Reykjavík Grapevine - 08.04.2005, Blaðsíða 17

Reykjavík Grapevine - 08.04.2005, Blaðsíða 17
Growing Pains for the World’s Oldest Parliament Sometime this year, Spaugstofan, the comedy program that is the country’s most popular television show, took on an eerie role. As it parodied the leaders of Iceland, we realized that the country’s elected representatives are a great deal more cartoonish than their parodies are. In fact, with Prime Minister Halldór Ásgrímsson seemingly taking a cue from the Bush administration and withdrawing from the press entirely (despite promises to the contrary), the parodies on Iceland’s weekly comedy show now seem like they’re running the country. To introduce you to the political situation here: Iceland is home to the world’s oldest parliament, the Alþingi, a democratic government of landholders formed in 930 CE, with activities that were extremely well documented in the Sagas from the 13th century on. Among the many world leaders to celebrate the importance of the Alþingi, former President Clinton made a pilgrimage to Þingvellir during his visit to Iceland this summer. He claimed he had taught about Alþingi at Yale, and that the Althingi “was amazing because it managed to give just enough power to get things done, but not enough to allow for corruption.” The compliment, given at a time when the Bush administration was under heavy fire for the Abu Ghraib scandal, suggested that America could learn a lot from Iceland’s Alþingi. This month, the Icelandic Alþingi attempted to teach America another lesson in democracy and justice by importing what it saw as a needlessly persecuted asylum seeker—in doing so, it exposed how flawed and irrelevant the Alþingi has become. Alþingi United, Country Divided on Fischer Granting Bobby Fischer Icelandic citizenship has not gone over well in the international media. The Boston Globe, one of many American papers to run editorials condemning the action, pointed out how many false assumptions the Icelandic government made in “lionizing” someone who will “become a blight on Icelandic society for years to come.” The European response doesn’t look to be much better. As Róbert Marshall, president of the Icelandic Journalist Union, told me in a phone interview from the annual meeting of the European Union of Journalists in Bilbao “talking with people here, none of them understand why we did this. None of them make any distinction between [Fischer] appearing in Iceland in 1972 and the hatred of Jewish people and the unbelievable nonsense that comes out of this man. They see the whole thing as one package.” In other words, according to American and European critics, the Alþingi painted their country as one that values anti- Semitism and tax evasion. By Bart Cameron With reporting from Paul F. Nikolov Or, How the Progressive Party Won Our Vote

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