Categories: News

Autocrats are rigging elections to stay in power and getting away with it

Crucially, it’s not just national elections that can put a strain on peace and stability. In Brazil, 22 people were murdered in the run up to the local government elections of 2002, leading 410 towns to request additional security from the police.

With such harrowing stakes, what can be done to defend democracy?

There are many important organisations around the world trying to promote democracy and ensure better quality elections, but all too often they lack the international backing that they need to have an effect.

This is because international support for high quality democracy and free and fair elections is on the wane.

For one thing, authoritarian states like China and Russia are becoming bigger players in international politics, and they certainly don’t exert pressure on governments that fail to hold high quality elections.

And for another, the election of Donald Trump in the US has called into question the willingness of the world’s most powerful nation to defend democracy either at home or abroad.

Trump’s open embrace of authoritarian strongmen from Turkey to Egypt to the Philippines sends a reassuring signal to would-be despots in the rest of the world who might once have feared American sanction.

As a result, instead of defending democracy, recent international developments have made it easier to rig elections.

This trend threatens to erode the credibility of the election as an institution; worse still, it might undermine global public support for democracy itself.

But while there are many ways to rig an election, there are also many ways to save democracy.

Right now, the despots are winning the battle – but if the world rallies behind it, democracy may yet win the war.

 

By Nic Cheeseman and Brian Klaas. This article was first published by The Conversation

(255 VIEWS)

Page: 1 2 3

Charles Rukuni

The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

Recent Posts

What is wrong with Zimbabwe? It’s not the economy but the government and its leadership

Zimbabwe is currently in turmoil after it devalued its five-month old currency, the Zimbabwe Gold…

October 1, 2024

Zimbabwe devalues ZiG by 44%, reduces amount people can take out from $10 000 to $2 000

Zimbabwe today devalued its local currency, the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG), by 44% to trade at…

September 27, 2024

Can today be the turning point for the ZiG?

Today is the third quarterly payment date (QPD) for the year, the second after the…

September 25, 2024

My 50 years of writing- Part Two

I left The Chronicle after nine years and returned to freelancing. I started The Insider,…

September 24, 2024

My 50 years of writing

I have been quiet for some time. Thinking. I have been running The Insider single-handedly…

September 22, 2024

ZiG payments now  account for 40% of transactions- 80% of government trade

Payments in Zimbabwe’s latest currency, the Zimbabwe Gold, now account for 40% of transactions, up…

August 22, 2024