It’s been 20 years since the fall of the Soviet empire in eastern Europe, but as far as our media are concerned the region could still be hidden behind an iron curtain. The death of Polish president Lech Kaczynski and many of his senior colleagues in a plane crash — treated by the European media as one of the major events of the year — rated only No.3 on the ABC news on Sunday, and it could manage only page seven in yesterday’s Age.
Yet the crash was rich with symbolism. Take the fact that a Polish leader could die in an accident in Russia without arousing even the slightest hint that the Russians were responsible: when else in history could that have been possible? (Compare the allegations surrounding the 1943 death of General Sikorski.)
Or the fact that Kaczynski, a controversial and divisive figure, could inspire such a united display of national mourning in Poland — suggesting a degree of political maturity that was unthinkable a decade or two ago.
But having never been given any background, Australian readers and viewers can hardly be expected to understand why Kaczynski was controversial, what his death signifies, or (perhaps most interestingly) how there are some lessons to be learned for Australian politics. So here’s a quick summary.
Like most European countries, Poland has a conservative party (called Law & Justice) as well as a liberal party (Civic Platform). In the 2005 elections, the then social-democrat government was so unpopular that the centre-right parties were left competing against each other. Instead of forming a broad coalition, as had been universally expected, the conservatives (who came out narrowly ahead) formed government on their own, leaving the liberals in opposition.
The differences between them match fairly obviously with some of the fault lines in our Liberal Party. Law & Justice — led by Kaczynski and his twin brother Jaroslaw — are nationalistic, anti-gay, pro-death penalty, suspicious of free-market reforms and European integration, and obsessed with fighting communists. Civic Platform (led by current prime minister Donald Tusk), on the other hand, supports the EU, human rights and deregulation, and pledged to withdraw of Poland’s troops from Iraq.
To gain a parliamentary majority, Poland’s conservatives relied on two parties of the extreme right — the equivalent of half the Liberal Party teaming with Family First and One Nation. But the difficulties of that relationship eventually led to fresh elections in 2007, in which Law & Justice were soundly beaten. The liberals gained 76 seats, the extremist parties were wiped out, and Tusk formed government in coalition with the small rural-based People’s Party.
Kaczynski remained president (a largely ceremonial position), but it was widely expected that he would be beaten by a Civic Platform candidate in elections later this year.
For Australian commentators, all this is deeply alien. For them, “right-wing” denotes a single category embracing free-marketeers and moral conservatives; the idea that the two could be enemies rarely crosses their minds. Hence the regular efforts to paint John Howard (or, even more perversely Tony Abbott) as a friend of small government and deregulation.
Our way of dividing up the political spectrum fails to make sense of the political experience in much of the world, including the new democracies of eastern Europe. (Hungary’s elections, held Sunday, make the same point — good luck finding results in the papers here.) If we look closely it even fails to make sense of the internal divisions in our own Liberal Party.
But if the tragedy in Smolensk doesn’t make anyone notice Poland, then it’s hard to think what will.
The media hardly covers itself in glory covering non-English speaking nations, and even then it is really only the US and UK, NZ, Canada, South Africa and India get very little shrift.
When it comes to non-English speaking nations, they either fall back to stereotypes such as the reflexive anti-Indonesian copy we have come to expect and the skewed view of China as a monolithic communist dictatorship, or they get ignored as all ‘too hard for the reader to understand’ (code for we can’t afford to have a reporter to cover it and besides our readers / viewers are only interested in what we tell them they want, ie, sex, sport and celebrities.
All very true & very interesting Charles but one area in which we differ greatly from our Eastern European brothers & sisters is in the way the media reports on the Right.
There is a greater interest in reporting on policy rather than ideology. Whereas here in cozy Oz we have a soft Left to rabid Left media represented by Fairfax, ABC, Seven, Nine, Sky News, Crikey, etc who don’t really care much about respective policy as they have made up their mind the the Left must always rule and that the Right can only rule occasionally under sufferance and only to clean up the mess left behind by progressive Govt.
One problem with Australian media is its focus on a very narrow range of news. Items are considered newsworthy here which would be ignored for their banality and triviality elsewhere. If our media gave us more intelligent discussion of international events they would have a wider range of subject areas and we would have more interesting newspapers and television.
The Australian newspaper is actually a creditable exception with its expanded coverage of international affairs.
Re the death of the Polish president and many significant people from politics, the church and the military: one should have expected a better coverage in Australia, if only out of respect for the large population of Polish heritage that live here.
I wonder what happened to the Australia of even a few years ago where we seemed to have lost our capacity for interest in any matter that is not generated in the first instance by some money making concern. The Poles have made a considerable contribution to Aust society, in particular their love of education. Many of us Baby Boomers witnessed our friends’ Polish parents reverence for getting a university education. We need to learn from history, and the 20 years fo Polish freedom has much to teach us. We simply bitch and moan about our political leaders not seeming to appreciate the incredible gifts we have been given in our freedom to use or waste our life in Oz
And that dear Crikey is why :
a)I Subscribe to Crikey
b) I Subscribe to The Guardian (UK) Newspaper
c) And fervently wish that Aussie papers would be banned from further contaminating the minds of the general public. They are useless, vitriolic, mindless, complaining of everything under The sun- and dish out mostly unintelligent, insulting, opinionated (sans objectivity) garbage.
ALSO- JUST THINK OF ALL THE CARBON EMISSIONS AND TREES THAT THAT WOULD SAVE!