Iceland review - 2007, Blaðsíða 31

Iceland review - 2007, Blaðsíða 31
ICELAND REVIEW 29 interview Eliza Reid: What are the Social Democratic Alliance’s primary objectives in this new coalition? Ingibjörg Sólrún Gísladóttir: Our main goal in this government is to ensure stability in economic matters. Big f luctuations in exchange rates and interest rates hit smaller companies and normal families. ... We also want to work towards as much harmony as possible in environmental and energy affairs, which has been a source of much debate. ER: The Social Democrats are the first party to implement a policy of gender balance in ministerial posts. As a noted proponent of feminist rights, was that a crucial issue for you when negotiating the posts? ISG: Absolutely. [Last year] I declared that I would not take the Social Democrats into a government unless there was equal representation between men and women in our ministerial team. The Social Democrats emphasize environmental issues and equality issues because the party has a feminist background. It must remain faithful to that background and those values and try as much as it can to improve the involvement of women. ER: Instead of entering the coalition with the center-right Independence Party, why was no left-wing coalition formed with parties with smaller representation in which you would have been named Prime Minister? ISG: [Forming a left-wing coalition] was not a realistic option because there was no willingness to cooperate between the Left-Green Movement and the Progressive Party. Practically speaking, it was all but impossible, although we would have wanted that option. ... What was lacking was the belief that such a cooperation would actually work out. There is no gain for the Social Democrats to lead a coalition with a woman as the first Prime Minister and be like the mother in the front seat with the kids yelling and screaming in the backseat. That would not have been a great achievement and not beneficial for the Social Democrats or for women. You need to have full faith in [a coalition’s] viability and I felt the present coalition was a more realistic option under the circumstances. ER: How do you work towards a compromise on big issues like EU membership, the environment and whaling, where you have vast differences between the ideologies of the Independence Party and Social Democrats? ISG: The problem is that some of these issues do not develop along traditional ideological lines. Take the European matter. The Social Democrats are the only party that has wanted to put applying for membership on the agenda. No other party has been willing to do that, neither from the left nor the right. So we do not have any partner in that area. You can say the same thing about the whaling issue. There are differences on that issue within all parties. As for environmental matters, it would not have been any easier to reach a compromise there with the Progressives, who have been in favor of heavy industry and harnessing energy, nor the Left-Green Alliance, who have been on the other side of the spectrum. In all these cases, one would have had to work towards a compromise. ER: In what issues do the two parties have similar approaches? ISG: In the economic arena. We need to achieve stability in the economy and to make difficult decisions because we have such a large majority behind us. In the coalition formation negotiations, we also achieved a good emphasis on welfare issues, which was the nucleus of our campaign in the election. ER: In future elections, do you think that being in this grand coalition with the Independence Party will make you less of an alternative to them? ISG: Of course it depends on how this collaboration goes. And what we have to be careful about is to take care of our own profile. Although we are in this collaboration we keep our own identity. The two parties aren’t being merged; we’re just founding a coalition on certain issues. ER: Is there a niche for a tiny but successful nation like Iceland on the international stage? ISG: I think we should be in environmental and energy affairs. ... Seventy percent of our energy consumption is through renewable sources. Probably no other nation in the world has as good a knowledge of using geothermal energy. The fact that we are so few can also be a strength. ... Our lack of military, which some people undoubtedly consider a weakness, can also be an asset because then we can be the proponents of peaceful solutions to disputes. We can be of use to the international community because we are a threat to no one. ER: The Social Democrats campaigned on withdrawing Iceland from the Coalition of the Willing. The current government charter says that the government “regrets the war in Iraq and desires peace in the Middle East.” Should that not have been more strongly worded because of your party’s opinion before the election? ISG: If I had been able to choose the words completely myself, I would have put it differently, but we had to take into consideration that we were constructing a coalition made of a leading party in the previous government, which made a decision to be in the Coalition of the Willing, together with a party that was on the forefront of the opposition and fought against this from the beginning. We decided, instead of focusing too much on the past, on this declaration that “we regret the war in Iraq.” I think it is a big achievement. It is in our hands to look toward the future. Newly appointed Foreign Minister Ingibjörg Sólrún Gísladóttir knows her politics. After serving three consecutive terms as a Mayor of Reykjavík, she became the leader of the Social Democrats. In the aftermath of the parliamentary elections earlier this summer, she helped engineer the new governing coalition between the nation’s two most successful parties. The politico speaks about the new order, Iceland’s role on the world stage, and her feminist roots. The Art of Compromise By eliza reid Photo By Páll StefánSSon
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