Reykjavík Grapevine - 09.03.2012, Side 8

Reykjavík Grapevine - 09.03.2012, Side 8
8 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 3 — 2012 I DRINK YOUR MILKSHAKE! Norwegian and British prospectors dis- covered strong evidence that there is oil in the so-called Dragon Area, the northeast corner of Icelandic territorial waters. Rock samples showed "active seepage of Juras- sic oil and a working hydrocarbon system." This will in all likelihood make things pretty exciting when a new Icelandic Licensing Round for drilling comes up this spring. While there is no indication as to exactly how much oil there might be, Hermann Guðmundsson, the director of petrol sta- tion chain N1, told reporters that this could “make Iceland one of the richest countries in the world within the next 12 years.” THE pRESIDENT IS RUNNING AFTER ALL After insinuating in his New Year's address that he would not seek re-election, and then refusing for months to give a straight answer when questioned, President Óla- fur Ragnar Grímsson has announced that he will run again this year. This was due in part, he said, to being presented with a petition with 30.000 signatures calling for him to run. Ólafur, who has been president for sixteen years now, could wind up being president for two decades if he wins. How- ever he has said that he may not finish his term if elected. During the time in which he appeared to be indecisive or perhaps se- cretive about his intentions to run or not, a poll conducted by Fréttablaðið showed the largest percentage of respondents wanted him to stay on, followed close behind by Former Minister of Justice Ragna Árnadót- tir (who has since declined to run) and for- mer chair of the Central Bank and current editor of Morgunblaðið Davíð Oddsson. REYKJAvÍK ENERGY pROpERTIES SOLD WITHOUT ADvERTISEMENT Reykjavík Energy (RE) apparently sold at least two of its holdings without ever mak- ing a public advertisement that they were for sale. The City of Reykjavík, which owns 94% of RE, acted on information they re- ceived about the matter and made a formal inquiry to RE. According to data on RE’s website, the sale process of the two hold- ings—Enex Kína and Envent Holding—be- gan in February 2010, with a deal signed in August 19, 2011. While RE only owned 19.53% of Enex Kína and 24.5% of Envent, the sale apparently went underway without the shares being made publicly available. FORMER pM IS ON TRIAL Former Prime Minister Geir H. Haarde is currently standing trial for negligence and mismanagement in the months leading up to Iceland’s financial collapse, despite the best efforts of his brethren in the conser- vative party to get the charges dropped. Geir has maintained that nobody could have predicted the crash and furthermore that there was nothing he could have done to prevent it. Day one was spent drilling Geir, who said that he was happy to finally get a chance to respond to the charges. On day two, former Chair of the Central Bank Davíð Oddsson, among others, testified. He asserted that he had warned Geir about trouble brewing in the banks, and that Geir showed a lack of confidence and trust in Davíð’s words. At the same time, he said he understood Geir not heeding his warnings, as it appeared that the banks were doing quite well financially. pAUL FONTAINE politics | Chaos So, will the Icelandic government survive yet another Grapevine dead- line? probably, but its chances of re-election are looking increasingly grim. This time, though, the threat is emerging from the left, and the landscape of Icelandic politics might hang in the balance. For most of the last 100 years, there have been four major parties in the Icelandic Alþingi: The Independence Party (right/ conservative), The Progressive Party (centre right or centre left, depending on which way the wind blows), The Social Democrats or their equivalent (left) and then a party that’s further left, currently the Left-Greens. There has usually been a splinter party too, (even farther left or farther right), but these almost never last for more than two elections. A NATIONAL AGREEMENT TO GO THE WRONG WAY Even though the line-up is fairly con- sistent, the instruments played are not. During the boom, for example, both The Independence Party and The Progressive Party and even most of The Social Dem- ocratic Alliance Party had become thor- oughbred neo-liberals, moving further to the right and leaving the Left-Greens alone in what had previously been the centre to left part of the spectrum. The economic collapse then led to a left swing, The Social Democrats reaffirmed their leftist roots and formed a govern- ment with the Left-Greens in 2009. In the elections that year, a new party, The Civic Movement, got four MPs in, but started committing hara-kiri almost upon arrival. First, one of its MPs left the party, and then the party itself left the three remaining MPs. Nevertheless, those three MPs, who formed The Move- ment, have managed to make their pres- ence felt in the Alþingi, not least of them Birgitta Jónsdóttir, who has received in- ternational attention for her support of Wikileaks. WHATEvER HAppENED TO THE CENTRE? The municipal elections of 2010 brought a different kind of party to power in Reykjavík. Comedian Jón Gnarr became mayor, heading a coalition of his own Best Party and The Social Democrats. Meanwhile, The Progressive Party, origi- nally a farmers’ party and often weak in the capital, was finally wiped out. Was this the new face of Icelandic politics, the irreverent Best Party taking the place of the sombre old farmers’ party at the cen- tre of the spectrum? In fact, the very notion of centre seems to have changed. Whereas it used to imply people were rather content with things the way they were, not wanting too much of one thing or the other and certainly not radical change, it now ap- pears to be made up of people who felt cheated in the boom, those not satisfied with the results of reconstruction or those opposed to the old four party left- right system. Polls consistently show this to be upwards of half of all voters, so it is small wonder that the new parties would want to appeal to these constituents. THE ANGRY MIDDLE-AGED MEN The old centre party, The Progressives, have meanwhile abdicated from the centre. Their leader Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson usually presents himself as the angry man of Icelandic politics, but with their nationalist rhetoric, they seem to have placed themselves to the right of The Independence Party. Could The Best Party step into the void and repeat its impressive Reykjavík results on a national level? Best Party CEO Heiða Helgadóttir certainly hopes so. She paired up with Guðmundur Ste- ingrímsson to form the Bright Future party. While Guðmundur seems sensible and remains well liked, he is much taint- ed by previously having been a member of no less than two mainstream political parties. So much for outsider status. It should be noted that they an- nounced their candidacy prior to coming up with a platform or even their party’s name. Rather than heralding the begin- ning of a powerful new force in Icelandic politics, this seems more to have encour- aged others to do the same. THE FAR LEFT TURNS RIGHT The new party that has caused the big- gest stir is the one led by Lilja Mósesdót- tir, previously a Left-Green who aban- doned ship halfway through the current term. Lilja has often complained that the left government is not being left enough, so it would seem reasonable that after setting off on her own, that her party, would be even farther to the left. Right? Wrong. Lilja has also headed for the centre, calling up former Independence Party member and beloved weather- man (yes, really) Siggi Stormur (“Siggi Storm”) to front the party with her. Perhaps inevitably, the party is called Solidarity, and perhaps just as inevitably, Siggi has already left amid rivalry over who gets the most airtime, and says he will not vote for the party. Without Siggi’s vote, Lilja’s following will no doubt mostly come at the expense of the left. Meanwhile The Movement is showing signs of life, with reconcilia- tion between party MPs and other party members in the works. It’s hard to see any major policy differ- ences between the new parties. All claim to represent a broad front of agreement cutting across old divisions, while in- creasingly fracturing the political land- scape. All want a substantial reduction in people’s debts, as do most people, but no one seems to have a realistic plan for achieving this. AND THE WINNER IS… What does seem obvious is that the cur- rent two-party government will not sur- vive the next election unchanged, being weakened both by constant attacks from the right and splintering on the left. The solution would be to bring in other part- ners, but since the current government has a hard time reaching agreements, would a three or four party coalition re- ally be more manageable? And would Lil- ja, if induced to join, be more willing to cooperate with the government, as head of her own party rather than a member of the Left-Greens? Perhaps we’ll see a Best Party-style landslide of one of the new parties, thus presenting a credible alternative to the four established ones while taking votes from both left and right. But with still a year to go, it is more likely that new parties will appear rather than old ones merging, this seems remote. The Best Party itself benefitted greatly from being the only viable alternative to the old four, but no party is now in this position. And no party has yet suggested that rarity in Icelandic politics: an electoral alliance. The alternative is clear. According to polls, The Independence Party has regained most of its strength (around 35% of the vote), even if it is unquestion- ably the party most responsible for the collapse. The increased fracturing will probably put them in a key position after the next election, regardless of whether that’s what most Icelanders want. All Tomorrow’s parties (And Yesterday’s Too) Words Valur Gunnarsson Illustration Inga María Brynjarsdóttir Does any of these parties appeal to you? Why/why not? Do we maybe need yet another party? What would that party be called, and what should its purpose be? Drop us a line: letters@grapevine.is Continued ATV AND BUGGY TOURS BY THE BLUE LAGOON www.lavatours.is - atv4x4@atv4x4.is - +354-857-3001 Buggy tours with driver guide: 1-hour 9.900 ISK per seat. 2-hour 16.900 ISK per seat. 3 to 4-hour 22.000 ISK per seat. ATV tours: 1-hour 9.900 ISK p.p two on each bike. 2-hour 16.900 ISK p.p two on each bike. 3 to 4-hour 22.000 ISK p.p two on each bike. ATV ADVENTURES ICELAND facebook.com/atvtours Pick-up in Reykjavík is 3.400 ISK p.p. Pick-up times 9:00/11:00/13:00 and 16:15 “Perhaps inevitably, the party is called Solidarity, and perhaps just as inevitably, Siggi has already left amid rivalry over who gets the most airtime, and says he will not vote for the party.”

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