By adopting free and democratic elections at the presidential,
legislative, and local levels, Palestinians may be laying down the
foundation of another working democracy in the Middle East. In the
January 9 presidential election, none of the seven candidates,
including Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen), took victory for granted. This was
evident in the hard campaigning by Fatah and Abu Mazen in these
elections, and also in the anxiety inside Fatah regarding the outcome.
Palestinian state television gave candidates equal airtime to present
their programs. Abu Mazen won the elections with only 62 percent of the
vote. The new president's swearing-in ceremony was delayed for a few
days by a court ruling pending charges regarding election violations.
Such signs of democracy carry great symbolic and practical significance
in the Palestinian setting.
In addition to the presidential election, the first two rounds of the
municipal elections (December 23 in 26 West Bank municipalities and
January 27 in 10 Gaza municipalities) reflected the pluralistic nature
of Palestinian politics. There was fierce competition between Fatah and
Hamas (the Islamic Resistance Movement, the main opposition party), a
pattern likely to be repeated in future rounds of municipal elections
as well as in legislative elections now scheduled for July 17. The
Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) is currently working on a new
election law based on a mixture of proportional representation (taking
the whole country as one electoral district) and a district system.
This law is likely to allow for broader participation and
representation in the new Council.
In addition to the importance for Palestinians themselves, Palestine's
electoral undertaking is likely to have a regional spillover effect,
making it less comfortable for regimes in the area to continue
conducting uncontested presidential referenda, and then announcing
results of 90 or even 100 percent in favor. By providing an example of
free, democratic, and pluralistic elections, the Palestinians may be
contributing to the process of reform in the Arab world as a whole.
For this demonstration effect to last, however, the Palestinian example
has to overcome many obstacles and become irreversible. The most
challenging of these obstacles is the continuing Israeli occupation.
The Palestinians managed to conduct free elections under occupation but
they cannot build a full democracy under occupation. For a democracy to
emerge, thrive, and be sustained, it requires a certain degree of
stability and prosperity. A political process to end this occupation
and establish an independent Palestinian state, as described by
President Bush's June 2002 speech and the Road Map, must be set in
motion in parallel to the democratic process that has now been set in
motion by the ongoing wave of elections in Palestine.
Palestinian reform also faces critical internal challenges. One-time
elections, or elections every ten years or so, do not build a
democracy. This year's presidential and legislative elections are the
first since 1996. The ongoing municipal elections are the first to take
place in Gaza, and the second in the West Bank, since the municipal
elections that took place under the Israeli occupation in 1976. One of
the primary reasons for the malfunction of the Palestinian Authority,
the spread of corruption and inefficiency, and perhaps even for the
breakdown of the peace process, was the failure of the Palestinians to
conduct routine and periodic elections. In the absence of elections,
accountability and transparency cease to be possible. Therefore,
periodic and routine elections at all levels-presidential, legislative
and municipal-are a must for creating and consolidating the democratic
experience in Palestine. These issues are in the core discussions
between Abu Mazen and his Fatah movement and the various political
groups, including Hamas, as integral items in any future national
accord that provides for political participation and power sharing.
Establishing a strong democratic tradition also requires a true
separation of powers, supremacy of the rule of law, strict observance
of the principles of accountability and transparency, and a persistent
fight against inefficiency, corruption, and chaos in Palestinian
society. Elections alone cannot make a democracy; they must be matched
by efforts to address the complex economic and social problems in the
Palestinian society, particularly poverty and unemployment.
A democratic process has been set in motion, changing the dynamics of
Palestinian politics. It is up to Palestinians to make this process
irreversible. President Abbas won the elections on a program calling
for ending the "militarization of the Intifada," a euphemism for
stopping violence. For the Palestinians to heed this call in practice,
they need to be convinced that there is a viable alternative that will
end their agony and bring them closer to freedom and independence. This
is where the help of the international community is needed most.
Dr. Ziad Abu-Amer is an elected member of the Palestinian Legislative
Council from Gaza and former Minister of Culture in the Palestinian
Authority.