Iceland review - 2015, Blaðsíða 59

Iceland review - 2015, Blaðsíða 59
ICELAND REVIEW 57 PHOTO BY PÁLL STEFÁNSSON. MID-TERM BLUES One night in the lead-up to the general election in Iceland a lit- tle over two years ago I was at a party where artists and collectors mingled. The discussion turned to politics and the upcoming election, the expectation being that there would be a change of govern- ment since support for the ruling coalition of the Social Democratic Alliance and Left- Green Movement was down to 34 percent. “I’m voting for the Pirates,” said an elder statesman of the European avant garde art scene, clutching a glass of red wine. To my surprise, there was a murmur of agreement from almost everyone in the group around him, mostly people in their sixties and sev- enties. “Well,” I thought, “what else would you expect from a bunch of silver-haired revolutionaries than to vote for a party which wanted to severely limit copyright and allow free distribution of software and music, as well as introduce direct democ- racy.” AHEAD OF THEIR TIME It turns out that these people were a few steps ahead of their time, as they have always been. The 2013 parliamentary elec- tion was won by the center Progressive Iceland’s Progressive Party-Independence Party coalition government recently celebrated its two-year anniversary. Half-way through its term, Halldór Lárusson reflects on the government’s track record. Party with 24.4 percent, and the center- right Independence Party with 26.7 per- cent, securing 19 MPs each. The Pirate Party got 5.1 percent of the vote and won three out of 63 seats—not bad for what some saw as a loony fringe party. Recently, however, the Pirates have been scoring up to 34.5 percent in opinion polls, making them the best-supported party in Iceland. Meanwhile, support for Prime Minister Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson’s Progressive Party has tanked to around 10 percent, while their coalition partner, the Independence Party, has not suffered such big losses. It’s been polling at around 23 percent, although historically their support has usually been around 35-40 percent. Acknowledging that opinion polls can be fickle creatures, if an election were held today, the Pirates would score 24 MPs, more than the two ruling parties com- bined. What started as a political move- ment in Sweden in 2006 and spread to other European countries only to fade away seems to have taken off in Iceland. But how is it that the Pirate Party became the biggest political force in Iceland, two short years after the last election? Probably because the government’s track record has been uneven, to say the least. It has failed to get many of its bills through parliament, while those it has managed to pass have often proved controversial and unpopu- lar. The opposition—including the Left- Greens and Social Democrats, which made up the previous government—has failed to take advantage of the situation and there is deep-seated mistrust of traditional politics. In addition, PM Sigmundur Davíð has proven a divisive figure who has sometimes blamed media bias for his problems and recently claimed that the lack of support for the government was caused by a separation between perception and reality in people’s minds, arguing something along the lines of, “You’ve never had it so good, you just don’t see it.” MAKING PROMISES AND KEEPING THEM The Progressive Party is a funny old beast. A centrist-party founded by farmers at the beginning of the 20th century, it has been in government for much of the time since, either turning to the left or the right for coalition partners. The party’s time in government from 1995-2007 as a coalition partner of the Independence Party ended with its support having virtually evaporat-
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