Implementing “Democracy” and Regime Change in “Enemy Countries”: The “Electoral Integrity Project”
A multi-million dollar Australian Government funded project at the University of Sydney, linked to Washington
A multi-million dollar
Australian Government funded project at the University of Sydney, linked
to spin doctors in Washington, is using a biased and secretive method
to help discredit elections in a range of ‘enemy’ countries. The
Electoral Integrity Project (EIP) joins the United States Studies Centre
(USSC), established in 2007, as another heavily politicised initiative
which compromises the independence of Australia’s oldest university (see
Anderson 2010).
A key target is socialist Venezuela, which is facing yet another
destabilisation campaign, backed by Washington. The recent rounds of
violence began in early 2014 and recently led to the arrest of several
opposition figures for murder and coup plotting. The pretext for the
violence has been that the government of President Nicolas Maduro is
somehow democratically illegitimate.
However the radical, popular ‘Bolivarian’ governments have won 12 of
Venezuela’s last 13 elections. Further, 80% of the voting age population
participated in the 2013 election, won by Maduro (International IDEA
2015). That is a massive increase on 1990s levels, when the Chavez
phenomenon effectively sidelined the old and moribund two party system.
And the electoral system is secure. Even the political journalist for
anti-government paper El Universal described Venezuela’s electoral
system as ‘one of the most technologically advanced verifiable voting
systems in the world’, with protections against fraud and tampering and
scrutineered random recount mechanisms (Martinez 2013).
Sydney University’s ‘Electoral Integrity Project’ tells a very
different story. According to their 2015 report, Venezuela’s
Presidential election in 2013 was one of the worst in the world, ranking
110 out of 127. They corroborate their data with a survey claiming
President Maduro only had a 24% popularity rating, with ‘85% believing
that the country was heading in the wrong direction’ (Norris et al 2015:
31). The EIP did not mention the Hinterlaces Polls, which have had
Maduro’s popularity (during the recent crisis) ranging from 39% to 52%;
nor do they cite polls showing overwhelming rejection of the
opposition’s violent attempts to remove the elected president (Dutka
2014).
The EIP produces an impressive forest of data to form its rankings on
the legitimacy of elections worldwide; but what is the basis for all
these numbers? Though it is not so easy to find, the method involves
selecting a range of criteria and then seeking ‘expert opinion’, from a
group of unnamed people. That is, the numbers and rankings rely on
‘expert opinion’, and those experts are anonymous. There is only
anecdotal recourse to more standard methods, such as actual opinion
polls, or actual participation rates.
Yet popular and expert perceptions are a curious thing. As most mass
media remains in the hands of a tiny oligarchy, for whom Venezuela has
long been a ‘black sheep’, image shaping is often distorted. Surveys by
the Chilean-based company LatinoBarómetro (2014: 8-9) illustrate this
point very well. The image of Venezuela’s democracy from outside the
country is rather ordinary (seen as 41% and 47% favourable, between 2010
and 2013), whereas within Venezuela it is very different. Venezuelans
rate their democracy at 70%, the second highest (after Uruguay) in Latin
America. Latino Barómetro (2014: 9) itself is surprised by these
results, saying: ‘The five countries which most appreciate their own
democracy are countries governed by the left: Uruguay, Venezuela,
Argentina, Ecuador and Nicaragua … the democracy of which citizens speak
is clearly not the democracy of which the experts speak’.
Yet surely any democracy is best judged by those who are able (or
unable) to participate in it? The opinions of expert outsiders seem of
little relevance. That is an elite approach. The International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights (Art 25) describes democratic rights this
way: ‘the right and the opportunity … to take part in the conduct of
public affairs, directly or through freely chosen representatives’. That
refers to the right of citizens in a particular body politic. Gauged
against this principle, the method of EIP project, relying on outside
expert opinion, seems poorly conceived.
Yet an elitist approach is consistent with the model promoted by the
National Endowment for Democracy (NED), a US government funded body
launched by the Reagan administration in the second cold war of early
1980s. The NED (usually through intermediaries) funds a range of
organisations in attempts to shape democracies or ‘civil societies’, to
make them more friendly to or compliant with Washington. One of the
founders and first President of the NED, Allen Weinstein, said in 1991,
‘A lot of what we do today was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIA’
(Lefebvre 2013). Indeed, as with the ‘psy-ops’ of the CIA, the NED has
been implicated in coups and destabilisation plans in a range of Latin
American countries, including Nicaragua, Haiti and Venezuela
(Kurlantzick 2004; Lefebvre 2013; Golinger 2006). The NED idea of
democracy has been described as ‘[a] top-down, elite, constrained (or
“polyarchal”) democracy … [where] the elites get to decide the
candidates or questions suitable to go before the people’ (Scipes 2014).
French researcher Olivier Guilmain (in Teil 2011) says that the NED
finances opposition parties in numerous countries and provides special
aid to exiles and opponents of regimes targeted by the US State
Department’.
Eva Golinger, whose book The Chavez Code exposed the Bush
administration’s involvement in the failed coup of 2002, has documented
the NED’s contribution to destabilisation and coups in Venezuela. In the
last year or so the NED has spent many millions on Venezuelan
opposition groups ‘including funding for their political campaigns in
2013 and for the current anti-government protests in 2014’ (Golinger
2014). She calls this ‘the same old dirty tactics’ of a coup in motion
(Golinger 2015).
It might not come as a surprise then, to find that there are indeed
NED and other US Government links to Sydney’s Electoral Integrity
Project. Chief investigator Professor Pippa Norris proudly lists her
work as a consultant for the NED, and at least six of the project
partners (without whose support the EIP ‘would not have been possible’)
have direct US government funding. The EIP method of relying on expert
opinion seems quite consistent with that ‘elite, constrained …
democracy’.
Worse, the EIP relies on anonymous opinion. A member of the project
clarified this to me in these words: ‘we have to maintain the
confidentiality of our sources as part of our legal obligations …
revealing the names of the experts could potentially risk putting them
in harm’s way in several states which do not respect human rights and
which suppress critics’. Be that as it may, the opinions of anonymous
people provide no way to assess the legitimacy of an independent state.
It contradicts the principles of openness and transparency, values the
EIP claims to both assess and promote. Who are these anonymous experts?
Do they include opposition figures in the countries whose governments
are under attack? Do they include the Washington insiders who advise on
destabilisation and coup plans? There is little indication the EIP takes
seriously the well-established principle of avoiding conflicts of
interest.
It is also alarming that the EIP, as an Australian Government (ARC)
funded academic project, whose subtitle (‘Why Elections fail and what we
can do about it’) suggests a measures of praxis, shares the Washington
phrase ‘failed elections [which] raised major red flags’, mentioning
several states, including Syria. It is well known that a major military
intervention in Syria was narrowly averted in September 2013, after
false claims that the Syrian Government had used chemical weapons
against children (for evidence of the falsity of these claims see: Hersh
2013 & 2014; Lloyd and Postol 2014; ISTEAMS 2013). Does the EIP
seek to associate itself with ‘red flag’ military interventions, if
countries fail to meet its dubious criteria?
The project rated Syria’s 2014 presidential elections near the bottom
of its chart (125 of 127), on the basis of its anonymous expert
opinions (Norris et al 2015: 11). The only rationale for this can be
seen in a brief note which observes ‘the election was deeply flawed
because some areas of the country were not under government control, so
polling did not take place in the regions where insurgents were
strongest’, and the fact that ‘National Coalition – the main western
backed opposition group’ boycotted the election (Norris et al 2015: 27).
While these are correct statements, they do not tell the whole story.
Conflict in other countries did not seem to bother the EIP or its
experts quite so much when they ranked the Ukraine election at 78 of 127
(Norris et al 2015: 10). Yet the election monitoring group
International IDEA (2015), an EIP partner, puts participation rates in
the Ukraine’s 2014 presidential election at 50%, while in the Syria’s
2014 presidential election it was 73%. Clearly the US foreign policy
factor is at play. Washington arms the ‘opposition’ in Syria and the
government in Ukraine. Similarly the NED has directly funded the Syrian
opposition (NED 2006; Teil 2011; IRI 2015) while urging military support
for the Ukraine government (Sputnik 2014; see also Parry 2014).
Finally we might observe that Israel’s 2013 elections were duly
reviewed by the EIP, leading to a very healthy 17/127 ranking (Norris et
al 2015: 8). Apparently being a racial state, with several million
effectively stateless Palestinian people, held in military-controlled
territories and with virtually no civil or political rights, has little
impact on the EIP assessment. Yet this is consistent with what the
Washington-Tel Aviv axis has long told us about Israel as ‘the only
democracy in the region’ (e.g. Goldman 2015, etc). The double standards
are breath-taking. With the Electoral Integrity Project’s US links and
its elitist assumptions about democracy it seems the project has little
sense of conflict of interest, let alone appropriate research method.
References
Anderson, Tim (2010) ‘Hegemony, big money and academic independence’, Australian Universities Review, Vol 53, No 2
Golinger, Eva (2006) The Chavez Code: Cracking U.S. Intervention in Venezuela, Olive Branch Press, Northampton, MA
Latinobarometro (2014)’ La Imagen de los países y las democracias’, informe (report):