead and crush everything in their
path? How can we retain faith in a government’s commitment to democracy when
one of its own rules an entire county like a despot, not only getting away with
rampant corruption and perhaps even murder, but in the process gets rewarded by
the central government with a position in its Standing Committee? When the executive engages in political machinations to remove those who stand in its path, especially those who are in the way of a controversial services trade agreement with China?
I couldn’t help but ponder those questions
on Sunday when I came upon pictures of gangster Chang An-le (張安樂),
or the “White Wolf,” as he attended the opening ceremony of his Unification
Party office in Greater Tainan. Since his return to Taiwan in late June, Chang,
who spent sixteen years in China, has toured the country and appeared on
countless TV shows to promote his unification campaign. Somehow, the wanted
fugitive was released on bail on the day of his arrival, and has since been
free to spread his gospel and engage in “benevolent” activities. Instead of
being in jail, or of appearing in court, or of preparing his defense, Chang has
been free to travel the nation and confirmed on Sunday his party’s intention to
field candidates in next year’s seven-in-one elections and the presidential
election in 2016.
I visited his Taipei office earlier this
year, and I saw the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) flag, the hundreds of
pictures of Chang toasting senior CCP officials. It is plainly evident that
Chang’s party is a front, or a spearhead, for CCP political activity in Taiwan,
which raises serious questions (among other things) about its financing. Not to
mention the gangster methods that party officials and supporters will likely
engage into come election time. And yet what is the government doing? Nothing.
Taiwan is a democracy, so Mr. Chang’s party is “legal.”
So what does a polity do when facing a
political party that, in reality, has no democratic bone in its body and which
is intended to serve as a Trojan Horse to destroy Taiwan’s democratic way of
life? Allowing it to enter the democratic system itself risks poisoning the
entire machine and ensures that democratic means and ways will be distorted in ways
that risk bringing the whole thing down. What does a country do when simply not
voting for a party isn’t enough? What do its people do when their purportedly
democratic government allows for the existence of an undemocratic — no,
anti-democratic — party that is backed by an authoritarian regime which has
made no secret of its intentions concerning Taiwan’s political system?
For a democracy to function, the players
must abide by certain tacit agreements which create an imperfect balance
whereby governors and the governed resolve the inherent tensions in any
political system. If one side in that equation no longer plays by those rules,
it would be foolhardy —in this case suicidal — to assume that democratic means
will suffice to protect one’s interests. So what comes next? (Photo CNA)
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