A discussion with diverse regional experts about the many significant elections that have already or will soon take place in 2024.
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Thank you all for coming out.
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It's really wonderful to see a full room,
full house starting off the new year.
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And this is our first of the,
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institute
wide generative theme initiative.
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So I'll say a little bit about that
in a second.
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We first want to welcome all of you.
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We'll have a few more people coming
in, I'm sure.
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Before you too long,
want to thank many people.
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Thanks to Chloe
for all the behind the scenes work
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and ordering the sandwiches
and and feeding you all
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thanks to our tech team
in the International Institute.
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Kaia, Ryan and André
who who organized the flyers in the website
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and will be posting today's video
thanks to Oliver, Warren and Mai
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for creating a video today.
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We didn't do the event.
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We chose not to do the event hybrid,
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but we will have a recording
and it will be posted online.
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So if you like what
you hear, tell your friends.
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Thanks to Peggy for,
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the communicate, our communications
director who will be writing about this.
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Always thanks to Catherine and Ron,
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who are the backbone of so many things
in the institute.
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And Cindy Fan,
our fearless leader, is traveling now.
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She's the vice provost
of the International Institute.
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David Kim and I are the associate
vice provost, and we are here
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to welcome you and organize this event.
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We'd like to take a minute
to acknowledge the land we are on,
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the unceded land of the Gabrielino and Tongva people.
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And now UCLA is a land grant
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institution,
which, as AI informed me this morning,
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because I had to Google
what exactly is a land grant institution.
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I've been saying it all these years
and I didn't really know what it was.
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So AI informed me that land
grant universities
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were established
under the Morrill Acts of 1862.
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In 1890, to provide a, quote, practical
education for the working classes
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by teaching agriculture, military tactics
and the mechanic arts, unquote.
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We are meeting in Bunche Hall, named after
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Ralph Bunche, who was a leader of the US
civil rights movement
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and the winner of the 1950
Nobel Peace Prize for his mediation
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between Palestinians
and Israelis in the late 1940s.
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And that brings me to also acknowledge
the political moment we are living
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a context of expanding war
in the Middle East, a finishing a year
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of tremendous suffering there,
as well as in Ukraine, Russia, Sudan.
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Never mind the climactic crisis
we're seeing around the world.
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Floods in West Africa, hurricanes
in Thailand, North Carolina, Florida
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and growing threats to democracy
and the drying up of the Amazon.
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Thank you.
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Yes, and I'm sure I left out
many other places and spaces
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where suffering is happening, where crises
are, where the world is at risk.
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So forgive me for
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not mentioning every place,
and every issue
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that is of concern
to should be of concern to all of us.
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But there are also some new possibilities
emerging,
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some bright spots on the global stage.
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And we hope to hear a little bit of that
and bring that into today's conversation.
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Today's panel is part
of the International Institute's
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Generative Theme initiative,
centered on a triptych of important
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and potentially contentious concepts
democracy, freedom and truth.
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The initiative is oriented to prompting
reflection on what each of these terms
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means, individually and in combination,
in dialog with each other.
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The International Institute
for those of you who aren't familiar.
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We welcome you to peruse the website.
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There's also a web page
about the democracy.
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See Freedom and Truth Initiative.
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You can also sign up for our mailing lists
and our monthly calendar.
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It brings together research centers
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and interdepartmental degree programs
with people
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who have in-depth knowledge
about many regions
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and matters in the world,
but we often work in isolation.
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So the aim of this panel,
and the aim of the Generative Themes
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initiative, is to generate conversation
across regions,
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across this expertise,
by considering what we can learn
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from looking at some of the many
significant elections that have happened
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or that will soon happen
around the world in 2024.
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The video from,
I told you that, will be on the website.
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And if you don't want to be in the video,
just don't sit in front of the camera.
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We've assembled four panelists,
each of whom
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will speak briefly to important elections
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in different nations
or regions of the world.
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We have India, Mexico, Latin America,
and the European Union represented.
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And to the issues
that these bring to the fore.
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We know these aren't
all of the regions or elections
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that are happening
in this year of super elections.
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But we want to invite, conversation
around these regions
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and others that you may be familiar with
and to think together.
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What can we learn from these
and other electoral flashpoints
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around the globe during this moment,
this current shifting world order?
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And then in in anticipation of the US
elections next month.
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All right.
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So, David, who went running out
to see to look for our fourth
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panelist is back
and he's going to introduce the speakers.
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Thank you.
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Thank you.
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Marjorie.
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I would also like to begin by,
echoing her gratitude for all of you,
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not just, being here,
but also for your support.
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It's wonderful to have the chance
of bringing everybody together.
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I stepped outside for a second
because our fourth panelist,
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who was coming from
outside of UCLA, is a little lost,
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but I hear that she's in the building,
so hopefully,
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she can make her way a little by little
and then join us in a minute.
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So let me begin
by introducing you to the panelists.
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It's really my pleasure of doing so,
professor Susanna Hecht.
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To my right is Professor
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with several appointments
at the Luskin School of Public Affairs
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and the Institute of the Environment
and Sustainability at UCLA.
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She also serves as director
of the Center for, for Brazilian Studies.
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She's proficient in numerous languages,
and her publications focus on topics
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as far reaching
as migration, urbanization,
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the Amazon, and natural resources
in South America.
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Professor Hecht will address three
extremely dicey elections in countries
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that have Amazon Sovereignties Venezuela
poster country for election fraud.
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And there's also the
country of my birth, Bolivia,
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with its, staged, auto coup.
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That's
also the country where my wife, is born.
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In Peru. No connection there.
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These are all,
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flailing, if not failed states,
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but the implications for the capacity
of governance over critical and large
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Amazonian areas has much broader effects
at the level of local systems,
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climate change
and the rise of clandestine economies.
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Let me move that to, her rights,
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and introduce,
Doctor Gaspar Rivera-Salgado,
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doctor Rivera-Salgado is director
of the UCLA center
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for Mexican Studies and project director
at the UCLA Labor Center
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and core faculty in the UCLA
Labor Studies Program.
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He directs the Global Labor Initiative
with an emphasis on cross-border
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worker to worker collaborations between
the United States, Mexico, and Canada.
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Doctor Rivera-Salgado, will address
last June's landslide victory of Mexico's
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first female president,
Claudia Sheinbaum.
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She will.
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He will consider both a power claim
but assumes with significant ability
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to pass constitutional reforms
and the challenges she will face
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given complex political dynamics
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and in challenges, insecurity
and the rule of law in Mexico.
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Then we have our third panelists,
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Tejas Parasher.
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Professor Parasher is assistant
professor of political theory
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with a joint appointment in the Department
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of Political Science
and the International Institute.
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So he's one of our teaching faculty.
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He's the author of an award
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winning book, Radical Democracy
in Modern Indian Political Thought.
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It appeared with Cambridge University
Press in 2023.
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His research explores the philosophical,
the political philosophy
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of collective self-determination,
political representation, and statehood.
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Last but not least,
our final panelist has just joined us.
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We're so glad that you're here.
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And she is a visitor to UCLA.
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Professor Klinger is a Thomas
Mann fellow, this year.
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And she is Professor
and chair of Digital Democracy,
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as well as a member of the board
of directors of the European New School
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of Digital Studies at the European
University of Viadrina in Frankfurt
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Oder in Germany.
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Professor Klinger will discuss
the new European Parliament
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that was elected in June 2024,
in relation to the upcoming US election,
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with a comparative perspective
of on democratic vulnerabilities,
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democratic backsliding and safeguarding
core democratic institutions.
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She brings a longitudinal perspective
to consider the role of election campaigns
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on social media,
and both the success of far
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right parties and divisions within them.
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So thank you once again
for joining the panel.
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Let's give them,
first of all, a round of applause.
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We have asked each panelist
to speak for about 5 to 10 minutes,
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and then jump right into a discussion
as soon as possible.
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The sooner the better, because I'm
sure you will have lots of questions
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and we very much
look forward to the discussion.
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Thank you. So let's begin with,
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let's begin with Tejas.
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Please come forward.
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Okay. Thank you everyone.
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So thank you, David.
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First of all, and to Marjorie,
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and both of you for organizing
this important event for the invitation.
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I'm really looking forward, to discussing
with you and with my co-panelists.
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So, as I think both David
and Marjorie mentioned at the beginning,
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this is a critically important year. Even,
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even by the standards of what's
been happening over the last five years.
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The, I mean,
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this is the most obviously the year
when the greatest number of human beings
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either have already gone to the polls
or will be going to the polls
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collectively in human history.
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And what I want to do in my, in my remarks
is, is to look at the largest
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of these democratic exercises,
which was the Indian parliamentary
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elections,
which happened in April and May of 2024.
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I want to say a little bit
about some dynamics,
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that I observed
or have observed in retrospect,
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about these elections
and then use them to say some
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make some more general remarks
about the relationship between,
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I think, democracy
and liberalism and rights
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and that kind of triangular relationship,
because those aren't the same thing.
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And I think part
of what the Indian election,
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I shown me
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is that that relationship
is in some sort of moment of evolution.
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I'm not sure what it's heading towards,
but there seems to be
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some kind of transformation
happening in that kind of relationship.
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Okay, so what exactly happened?
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So, so in the 2024
general election in India, the incumbent,
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the ruling party Bharatiya Janata Party
or BJP, led by Prime
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Minister Narendra Modi, was expected
to win a decisive victory, right?
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This was the expectation
going into the elections.
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And if you looked at polling numbers,
including exit polls,
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into the early stages of the election
in April, then then the prediction
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was that the BJP would certainly get
an absolute majority on its own.
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So just, as a single party.
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So this would have meant that
it would get at least 273 of the total
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543 elected seats
in the national parliament.
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So that was
that was sort of the baseline prediction.
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And then further, the prediction was that
it would actually beat the seat
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share that it had received in 2019,
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the 3 or 3 feature
that it had gained in the 2019 election.
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So the expectation was not that
the BJP would win,
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not just that, but that it would do
better than it had done
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five years earlier
when it had won a clear landslide victory.
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Right. And
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it, it actually in the lead
up to the election, in the campaigning,
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BJP party leaders were pushing for more
than 400 seats on, on its own as a party,
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which is something that has not happened,
in Indian history, except once in 1984.
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Right.
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So this would have meant
a full on supermajority win.
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Now what? So what happened?
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So this was the prediction going
into the elections and, what happened?
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Well, the in the end,
the BJP did win the 2024 election.
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So it is the governing party today.
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And actually just this this, morning,
this evening at one elections
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in a crucial northern state.
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So it's still, you know, it won.
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But its victory
margin was substantially less, than either
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party leaders
or pollsters had predicted or anticipated.
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So on its own,
the BJP only gained 240 seats,
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which is
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far less than what it had gained in 2019,
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and it only actually gained a majority,
through its coalition partners.
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Right.
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So it had formed this coalition
with other parties called the National
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Democratic Alliance or the NDA,
and that is what led that.
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It's that coalition
that led the BJP to form a majority.
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And even that majority,
that absolute majority was short of 300.
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So even as part of a coalition, it
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fell short of the single party, like,
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you know, the vote
it had gotten as a single party in 2019.
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And the party also lost some key
constituencies in northern states
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where it had expected,
to sail to easy victory.
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Right.
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So I think the victory of the BJP,
the electoral victory of the BJP was not,
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surprising to anyone,
but the fact that it happened through
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such a slim margins,
did catch, many people off guard.
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I don't know if anyone saw this,
like, video that went viral of an
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a pollster crying on command magazine.
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Realize that, you know, his like,
predictions had not come true.
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It's. Yeah. Yeah.
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Okay.
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So that's what happened.
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Now, I think there have been a few,
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some of the commentary produced
in the immediate aftermath of the election
256
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was a little,
257
00:14:41,200 --> 00:14:43,760
too optimistic, too exaggerated,
that saying that this marks
258
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the end of populism,
the end of strongman politics.
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I don't think that's true.
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And as I said, the BJP
just won another election.
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So, you know, it doesn't I don't think it
marks that kind of watershed moment
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of an end of a certain era
that it started.
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00:14:56,360 --> 00:15:00,320
But it is it is striking for
and for a few other reasons.
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And there are a number of factors
behind this result.
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Right.
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So, so,
we can imagine things like regionalism,
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the importance of regionalism
in Indian politics, the idea,
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the concern about welfare provisions, the,
you know,
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the reality of India's lagging
growth and job growth numbers and so on.
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So there were a number of factors,
but one particularly important
271
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one that I want to just briefly
highlight is a concern that had,
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become very salient about the problem
of constitutional erosion.
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Right.
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And this is a term that sometimes, now,
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become current
in political and constitutional theory.
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So constitutional erosion,
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there was a real tangible fear
in the early months of 2024
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that if the BJP were to win
through a supermajority vote,
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it would have unimpeded power to amend,
fundamentally amend the Constitution.
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Right.
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So the kind of parliamentary structure
that had been put into place
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through this constitutional structure
that has been more or less functioning,
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seamlessly
since 1950, would be threatened.
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Right?
285
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So this while this was obviously
a parliamentary election,
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there was a fear that it was
287
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the supermajority win of more than 400
would have given Modi
288
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almost an executive power
to amend the Constitution.
289
00:16:19,760 --> 00:16:23,160
And this is something that has happened
in India once before, during a period
290
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called the emergency, right?
291
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This two year period in 1975, from 1975
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to 1977, where there was a real,
293
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you know, interruption of democracy
and a changing of the Constitution,
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there was a fear
that this was going to happen again.
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And what I think that one of the things
that I just want to mention
296
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that was really striking to me,
297
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and it has been, even more striking is
I kind of look back on this election.
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Is that something that the otherwise
shaky coalition of opposition parties did
299
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successfully was to highlight
the election as a fight
300
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over the Constitution, over
constitutional values.
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Right.
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00:16:56,680 --> 00:17:01,200
And so the election came to be framed
as an election for liberal rights,
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for a Liberal division,
a Liberal vision of a division of powers,
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you know, the sanctity of the judiciary
and so on,
305
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but also for the protection
of sort of basic
306
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civil
liberties and individual rights, right.
307
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And so this
308
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election became framed as an election for
the values of constitutional liberalism
309
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as much as or more than an election
between different competing
310
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visions of nationalism,
which is what I, I think the contest
311
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between the BJP and other parties
had been through the 20 tens.
312
00:17:29,400 --> 00:17:32,520
You know, whether or not you imagine
India to be a secular republic or not,
313
00:17:32,680 --> 00:17:36,280
whether or not you imagine, national
you know, what you imagine
314
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your vision of national security to be.
315
00:17:37,560 --> 00:17:41,400
I think much of the debate had been about
nationalism and what I'm really struck by
316
00:17:41,400 --> 00:17:44,320
is that in 2024,
the debate seems to have shifted
317
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to towards a defense of liberal values
and sort of basic liberal,
318
00:17:48,120 --> 00:17:50,040
what we might call basic liberal values.
319
00:17:50,040 --> 00:17:51,800
So a lot of the rhetoric against
320
00:17:51,800 --> 00:17:55,640
the incumbent party
was either framed as a defense of core
321
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constitutional values of the Constitution
itself, or as an institutional defense,
322
00:18:01,800 --> 00:18:02,520
of pluralist
323
00:18:02,520 --> 00:18:06,480
democracy, separation of powers
and individual rights.
324
00:18:06,480 --> 00:18:06,720
Right.
325
00:18:06,720 --> 00:18:10,200
So, so there were lots of opposition
rallies held through March,
326
00:18:10,200 --> 00:18:13,200
which were literally titled
Save the Constitution,
327
00:18:13,960 --> 00:18:14,200
right.
328
00:18:14,200 --> 00:18:15,720
And copies of the Constitution
329
00:18:15,720 --> 00:18:18,800
became this kind of totemic symbol
that people were holding up.
330
00:18:19,040 --> 00:18:21,400
And I think this is really new.
331
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I found this as someone who works on
the Indian Constitution
332
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in competitive perspective.
333
00:18:27,120 --> 00:18:30,960
I found this kind of mass uptake
of a constitutional language of liberal
334
00:18:30,960 --> 00:18:32,880
right to be very new, right.
335
00:18:32,880 --> 00:18:34,240
As I mentioned, it's different.
336
00:18:34,240 --> 00:18:36,520
It was it struck
me as being quite different
337
00:18:36,520 --> 00:18:39,520
from how the debate
between the BJP and its,
338
00:18:39,960 --> 00:18:43,160
opponents had been happening since 2014,
which is more about nationalism.
339
00:18:43,360 --> 00:18:46,360
But it was also different
from the inter brief
340
00:18:46,360 --> 00:18:49,680
interruption of democratic politics
in India in the mid 1970s.
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Right, which I just mentioned earlier.
342
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So this period called the emergency,
where, martial law is,
343
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is put into place
under emergency measures.
344
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And, and democracy
is effectively suspended.
345
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There's a lot of violations
of civil liberties and so on.
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00:19:03,560 --> 00:19:06,560
At this moment, if you look back
to the documents produced and the kind of
347
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rhetoric, political discourse in the 70s,
the critique of democracy,
348
00:19:10,600 --> 00:19:13,600
of the emergency
of martial law, of emergency powers
349
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was as a defense of democracy
and popular sovereignty, right?
350
00:19:17,200 --> 00:19:21,480
The power of the people
that this is not a democratic, act.
351
00:19:21,800 --> 00:19:22,080
Right.
352
00:19:22,080 --> 00:19:24,760
And so what we need
is a defense of democracy.
353
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We need more robust forms of democracy.
354
00:19:26,400 --> 00:19:30,000
It's a critique of kind of one party rule
that doesn't seem to be happening now.
355
00:19:31,080 --> 00:19:32,840
The opposition to Modi,
356
00:19:32,840 --> 00:19:37,360
to the BJP in 2024 seems to be enveloped
in this liberal language of freedom
357
00:19:37,360 --> 00:19:41,160
and individual rights,
which is new to me, like at least
358
00:19:41,160 --> 00:19:44,480
at the mass level, seems new to me
as a dynamic in Indian politics.
359
00:19:44,800 --> 00:19:47,840
And I think this is where,
this is where I just want to close in.
360
00:19:47,840 --> 00:19:50,000
I think this this is something
361
00:19:50,000 --> 00:19:52,560
really interesting, like something
really interesting is happening,
362
00:19:52,560 --> 00:19:56,040
I think both in the Indian case
and I think more broadly, right, that
363
00:19:56,160 --> 00:19:59,160
first of all, in the Indian case,
this kind of,
364
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grassroot, the growth of this
kind of grassroots liberalism,
365
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right, that that opposite
366
00:20:05,880 --> 00:20:09,560
opposition
to perceived erosion of democracy
367
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is actually framed,
not in the language of democracy itself,
368
00:20:13,040 --> 00:20:16,640
but in the language of individual rights,
which is not a language that I think
369
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has really had resonance
in Indian political discourse
370
00:20:20,160 --> 00:20:22,320
in much of the country,
much for much of the 20th century.
371
00:20:22,320 --> 00:20:26,160
So this is new and then I think globally
as well, what it what it really shows.
372
00:20:26,160 --> 00:20:29,800
I think it's signaled
something that that, you know, there's
373
00:20:30,400 --> 00:20:34,160
there's been this talk of the rise
of something called illiberal democracy
374
00:20:34,200 --> 00:20:38,240
with reference to Hungary, a democracy
that kind of doubles down on principles
375
00:20:38,240 --> 00:20:42,480
of popular sovereignty
and charismatic leadership, but is deeply
376
00:20:42,640 --> 00:20:45,880
skeptical, critical, and even rejects
right frameworks and so on.
377
00:20:46,440 --> 00:20:50,760
And in opposition to illiberal democracy,
I think the uptake of liberalism itself,
378
00:20:50,760 --> 00:20:53,760
this kind of reclamation
of the language of liberalism,
379
00:20:54,240 --> 00:20:57,080
by actors and political thinkers
380
00:20:57,080 --> 00:21:00,080
and activists who I think never
really had much to do with liberalism.
381
00:21:00,160 --> 00:21:02,280
I mean, you see, the Communist Party
in India, for instance,
382
00:21:02,280 --> 00:21:05,600
coming out in defense of liberal rights,
and this is just such a,
383
00:21:06,160 --> 00:21:09,640
you know, it's this kind of consensus
around the value
384
00:21:09,640 --> 00:21:11,640
of constitutional liberalism,
which I think is really new.
385
00:21:11,640 --> 00:21:14,760
So, so I think this
what this shows globally and more
386
00:21:14,800 --> 00:21:19,920
in more kind of abstract,
ways is ism is a very different argument
387
00:21:19,920 --> 00:21:22,320
for the electoral process,
for the value of democracy,
388
00:21:22,320 --> 00:21:26,040
beyond more familiar arguments
about ensuring, accountable government.
389
00:21:26,040 --> 00:21:26,480
Right.
390
00:21:26,480 --> 00:21:31,120
So it's shows how we can view
elections that are happening now
391
00:21:31,640 --> 00:21:35,320
as kind of contests
over liberalism itself.
392
00:21:35,320 --> 00:21:39,320
Contests over the value of individual
rights, rather than simply,
393
00:21:39,320 --> 00:21:42,440
as I think we've tended to see them
as contests over Democratic,
394
00:21:44,040 --> 00:21:46,840
robustness of democratic institutions.
395
00:21:46,840 --> 00:21:50,000
You know, that's usually how democratic
backsliding and erosion have been seen.
396
00:21:50,000 --> 00:21:53,520
But I think there's something much deeper
going on here that the Indian elections
397
00:21:53,520 --> 00:21:57,360
are a kind of indicator
of this kind of debate about whether
398
00:21:58,080 --> 00:22:01,080
liberalism itself needs to be protected.
399
00:22:01,440 --> 00:22:02,880
In a democratic framework.
400
00:22:02,880 --> 00:22:04,200
And what are the stakes of doing that?
401
00:22:04,200 --> 00:22:06,240
So I'll stop there.
I think there's a lot more I can say.
402
00:22:06,240 --> 00:22:06,720
There's a lot more
403
00:22:06,720 --> 00:22:10,680
I didn't say about these elections,
but I'm hoping we can come back,
404
00:22:10,920 --> 00:22:14,160
to some of these, questions
and connections in the conversation.
405
00:22:14,160 --> 00:22:15,320
So thank you.
406
00:22:15,320 --> 00:22:18,520
Well, thank you for coming out here on,
407
00:22:19,560 --> 00:22:21,760
a beautiful day where you might be
408
00:22:21,760 --> 00:22:24,760
happily sitting outside
having lunch outside.
409
00:22:25,160 --> 00:22:28,160
What I'm going to be talking about
is perhaps
410
00:22:28,440 --> 00:22:31,800
feels like the opposite
of what we just heard, which is really,
411
00:22:32,280 --> 00:22:36,000
the thinking about, these questions
412
00:22:36,160 --> 00:22:40,560
not so much within a national context,
but it was in a regional context
413
00:22:40,800 --> 00:22:44,400
and also within an environmental
and planetary context,
414
00:22:44,400 --> 00:22:48,240
because I think it's important
to understand that these elections
415
00:22:48,480 --> 00:22:51,160
really aren't just about us.
416
00:22:51,160 --> 00:22:54,000
Although of course,
we feel it to be that way,
417
00:22:54,000 --> 00:22:56,800
but also about very important
environmental questions.
418
00:22:56,800 --> 00:23:01,040
So in that light, I'd like to go forward
and sort of think about
419
00:23:01,320 --> 00:23:02,880
what these kinds of,
420
00:23:04,320 --> 00:23:06,720
ecological implications
421
00:23:06,720 --> 00:23:10,880
are of electoral failures
and collapse colleges.
422
00:23:10,880 --> 00:23:16,800
That is, tipping points and flashpoints
in politics in many places in the world
423
00:23:16,840 --> 00:23:19,840
have very important
environmental questions.
424
00:23:20,000 --> 00:23:24,000
And as we know, nobody escapes
climate change anymore.
425
00:23:24,000 --> 00:23:26,760
So, hang on to your hats.
426
00:23:26,760 --> 00:23:28,320
Okay.
427
00:23:28,320 --> 00:23:30,440
This is,
428
00:23:30,440 --> 00:23:33,440
sort of a picture of the major climate,
429
00:23:34,640 --> 00:23:37,640
tipping points, planetary climate, tipping
points.
430
00:23:38,160 --> 00:23:42,560
Now, if you look rather carefully,
one of the things that you might notice
431
00:23:42,960 --> 00:23:46,880
is that most of these are not particularly
inhabited.
432
00:23:47,200 --> 00:23:50,840
The West Antarctic ice Sheet
teeming with its urban,
433
00:23:51,160 --> 00:23:55,200
urban culture and,
you know, famous for its, films.
434
00:23:55,520 --> 00:23:59,600
No, what you see
is that most of the tipping points
435
00:23:59,600 --> 00:24:02,600
on climate and,
436
00:24:03,520 --> 00:24:06,200
and they're very serious ones, by the way,
437
00:24:06,200 --> 00:24:10,440
are, are reflected in areas
that aren't actually inhabited.
438
00:24:10,880 --> 00:24:16,160
So but the one area
that is really inhabited is Amazonia.
439
00:24:16,240 --> 00:24:18,000
It's got 40 million people.
440
00:24:18,000 --> 00:24:21,000
So in a sense, human agency,
441
00:24:21,640 --> 00:24:25,360
okay, we can do whatever we do
with our cars and other kinds of things.
442
00:24:25,360 --> 00:24:31,200
But in terms of one of the great carbon
engines of the planet,
443
00:24:31,760 --> 00:24:34,240
it is Amazonia at its heart,
444
00:24:34,240 --> 00:24:37,720
and it is a highly populated place.
445
00:24:37,960 --> 00:24:40,320
Even though we have the green blob
problem.
446
00:24:40,320 --> 00:24:41,320
Oh, nothing's there.
447
00:24:41,320 --> 00:24:43,680
It's just, you know, you see that map?
448
00:24:43,680 --> 00:24:48,240
So, I'll show you,
so let me just quickly go over,
449
00:24:49,280 --> 00:24:50,600
what are the kind of the stakes
450
00:24:50,600 --> 00:24:54,200
because I'm going to talk about failing
states, failing democracies,
451
00:24:54,560 --> 00:24:57,840
and what that means in terms of the stakes
452
00:24:58,160 --> 00:25:01,560
for, the planet, for the climate,
453
00:25:02,920 --> 00:25:03,920
as they say.
454
00:25:03,920 --> 00:25:08,480
Well, I never knew climate change
would happen so fast, but, those of you
455
00:25:08,480 --> 00:25:12,440
who follow the Great Acceleration know
that we're on an exponential drive.
456
00:25:12,440 --> 00:25:14,520
So you want to look out.
457
00:25:14,520 --> 00:25:18,600
So I'm going to try and break
open the green blob for you a little bit
458
00:25:19,000 --> 00:25:21,680
and give you a bigger picture
of what's going on.
459
00:25:21,680 --> 00:25:25,200
So one of the things is okay,
I showed you that picture and there
460
00:25:25,320 --> 00:25:26,920
everybody's chewing their nails.
461
00:25:26,920 --> 00:25:29,640
Oh these big climate tipping points.
462
00:25:29,640 --> 00:25:33,720
But what's at stake
is when we look at Amazonia,
463
00:25:33,720 --> 00:25:36,480
what we see is a really important,
464
00:25:36,480 --> 00:25:39,480
tipping point
having to do with the climate engine,
465
00:25:39,560 --> 00:25:42,560
both the absorption from the atmosphere
and the storage.
466
00:25:42,800 --> 00:25:46,680
And when you destroy it,
you release a bunch of carbon.
467
00:25:46,680 --> 00:25:47,520
So there's that.
468
00:25:47,520 --> 00:25:51,360
And if you destabilize it
so that the system itself
469
00:25:51,360 --> 00:25:56,000
can't reproduce itself, it starts to be
an emitter of carbon itself.
470
00:25:56,000 --> 00:25:57,720
And we'll get to that later.
471
00:25:57,720 --> 00:25:59,160
The other thing, which,
472
00:26:00,480 --> 00:26:03,480
you're probably
more familiar with the question of,
473
00:26:03,520 --> 00:26:08,440
carbon, but perhaps a lot less
so with the importance of Amazonia
474
00:26:08,440 --> 00:26:13,320
as a hydrological driver in the climate,
in the climate and planetary system.
475
00:26:13,840 --> 00:26:17,960
So one of the things, of course,
my usual obnoxious things.
476
00:26:18,240 --> 00:26:20,280
Everybody lives Amazonia out.
477
00:26:20,280 --> 00:26:22,240
It's the size of the United States.
478
00:26:22,240 --> 00:26:25,560
It's got, you know, a zillion
a zillion of everything in it.
479
00:26:26,120 --> 00:26:29,720
But, drawing up a river set of rivers
480
00:26:29,720 --> 00:26:32,720
that are one sixth of the world's
freshwater
481
00:26:32,760 --> 00:26:35,760
is not nothing. And,
482
00:26:36,000 --> 00:26:37,680
I myself keep
483
00:26:37,680 --> 00:26:42,200
finding myself extremely distressed
at looking at the drawing of the Amazon,
484
00:26:42,200 --> 00:26:46,160
because of course, this has major effects
more generally.
485
00:26:46,560 --> 00:26:49,840
And these
I've just mentioned a few of the major
486
00:26:49,840 --> 00:26:52,920
tributaries
doesn't matter to go through those here,
487
00:26:53,600 --> 00:26:56,600
but so we have the rivers on the ground,
488
00:26:56,920 --> 00:26:59,080
but we also have
what are called aerial rivers.
489
00:26:59,080 --> 00:27:02,240
Now we in here
know that we get aerial rivers.
490
00:27:02,240 --> 00:27:05,240
That's
where we get our big horrific storms
491
00:27:05,240 --> 00:27:08,240
that come smashing in at us.
492
00:27:08,400 --> 00:27:12,680
There are these aerial rivers
that are generated by the Amazon itself.
493
00:27:12,680 --> 00:27:14,480
And I'll show you a picture in a minute.
494
00:27:14,480 --> 00:27:17,800
But, they're the key to rain
fed agriculture
495
00:27:18,120 --> 00:27:22,920
in the rest of the hemisphere,
in the rest of the southern hemisphere.
496
00:27:23,640 --> 00:27:26,000
So what you have to sort of imagine is
497
00:27:26,000 --> 00:27:31,920
if you interfere with those aerial rivers,
you interfere with the hydrological and
498
00:27:31,920 --> 00:27:37,240
watering system for much of the important
agricultural areas of the planet.
499
00:27:38,280 --> 00:27:40,800
This is also important for shipping.
500
00:27:40,800 --> 00:27:44,520
There's the ecological thing of rivers,
livelihoods and
501
00:27:46,080 --> 00:27:47,120
and shipping.
502
00:27:47,120 --> 00:27:50,040
So and water.
503
00:27:50,040 --> 00:27:53,240
In 2014, so Paulo ran out of water.
504
00:27:53,840 --> 00:27:58,040
It was, of course, another one of these
sort of failures of the aerial River.
505
00:27:58,560 --> 00:28:01,160
The other thing is,
506
00:28:01,160 --> 00:28:05,080
although we might not care about it
that much, you might not be familiar
507
00:28:05,080 --> 00:28:06,120
with the Pantanal.
508
00:28:06,120 --> 00:28:09,120
I have great pictures,
but I don't have any time to put them up.
509
00:28:10,240 --> 00:28:13,240
It is sort of the New World Serengeti.
510
00:28:13,680 --> 00:28:18,800
It's, the world's largest wetland,
and about half of it burned this year.
511
00:28:19,360 --> 00:28:20,040
So it's.
512
00:28:20,040 --> 00:28:25,040
And, in the previous bout,
a couple of years ago, something like 17
513
00:28:25,040 --> 00:28:30,400
million vertebrates killed in the process
of drying out and burning up a wetland.
514
00:28:30,880 --> 00:28:35,600
So you want to really think
about the magnitude and the scale
515
00:28:35,640 --> 00:28:41,920
of what political processes
can unleash or can curtail.
516
00:28:42,160 --> 00:28:47,000
So this is an extremely important,
repeating point that I'll be making.
517
00:28:48,760 --> 00:28:51,200
I have a paper that just came out
on what else?
518
00:28:51,200 --> 00:28:55,280
Well, in my Valentine to Amazonia
with a bunch of other colleagues
519
00:28:55,680 --> 00:28:59,040
about the Amazon
hitting its tipping point,
520
00:28:59,640 --> 00:29:03,840
that is, if it if it gets cleared enough,
it becomes unstable,
521
00:29:04,120 --> 00:29:07,600
and then it turns into a different kind
of vegetation.
522
00:29:08,160 --> 00:29:11,320
Now, we don't normally think about
that is going on, but
523
00:29:11,960 --> 00:29:14,920
processes occur without our intervention.
524
00:29:14,920 --> 00:29:17,880
So this is also a very
and we're really coming close
525
00:29:17,880 --> 00:29:23,320
to that tipping point, which is again
why it's important to think about what
526
00:29:23,760 --> 00:29:28,880
political actors and actions
and capacities and governance mean
527
00:29:29,080 --> 00:29:34,280
in terms of larger questions
that are, related to our lives.
528
00:29:34,280 --> 00:29:37,280
But perhaps we don't think about them
quite that way.
529
00:29:37,320 --> 00:29:40,920
The other thing is those,
and those aerial rivers effect,
530
00:29:40,920 --> 00:29:45,280
and in glaciers
and in snowfall and essentially
531
00:29:45,520 --> 00:29:49,200
are key to a lot of the hydrology
of the Andean states.
532
00:29:49,960 --> 00:29:53,840
And then, of course, more generally,
the questions of livelihoods
533
00:29:53,840 --> 00:29:58,080
of both urban and rural
and other kinds of dynamics.
534
00:29:58,080 --> 00:30:01,840
So the stakes are really big on
Amazonian governance.
535
00:30:01,840 --> 00:30:04,960
It's not just like, well, you know, like
536
00:30:05,400 --> 00:30:08,280
maybe we'll lose a pupfish or something.
537
00:30:08,280 --> 00:30:12,200
It's really like
losing continental level ecosystems.
538
00:30:13,320 --> 00:30:14,520
So here's,
539
00:30:14,520 --> 00:30:17,520
here's but I'm just going to give you
sort of a look at this.
540
00:30:17,840 --> 00:30:21,000
What you can see here is
this is I'm trying to break
541
00:30:21,000 --> 00:30:22,400
open the green blob for you.
542
00:30:22,400 --> 00:30:25,400
And what you can see is when we put it,
543
00:30:25,440 --> 00:30:28,440
when we talk about Amazonian as a biome
544
00:30:28,440 --> 00:30:32,400
and not just like,
oh, Brazilian Amazon or something.
545
00:30:32,560 --> 00:30:37,320
What you can see is an important element
of shared sovereignty,
546
00:30:38,360 --> 00:30:41,360
of this area. And,
547
00:30:41,760 --> 00:30:44,760
I think we have the habit of saying,
well, it's all in Brazil.
548
00:30:44,920 --> 00:30:46,800
It's a lot of it really is.
549
00:30:46,800 --> 00:30:49,640
But then you can sort of see this,
that there are these little,
550
00:30:49,640 --> 00:30:52,920
you know, the percent of the biome
is kind of small and,
551
00:30:53,280 --> 00:30:55,440
you know, like,
why should we care about Ecuador?
552
00:30:55,440 --> 00:30:57,320
It's only got 1.1%.
553
00:30:57,320 --> 00:31:00,160
But the point is that in terms
554
00:31:00,160 --> 00:31:03,240
of their national areas,
they're quite extensive.
555
00:31:03,800 --> 00:31:07,080
That is, each of these countries
has sovereignty
556
00:31:07,400 --> 00:31:11,400
over a big, has its national sovereignty.
557
00:31:11,400 --> 00:31:16,920
Its national area is in the Amazon biome,
so that the decisions it makes
558
00:31:17,160 --> 00:31:20,000
for its national good
559
00:31:20,000 --> 00:31:24,960
have lots of impacts
that we might not, expect them to have.
560
00:31:25,320 --> 00:31:28,560
So it's very important to understand
561
00:31:28,800 --> 00:31:31,800
that there are competing different
562
00:31:31,800 --> 00:31:36,160
dynamics that go on on this
that have different kinds of effects.
563
00:31:36,360 --> 00:31:39,360
So even though it looks small
and remember, it's big.
564
00:31:39,440 --> 00:31:44,360
Amazon, to quote George Bush,
when he discovered that Brazil is big,
565
00:31:45,960 --> 00:31:48,880
you know, and not to quote a previous
566
00:31:48,880 --> 00:31:51,960
president, you know, it was worrying
about certain kinds of sizes.
567
00:31:51,960 --> 00:31:56,600
But the point is, Amazonia is really big,
so that even though if you only have
568
00:31:56,600 --> 00:32:00,480
a fairly small percentage of it,
what you do in terms of its
569
00:32:00,480 --> 00:32:04,320
of your decision making becomes, problem.
570
00:32:04,720 --> 00:32:08,400
Now, my I'm just going to give you
a picture of the drying Amazon,
571
00:32:08,520 --> 00:32:11,520
you know,
these sort of heartbreaking things, these,
572
00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:13,960
aerial rivers.
573
00:32:13,960 --> 00:32:15,600
This is kind of what this looks like.
574
00:32:15,600 --> 00:32:19,920
The Amazon sort of sucks water
out of the it's it's more complicated
575
00:32:19,920 --> 00:32:25,440
than I'm going to explain, but, basically
sucks water out of the, the atmosphere
576
00:32:25,440 --> 00:32:29,640
and out of the ground and through various
kinds of water connections.
577
00:32:30,000 --> 00:32:33,120
And, it creates its own water system.
578
00:32:33,360 --> 00:32:37,680
This little, diagram
gives you a better sense of it.
579
00:32:37,680 --> 00:32:41,520
But the point that you can see here
is that the Amazon,
580
00:32:41,520 --> 00:32:45,120
the hydrological system,
is largely a function
581
00:32:45,480 --> 00:32:49,400
of this biotic pump
known as the Amazon forest.
582
00:32:49,680 --> 00:32:52,520
So, even though we know
that there have been large
583
00:32:52,520 --> 00:32:55,760
populations in the past,
their dynamics of,
584
00:32:56,400 --> 00:33:00,360
civilization were somewhat different
from ours, which did not require
585
00:33:00,600 --> 00:33:03,600
the massive destruction of the forest
itself.
586
00:33:03,760 --> 00:33:08,160
There's many interesting stories to be
told about this, but I don't have time.
587
00:33:09,560 --> 00:33:11,200
So one of the things is when
588
00:33:11,200 --> 00:33:15,120
you start to DeForest a lot,
and you have larger
589
00:33:15,120 --> 00:33:18,760
climate change, that the area becomes
quite vulnerable to forest.
590
00:33:18,760 --> 00:33:23,520
And I think you can get a sense here
of a kind of exploding dynamic.
591
00:33:24,360 --> 00:33:28,000
I'll talk
more about these questions later, but
592
00:33:28,680 --> 00:33:32,920
let me just sort of make a premise
from describe
593
00:33:32,920 --> 00:33:36,440
a graph that gives
you kind of a premise about where we are
594
00:33:36,720 --> 00:33:39,320
and why I'm going to make the argument
I am.
595
00:33:39,320 --> 00:33:44,320
And again, it's more complicated
than we can say in the time that we have.
596
00:33:45,000 --> 00:33:49,200
And I'm going to really have to zip,
but what you see is that
597
00:33:49,200 --> 00:33:54,280
when you have actual governance,
and this, period to that,
598
00:33:55,320 --> 00:34:00,120
to my, to our, to my right,
your left is the period in which there
599
00:34:00,120 --> 00:34:04,360
was quite a bit of careful governance,
a lot of transformations that went on.
600
00:34:04,360 --> 00:34:07,360
This is the first, the,
the second Lula period
601
00:34:08,040 --> 00:34:10,640
you go through where you start
to see a little instability.
602
00:34:10,640 --> 00:34:14,640
This is during the impeachment
of Dilma Rousseff
603
00:34:14,640 --> 00:34:18,360
and, and and the Temer regime.
604
00:34:18,680 --> 00:34:19,320
And then
605
00:34:20,560 --> 00:34:23,400
in 2019,
606
00:34:23,400 --> 00:34:28,040
you, you
get the entrance of Jair Bolsonaro.
607
00:34:28,040 --> 00:34:32,400
So you go, this is kind of one of those
perfect social science experiments
608
00:34:32,680 --> 00:34:37,000
where you go, okay, we'll have we'll have,
management, governance,
609
00:34:37,360 --> 00:34:40,080
we'll use, will implement what we say
610
00:34:40,080 --> 00:34:43,840
our laws will enforce,
and you get that kind of dynamic.
611
00:34:44,200 --> 00:34:46,960
And then you have the perfect alternative,
612
00:34:46,960 --> 00:34:50,320
which is Jair Bolsonaro says, let it rip.
613
00:34:50,920 --> 00:34:53,880
And then you see the deforestation
dynamic like that.
614
00:34:53,880 --> 00:34:58,800
And then we have now for the Lula thing
comes back, decline in deforestation.
615
00:34:59,120 --> 00:35:03,000
But now there's another dynamic going on,
which has to do with,
616
00:35:03,360 --> 00:35:07,480
that is beyond the control of humans,
which is the dynamics of
617
00:35:07,680 --> 00:35:09,640
desiccation and burning.
618
00:35:09,640 --> 00:35:14,480
But the point that I'm making here,
which you should take or the takeaway is
619
00:35:15,200 --> 00:35:19,440
lots, you know, governance and management
and enforcement of policies
620
00:35:20,040 --> 00:35:23,600
and local support as well, versus
621
00:35:23,880 --> 00:35:27,760
pulling everything off
and having it be a less a fair system.
622
00:35:29,400 --> 00:35:31,320
Well,
623
00:35:31,320 --> 00:35:32,600
here's what you get.
624
00:35:32,600 --> 00:35:36,000
We have I'm
not going to go into too much detail here
625
00:35:36,000 --> 00:35:39,000
because I don't have very much time.
626
00:35:39,000 --> 00:35:41,440
Basically what this slide will tell you
627
00:35:41,440 --> 00:35:45,880
is that there's a lot of explosive,
activities,
628
00:35:45,880 --> 00:35:49,440
a lot of expansion of illegal activities
629
00:35:49,440 --> 00:35:53,760
that is illegal
cultivation of coca, illegal mining,
630
00:35:53,760 --> 00:35:57,280
illegal timber,
a lot of land grabbing and so on.
631
00:35:57,600 --> 00:36:01,800
And a deep most of this becomes
unrest related over time.
632
00:36:02,120 --> 00:36:05,040
And global demand
for all of these is very high too,
633
00:36:05,040 --> 00:36:08,040
for reasons of different kinds
of instabilities.
634
00:36:08,800 --> 00:36:12,960
So it's important to understand
that this also is reflecting expansion
635
00:36:12,960 --> 00:36:17,240
in clandestine economies
and also with clandestine economies.
636
00:36:17,520 --> 00:36:20,080
You can also get
a lot of criminal organizations.
637
00:36:20,080 --> 00:36:24,040
So the governance sort of shifts
from what we might call collective,
638
00:36:24,200 --> 00:36:27,240
state level
governance and local governance
639
00:36:27,600 --> 00:36:30,360
into criminal organizations.
640
00:36:30,360 --> 00:36:34,640
So, let me go through quickly
and I'm really going to zoom because,
641
00:36:35,960 --> 00:36:36,800
I'm, I'm going to
642
00:36:36,800 --> 00:36:39,800
try to do this in three minutes.
643
00:36:40,560 --> 00:36:44,680
What we have
is basically a bunch of failed states now.
644
00:36:45,000 --> 00:36:50,360
So own and have sovereignty
over a large amount of Amazonia.
645
00:36:50,800 --> 00:36:55,440
One Ecuador, as you may have recalled,
is now in a state of exception.
646
00:36:55,440 --> 00:37:00,000
And, they're it's was on the verge
of becoming a narco state.
647
00:37:00,000 --> 00:37:03,160
It's, it is not really a democratic state
648
00:37:03,160 --> 00:37:06,160
anymore, even though
it's going to have elections next year.
649
00:37:07,320 --> 00:37:09,360
And you get an overriding
650
00:37:09,360 --> 00:37:12,360
of what were actual,
651
00:37:12,640 --> 00:37:15,400
things such as the, initial day
652
00:37:15,400 --> 00:37:18,720
have to leave the oil
in the ground in the Yasuni.
653
00:37:19,800 --> 00:37:22,200
And this has simply been overturned.
654
00:37:22,200 --> 00:37:27,480
So in that sense, the
the state of exception permits
655
00:37:27,760 --> 00:37:32,920
both a kind of militarization
and criminalization of various kinds of,
656
00:37:35,760 --> 00:37:37,000
state.
657
00:37:37,000 --> 00:37:40,000
How should
we call it, those resisting the state
658
00:37:40,600 --> 00:37:44,080
as well as, those who can benefit from it.
659
00:37:44,080 --> 00:37:48,480
And also, there's always a little bit
of an alliance going on, as many of you
660
00:37:48,480 --> 00:37:52,240
might have noticed this summer
that Bolivia seemed to have an utter coup.
661
00:37:53,040 --> 00:37:55,680
Mr. Fujimori, who sort of invented
662
00:37:55,680 --> 00:37:59,040
the concept in Peru, just recently died.
663
00:37:59,280 --> 00:38:02,280
But basically there was an attempted coup.
664
00:38:02,520 --> 00:38:07,560
And as the the leader of the coup,
was confronted, he said, no, no,
665
00:38:07,600 --> 00:38:11,480
no, it was he wanted to do this
to get his numbers up.
666
00:38:11,880 --> 00:38:15,000
So in essence,
we have a kind of a big problem.
667
00:38:15,920 --> 00:38:19,560
And then there is a
the larger, larger problem of,
668
00:38:19,680 --> 00:38:23,160
kind of divided populism going on between,
669
00:38:23,760 --> 00:38:26,760
in Bolivia, between,
670
00:38:27,120 --> 00:38:30,680
Evo Morales and, and who is asking?
671
00:38:32,480 --> 00:38:35,480
And a great deal of,
672
00:38:35,480 --> 00:38:40,800
how should we say the undermining
and questioning
673
00:38:40,800 --> 00:38:42,720
the legitimacy of the government.
674
00:38:42,720 --> 00:38:46,200
There's a lot more detail to this in terms
675
00:38:46,200 --> 00:38:49,920
of how the state itself was dismantled.
676
00:38:50,640 --> 00:38:53,640
And also the continuing,
677
00:38:53,840 --> 00:38:56,720
conflict between the Santa Cruz,
the lowland
678
00:38:56,720 --> 00:39:01,680
Amazonian elites,
and the upland, historical elites.
679
00:39:01,680 --> 00:39:04,800
So in any case, it's a failed
or a failed state.
680
00:39:05,080 --> 00:39:09,240
And in essence,
it hasn't got an operating,
681
00:39:09,840 --> 00:39:13,560
Amazonian, management, system.
682
00:39:14,080 --> 00:39:17,880
Then I'm going to, the
I just say a few words about,
683
00:39:18,960 --> 00:39:19,640
Peru.
684
00:39:19,640 --> 00:39:24,720
Peru has a habit of kind of,
posing as presidents and,
685
00:39:25,280 --> 00:39:29,720
dissolving its Congress's, currently,
you know, Bill after who
686
00:39:29,760 --> 00:39:34,440
you might have been following,
was famous for her collection of Rolexes.
687
00:39:34,440 --> 00:39:39,360
If you think they cost $10,000, that's
that's only a fraction of what they cost.
688
00:39:40,520 --> 00:39:43,480
But, as she was put into place,
689
00:39:43,480 --> 00:39:46,680
as Pedro Castillo was arrested,
690
00:39:47,680 --> 00:39:50,960
there were major massacres
of street protests and so on.
691
00:39:51,360 --> 00:39:54,760
And again, there
there's a legitimacy crisis,
692
00:39:54,760 --> 00:39:59,120
a failing state,
and essentially no Amazonian management.
693
00:39:59,520 --> 00:40:03,240
And even though it has an expanding,
gold system.
694
00:40:03,600 --> 00:40:06,960
And Venezuela,
of course, is the sort of poster child for
695
00:40:07,560 --> 00:40:10,560
maybe not a failed state,
but a fully authoritarian state.
696
00:40:11,640 --> 00:40:15,120
And, even though, rivals were jailed,
697
00:40:15,120 --> 00:40:19,520
they were sent into exile,
protesters were jailed and killed.
698
00:40:20,400 --> 00:40:25,080
It is also, in some kind of crisis.
699
00:40:25,080 --> 00:40:28,200
Essentially, it's become also part of the
the narco
700
00:40:28,200 --> 00:40:31,440
nexus in Amazonia, illegal gold mining.
701
00:40:31,440 --> 00:40:35,320
The upcoming arrow is basically run
by former ELN,
702
00:40:36,200 --> 00:40:39,320
revolutionaries and the minor and the,
703
00:40:40,360 --> 00:40:41,560
the military.
704
00:40:41,560 --> 00:40:44,920
And, this is taking place in conservation
areas.
705
00:40:45,400 --> 00:40:47,560
Okay. I'm
going to just show you a few slides.
706
00:40:47,560 --> 00:40:50,680
Just trust me on this,
that default submission rates
707
00:40:50,680 --> 00:40:53,680
are going up with the kind of chaos
that we're seeing.
708
00:40:53,760 --> 00:40:57,760
You can get some volatility, but overall
the trend is very much up.
709
00:40:58,480 --> 00:41:01,360
And I don't want to go over this
in too much detail,
710
00:41:01,360 --> 00:41:04,440
but it's easy to see deforestation.
711
00:41:04,440 --> 00:41:09,480
It's less easy to see this dynamic of
illegal mining, particularly gold mining.
712
00:41:09,480 --> 00:41:13,800
And I'm going to just shoot through this
because I yeah, I'm right to the end here.
713
00:41:14,280 --> 00:41:17,520
This is what you this is what it looks
like when you look at this.
714
00:41:17,520 --> 00:41:19,960
It looks like little,
you know, a little popcorn.
715
00:41:19,960 --> 00:41:22,560
But when you look at it on the ground,
it's much more intense.
716
00:41:22,560 --> 00:41:27,280
And of course, the problem here
is the issue of mercury,
717
00:41:27,280 --> 00:41:31,440
toxicity of the rivers
and and of the air's, and soil.
718
00:41:31,480 --> 00:41:33,960
And this is also what it looks like
719
00:41:33,960 --> 00:41:36,640
when we start to move into questions
of tipping points.
720
00:41:36,640 --> 00:41:40,800
What you see is in the pasture
and agriculture and gold areas,
721
00:41:41,000 --> 00:41:42,840
we start to push Amazonia right
722
00:41:42,840 --> 00:41:45,840
to the tipping point,
which is supposed to be about 20%.
723
00:41:45,880 --> 00:41:48,880
So again, I'm just leaping through this
like a little gazelle.
724
00:41:49,320 --> 00:41:52,760
And this area here is the area
which is now
725
00:41:52,800 --> 00:41:56,520
become an emitter of carbon
rather than an absorber of it.
726
00:41:56,520 --> 00:41:58,800
It's in the eastern Amazon.
727
00:41:58,800 --> 00:42:02,520
Another thing that's important
to keep in mind, and you probably don't
728
00:42:02,520 --> 00:42:06,680
have this on your radar particularly, is
that Amazonia is sort of the next major,
729
00:42:07,240 --> 00:42:08,360
oil world.
730
00:42:08,360 --> 00:42:13,280
I'm not going to go into this in too much
detail, but you can see also that in the,
731
00:42:14,360 --> 00:42:14,760
in the
732
00:42:14,760 --> 00:42:18,480
eastern
Amazon in the sort of Caribbean Amazon,
733
00:42:18,800 --> 00:42:24,000
this is now essentially become
client states of, oil companies.
734
00:42:24,000 --> 00:42:26,880
So and I'm going to show you something.
735
00:42:26,880 --> 00:42:28,400
It also goes further down.
736
00:42:28,400 --> 00:42:33,800
But you probably didn't
have Guyana on your radar
737
00:42:34,320 --> 00:42:37,320
as one of the major oil producers.
738
00:42:37,800 --> 00:42:39,680
Non-OPEC, oil
739
00:42:39,680 --> 00:42:42,680
producers, it's ahead of Norway.
740
00:42:42,880 --> 00:42:46,080
I can guarantee you, if you went to
Guyana, you would not mistaken
741
00:42:46,360 --> 00:42:49,280
for Norway
in terms of its social investments.
742
00:42:49,280 --> 00:42:52,320
So you might ask where that investment
goes.
743
00:42:52,920 --> 00:42:56,880
And I think the Swiss banks might have
some a few words to say about this,
744
00:42:57,440 --> 00:43:01,600
but the point being that you're not seeing
a lot of investment, but you are seeing
745
00:43:01,600 --> 00:43:05,200
some money laundering and various kinds
of deforestation dynamics.
746
00:43:05,560 --> 00:43:07,320
I'm just finishing up.
747
00:43:07,320 --> 00:43:12,000
And the other thing is that
not only are you seeing sort of,
748
00:43:13,160 --> 00:43:15,360
how shall we say cartel
749
00:43:15,360 --> 00:43:19,280
economies, but also criminal groups
that are running it.
750
00:43:19,280 --> 00:43:24,640
So within the context
of these failed states and flailing states
751
00:43:24,640 --> 00:43:28,040
that are sitting distant from the Amazon,
752
00:43:28,320 --> 00:43:31,320
clinging to power and their own little,
753
00:43:32,360 --> 00:43:34,840
interest in the dynamics,
754
00:43:34,840 --> 00:43:37,680
it has left a political void.
755
00:43:37,680 --> 00:43:40,080
It has left a governance void.
756
00:43:40,080 --> 00:43:43,440
And as we know, nature abhors a,
757
00:43:45,120 --> 00:43:49,360
nature abhors a, a, a vacuum.
758
00:43:49,720 --> 00:43:53,760
And that vacuum is now increasingly filled
by criminal groups,
759
00:43:54,080 --> 00:43:58,800
also with multinational links
to European dynamics as well.
760
00:43:59,280 --> 00:44:02,280
So the great
761
00:44:02,960 --> 00:44:04,560
Brazilian writer, occultist
762
00:44:04,560 --> 00:44:08,400
Acuna, of whom
I my little heart beats all the time.
763
00:44:09,760 --> 00:44:12,760
When he went through Amazonia,
764
00:44:13,080 --> 00:44:15,760
a little more than 100 years
ago, described it
765
00:44:15,760 --> 00:44:20,600
as this the last known
finished play page of Genesis, the place
766
00:44:20,920 --> 00:44:27,000
in which the world was being rewritten
in this kind of marvelous and
767
00:44:27,960 --> 00:44:29,640
illuminating way
768
00:44:29,640 --> 00:44:32,880
of abundance and glory.
769
00:44:33,600 --> 00:44:35,960
But it may be that
770
00:44:35,960 --> 00:44:39,280
the last, page, unfinished page of Genesis
771
00:44:39,840 --> 00:44:42,840
looks more like it's less like.
772
00:44:43,080 --> 00:44:46,080
So thank you so much.
773
00:44:47,960 --> 00:44:49,200
I really appreciate these
774
00:44:49,200 --> 00:44:52,200
last, two presentations.
775
00:44:52,400 --> 00:44:54,840
Things
are coming into perspective right.
776
00:44:54,840 --> 00:44:58,560
One of the questions
that I wanted to address was how people
777
00:44:59,080 --> 00:45:01,480
organize the multiple paths to democracy.
778
00:45:01,480 --> 00:45:04,480
Right. And who are the main actors there?
779
00:45:04,800 --> 00:45:09,520
This is a very interesting year for
those of us who do US-Mexico relations.
780
00:45:09,520 --> 00:45:12,240
We have presidential elections
from both countries, right?
781
00:45:12,240 --> 00:45:16,480
We had Mexican elections in June in Mexico
and in the United States.
782
00:45:16,480 --> 00:45:18,560
They're coming up in less than a month.
783
00:45:18,560 --> 00:45:21,240
So it's fascinating to try to explain
784
00:45:21,240 --> 00:45:25,160
the two systems to people,
especially if you get interviewed by,
785
00:45:26,160 --> 00:45:29,000
TV channels because they want you to do it
in three minutes.
786
00:45:29,000 --> 00:45:32,000
Exactly. And so,
787
00:45:32,240 --> 00:45:36,120
and this is, there's some, contrast,
right where I said United
788
00:45:36,120 --> 00:45:41,600
States, you have reelections,
you have two parties.
789
00:45:41,880 --> 00:45:45,880
There have been attempts to have,
more than two parties, but basically
790
00:45:46,200 --> 00:45:49,920
the political scene is dominated
by two parties.
791
00:45:51,520 --> 00:45:53,880
You can get reelected,
792
00:45:53,880 --> 00:45:57,560
and the country is leading
is easily to half right.
793
00:45:57,960 --> 00:45:59,000
You red in blue state.
794
00:45:59,000 --> 00:46:03,120
So what's little known is
how Mexico organizes their elections.
795
00:46:03,120 --> 00:46:06,040
There are seven national parks.
796
00:46:06,040 --> 00:46:11,600
I don't know if you know that, but
also you cannot get reelected in Mexico.
797
00:46:11,600 --> 00:46:14,880
You get only one term,
although that has been opened up
798
00:46:15,240 --> 00:46:18,240
for especially people in Congress.
799
00:46:18,280 --> 00:46:20,880
And of course, the headlines last night,
800
00:46:20,880 --> 00:46:25,320
a woman was selected in June
for the first time
801
00:46:25,320 --> 00:46:28,720
in the 200 years
of Republican history in Mexico.
802
00:46:29,080 --> 00:46:32,400
And it was interesting, too,
because she was competing,
803
00:46:33,520 --> 00:46:34,480
with another work.
804
00:46:34,480 --> 00:46:37,480
So Claudia Sheinbaum came up,
805
00:46:37,640 --> 00:46:40,160
against Xóchitl Gálvez.
806
00:46:40,160 --> 00:46:45,480
So it was known already that a woman
with way would be the president of Mexico.
807
00:46:45,720 --> 00:46:49,240
Indeed, during the election, it's
one of the questions that people ask is
808
00:46:49,240 --> 00:46:50,640
how did that happen?
809
00:46:50,640 --> 00:46:50,960
Right.
810
00:46:50,960 --> 00:46:55,680
How is it
that Mexico was able to elect
811
00:46:56,080 --> 00:47:00,360
and of course, when a woman,
what are the challenges that she's facing?
812
00:47:00,360 --> 00:47:03,360
Everybody starts at about,
of course, how she would deal with,
813
00:47:04,080 --> 00:47:06,840
Donald Trump administration,
you know, member.
814
00:47:06,840 --> 00:47:07,000
Right.
815
00:47:07,000 --> 00:47:10,840
Because we have
we had a little preview of the last,
816
00:47:11,000 --> 00:47:14,560
Trump administration dealing with the past
president, Andrés Manuel Lopez Obrador.
817
00:47:15,000 --> 00:47:17,920
And so this is a history, I think, of,
818
00:47:17,920 --> 00:47:20,240
political transitions.
819
00:47:20,240 --> 00:47:24,200
I would, argue that, there had been,
820
00:47:25,440 --> 00:47:28,680
big political transition
in Mexico, especially,
821
00:47:30,120 --> 00:47:31,480
along these lines of
822
00:47:31,480 --> 00:47:34,480
the, political actors,
which are political parties,
823
00:47:35,520 --> 00:47:39,960
despite the fact that there were seven
national parties,
824
00:47:39,960 --> 00:47:44,280
these parties clustered alongside
three main candidate.
825
00:47:44,280 --> 00:47:46,680
So they had two full positions.
826
00:47:46,680 --> 00:47:51,240
It was fascinating to
to see these coalitions at work.
827
00:47:51,240 --> 00:47:55,160
And also the ploy, set of narratives
828
00:47:55,160 --> 00:47:58,240
to capture the attention
and the loyalty of people.
829
00:47:58,240 --> 00:48:02,640
So and this is a story
also of a new party emerging
830
00:48:03,000 --> 00:48:07,560
and becoming dominant
in, in a very short period of time.
831
00:48:07,600 --> 00:48:10,840
The political party affiliation bound
832
00:48:11,280 --> 00:48:14,280
is called Morena
833
00:48:14,760 --> 00:48:15,600
Movimiento
834
00:48:15,600 --> 00:48:19,560
de Regeneración Nacional,
a movement of national renovation,
835
00:48:20,400 --> 00:48:21,800
which is very interesting.
836
00:48:21,800 --> 00:48:24,920
I mean, the effort and sounds
better than people making that.
837
00:48:25,160 --> 00:48:30,720
And he was there for the first lecture
that they participated was in 2014
838
00:48:31,720 --> 00:48:34,720
there in the mid in the midterm elections.
839
00:48:34,720 --> 00:48:37,640
The administration
that was the first election.
840
00:48:37,640 --> 00:48:41,360
Then the four years later in 2018,
841
00:48:43,160 --> 00:48:45,960
that was the first presidential election
that Morena participated
842
00:48:45,960 --> 00:48:48,960
and Andrés
Manuel Lopez Obrador won the presidency.
843
00:48:49,720 --> 00:48:52,280
They assembled together coalition
844
00:48:52,280 --> 00:48:54,760
that you would call the center,
845
00:48:54,760 --> 00:48:58,440
left coalition with the Green Party,
the Workers Party and Morena.
846
00:48:58,760 --> 00:49:01,200
So that's the coalition,
847
00:49:01,200 --> 00:49:04,200
like, so,
848
00:49:05,000 --> 00:49:08,000
allow Claudia Sheinbaum to go,
849
00:49:08,040 --> 00:49:09,400
to win the presidency.
850
00:49:09,400 --> 00:49:11,840
The other coalition
851
00:49:11,840 --> 00:49:13,320
is kind of a mixture.
852
00:49:13,320 --> 00:49:16,800
I don't know how you call it,
because you have the PRV,
853
00:49:17,080 --> 00:49:19,720
which is the legacy Communist Party,
Mexico,
854
00:49:19,720 --> 00:49:22,200
which has gone through
many different transformations.
855
00:49:22,200 --> 00:49:27,360
But the PRV was that party
that represented the left in Mexico,
856
00:49:27,360 --> 00:49:31,280
which became
only legally the late 1970s. And,
857
00:49:32,280 --> 00:49:33,160
the last
858
00:49:33,160 --> 00:49:36,160
transformation of that party was still,
859
00:49:36,960 --> 00:49:38,640
to converting to the PRV.
860
00:49:38,640 --> 00:49:43,560
Then we had the private party
that governed Mexico since,
861
00:49:44,840 --> 00:49:47,320
it's,
the aftermath of the Mexican Revolution
862
00:49:47,320 --> 00:49:51,600
up to the transition, in the 1990s
with this default.
863
00:49:51,640 --> 00:49:55,200
So it was a centered nationalist party.
864
00:49:55,200 --> 00:49:59,000
The PRI was always,
it was hard to classify the work
865
00:49:59,000 --> 00:50:03,960
part of the International Socialist,
they were very nationalistic.
866
00:50:04,440 --> 00:50:07,440
They knew how to,
867
00:50:08,280 --> 00:50:09,240
fix elections.
868
00:50:09,240 --> 00:50:13,240
So that's why they were named,
like the perfect, dictatorship.
869
00:50:13,600 --> 00:50:15,920
And then you have the P,
870
00:50:15,920 --> 00:50:19,360
the, actual National Party,
which is the left
871
00:50:19,960 --> 00:50:23,280
the right,
the center party.
872
00:50:24,360 --> 00:50:25,920
So you had that coalition.
873
00:50:25,920 --> 00:50:30,360
So at the end it they secured
the presidential election or than not.
874
00:50:31,320 --> 00:50:31,640
Yeah.
875
00:50:31,640 --> 00:50:34,640
Claudia Sheinbaum won, in a landslide.
876
00:50:34,680 --> 00:50:37,760
He wasn't he wasn't even close to 80%,
877
00:50:38,960 --> 00:50:40,680
more than the next year.
878
00:50:40,680 --> 00:50:41,760
So it was interesting.
879
00:50:41,760 --> 00:50:44,920
But these elections
also were very consequential.
880
00:50:46,000 --> 00:50:50,520
All the entire Congress,
the 500, federal representatives
881
00:50:50,520 --> 00:50:54,480
and the entire Senate, 100
generally were up for grabs.
882
00:50:54,480 --> 00:50:55,600
So that's interesting.
883
00:50:55,600 --> 00:50:58,640
So the big political debate
was very localized
884
00:50:58,640 --> 00:51:01,640
already.
885
00:51:02,440 --> 00:51:05,760
It was, a continuation, a candidate,
886
00:51:06,040 --> 00:51:11,080
the acceleration by whose main message was
that she wanted to continue
887
00:51:11,480 --> 00:51:14,800
with the policies,
the populist, policies of Andrés
888
00:51:14,800 --> 00:51:19,560
Manuel Lopez Obrador and know position
that,
889
00:51:20,160 --> 00:51:23,160
they they've really tried to figure out
how to frame that.
890
00:51:23,160 --> 00:51:24,960
Right, that,
891
00:51:24,960 --> 00:51:27,680
I don't you remember the election of
and then another so on.
892
00:51:27,680 --> 00:51:31,480
But they said, you know, if he wins,
Mexico is going to become a Venezuela
893
00:51:31,480 --> 00:51:34,680
because he's basically a leftist,
reckless candidate.
894
00:51:35,360 --> 00:51:38,160
And our democracy is going to go out,
betray.
895
00:51:38,160 --> 00:51:39,960
That didn't happen.
896
00:51:39,960 --> 00:51:41,480
They tried to really,
897
00:51:42,720 --> 00:51:43,320
come up with a
898
00:51:43,320 --> 00:51:47,520
narrative about a fight
for democracy in Mexico.
899
00:51:47,600 --> 00:51:52,880
And this is interesting because Andrés
Manuel Lopez Obrador, in the last year,
900
00:51:52,880 --> 00:51:55,880
he's been proposed a major leader,
901
00:51:57,640 --> 00:52:00,640
reforms in Mexico.
902
00:52:01,200 --> 00:52:02,800
And he's a very interesting character.
903
00:52:02,800 --> 00:52:03,760
He leaves office.
904
00:52:03,760 --> 00:52:06,760
He left office with 70% approval rate,
905
00:52:08,160 --> 00:52:08,840
of the electorate.
906
00:52:08,840 --> 00:52:11,880
This is quite astonishing, right,
that a president
907
00:52:12,280 --> 00:52:15,280
that covered the country for six years
908
00:52:15,360 --> 00:52:17,680
was such a dominant political figure
909
00:52:17,680 --> 00:52:21,000
that he left office
with such high approval rate.
910
00:52:21,280 --> 00:52:25,040
And in the last month,
the elections happened in June,
911
00:52:25,520 --> 00:52:31,240
the new Congress, with a new composition
where the Morena party
912
00:52:31,400 --> 00:52:34,800
with its allies
controlled a super majority
913
00:52:34,800 --> 00:52:38,640
and in the House of Representatives,
and they were one
914
00:52:38,760 --> 00:52:42,920
senator shy of controlling
two thirds of the of the Senate.
915
00:52:42,920 --> 00:52:47,200
Actually, it is last month there had been,
916
00:52:48,520 --> 00:52:51,720
about seven constitutional reforms
in Mexico.
917
00:52:51,840 --> 00:52:55,440
Major reforms that were passed because,
918
00:52:56,040 --> 00:52:59,080
Morena was able to gain
919
00:52:59,560 --> 00:53:04,440
one senator from the, power
to vote on these major reforms.
920
00:53:04,440 --> 00:53:09,360
So it was the these elections were very
consequential because in these last month,
921
00:53:10,040 --> 00:53:12,600
and that was before,
the indigenous election.
922
00:53:12,600 --> 00:53:15,600
But came into office on October 1st.
923
00:53:16,440 --> 00:53:18,160
The transition had been shortened.
924
00:53:18,160 --> 00:53:21,200
It used to be that the new president
would come into office in December.
925
00:53:21,560 --> 00:53:26,400
But, you know that the summer and the fall
that would that was a long time.
926
00:53:26,640 --> 00:53:28,480
So they decided to shorten that.
927
00:53:28,480 --> 00:53:31,600
So Congress, the new Congress
study session
928
00:53:31,600 --> 00:53:35,320
in September, and the president
took office on October 1st.
929
00:53:35,320 --> 00:53:38,320
So it was it was quite
astonishing to be in Mexico City.
930
00:53:40,360 --> 00:53:44,520
Yes. Walking towards the so-called
the main plaza,
931
00:53:45,120 --> 00:53:47,760
where Claudia Sheinbaum will receive,
932
00:53:47,760 --> 00:53:51,000
in a symbolic way, the staff of,
933
00:53:51,360 --> 00:53:55,320
leadership
baSton de Mando with surrender by,
934
00:53:56,520 --> 00:53:59,520
120 women actually on stage.
935
00:53:59,920 --> 00:54:06,120
We, as a symbol of women representation,
indigenous people representation.
936
00:54:06,440 --> 00:54:08,680
And it was a massive mobilization.
937
00:54:08,680 --> 00:54:11,680
So I was thinking, you know what?
938
00:54:12,080 --> 00:54:15,080
What, one of the interesting way,
939
00:54:15,400 --> 00:54:17,760
the elections would settle
a lot of debate, right?
940
00:54:17,760 --> 00:54:19,800
The elections were not even close.
941
00:54:19,800 --> 00:54:21,760
The Morena
942
00:54:21,760 --> 00:54:23,400
won by a landslide.
943
00:54:23,400 --> 00:54:26,000
But it's still
there's a lot of questions coming up
944
00:54:26,000 --> 00:54:29,160
and especially thinking
about the relationship between U.S.
945
00:54:29,160 --> 00:54:30,000
and Mexico.
946
00:54:30,000 --> 00:54:31,680
There are some major questions, right?
947
00:54:31,680 --> 00:54:34,720
First of all,
what's going to happen in the, U.S.
948
00:54:34,720 --> 00:54:35,800
election?
949
00:54:35,800 --> 00:54:38,800
That's going to be very interesting,
because, of course,
950
00:54:39,240 --> 00:54:42,440
analysts are saying that, you know,
there might be one scenario
951
00:54:42,440 --> 00:54:46,120
where with Kamala Harris,
there might be some,
952
00:54:47,280 --> 00:54:51,720
openings
to, to figure, multilateral solutions
953
00:54:51,720 --> 00:54:55,600
to a lot of the problems
that us, Mexico are facing.
954
00:54:55,600 --> 00:55:00,640
And then not only is, violence, narcotrafficker, narcotrafficking.
955
00:55:00,640 --> 00:55:05,000
These also be waves of immigrants
coming from Central America,
956
00:55:05,440 --> 00:55:08,440
South America,
but also other parts of the world.
957
00:55:08,960 --> 00:55:12,240
Now they're coming through Mexico
and they're staying in Mexico.
958
00:55:12,480 --> 00:55:16,560
So that would require
not a unilateral solution, but rather
959
00:55:16,560 --> 00:55:20,040
sitting down with a lot of these
countries, Central America,
960
00:55:20,360 --> 00:55:24,440
the US, Mexico, the new, trade agreement
961
00:55:24,840 --> 00:55:27,840
that has been, the framework,
962
00:55:28,200 --> 00:55:33,120
that has allowed Mexico
to become the first trading partner
963
00:55:33,320 --> 00:55:37,080
or the United States
is up for a renegotiation.
964
00:55:37,080 --> 00:55:37,800
They have to come up
965
00:55:37,800 --> 00:55:41,880
with a new version of the US-Mexico-Canada trade agreement by 20,
966
00:55:42,960 --> 00:55:45,360
2026, in two years.
967
00:55:45,360 --> 00:55:49,400
So that's going to be the first order
of business, really, for the new,
968
00:55:50,600 --> 00:55:53,800
for this new administration, Mexico
also for, for or the US
969
00:55:53,800 --> 00:55:57,920
administration assemble a negotiating team
and come up with,
970
00:55:59,880 --> 00:56:02,960
a new version of the US Senate,
basically trade agreement
971
00:56:03,160 --> 00:56:07,120
that has had a tremendous impact
in terms of the Mexican economy.
972
00:56:07,120 --> 00:56:10,120
The last time, the last agreement
that was,
973
00:56:10,440 --> 00:56:13,440
signed at the end of 2019
974
00:56:13,440 --> 00:56:16,440
really forced literally forced Mexico
975
00:56:16,440 --> 00:56:20,880
to do
and to start a its, labor legal framework.
976
00:56:21,360 --> 00:56:25,160
They have to come up with new structures
with a new federal legal system.
977
00:56:25,320 --> 00:56:27,120
And that was good for a lot of workers.
Right?
978
00:56:27,120 --> 00:56:31,600
I mean, that provided with the emergence
of an independent labor movement.
979
00:56:31,600 --> 00:56:34,080
But now it has to be renegotiated.
980
00:56:34,080 --> 00:56:35,280
There's a lot of questions on,
981
00:56:36,480 --> 00:56:38,080
posting these trade agreements,
982
00:56:38,080 --> 00:56:43,560
especially energy food production,
and especially the, drug trade.
983
00:56:43,560 --> 00:56:46,680
So those are big issues
that are going to be there.
984
00:56:47,040 --> 00:56:50,560
And that's why I think, some of the issues
is, you know,
985
00:56:50,600 --> 00:56:52,920
people are questioning
if people have a lot of questions
986
00:56:52,920 --> 00:56:56,800
about whether or not
the reforms that are happening in Mexico
987
00:56:56,920 --> 00:56:59,920
are sustainable
and are good for democracy.
988
00:57:00,240 --> 00:57:02,280
And I think we need to pay attention
at that.
989
00:57:02,280 --> 00:57:06,000
The most controversial, reform
that was approved
990
00:57:06,320 --> 00:57:09,120
was the judicial reform,
991
00:57:09,120 --> 00:57:11,640
the, party in power
992
00:57:11,640 --> 00:57:14,440
actually proposals and that was approved
993
00:57:14,440 --> 00:57:17,440
that the Supreme Court
and a lot of the judges,
994
00:57:18,480 --> 00:57:21,480
are going to be elected on a popular vote
995
00:57:21,720 --> 00:57:24,720
that is a source of a lot of controversy.
996
00:57:24,960 --> 00:57:28,480
Clearly, the international press
was totally against that.
997
00:57:28,480 --> 00:57:31,600
The advice
and the US ambassador in Mexico, Ken
998
00:57:31,600 --> 00:57:34,600
Salazar, got into a lot of trouble
because he came out,
999
00:57:34,640 --> 00:57:38,720
he came out in a press conference
speaking against those reforms.
1000
00:57:38,720 --> 00:57:44,880
And, before our Secretary of Mexico
complain about that, there was a huge
1001
00:57:46,080 --> 00:57:48,480
backlash internationally,
1002
00:57:48,480 --> 00:57:51,480
thinking that
maybe there's not a good reform
1003
00:57:51,880 --> 00:57:54,480
from the perspective of the outgoing
president.
1004
00:57:54,480 --> 00:57:56,840
He mentioned that
there was a lot of corruption.
1005
00:57:56,840 --> 00:58:00,320
And the only way to fix it to a stop.
1006
00:58:00,320 --> 00:58:05,720
Elites for controlling the judicial system
was for people to vote.
1007
00:58:06,400 --> 00:58:09,400
Well, of course, Morena is running,
1008
00:58:11,160 --> 00:58:12,440
popular wave.
1009
00:58:12,440 --> 00:58:15,160
It may be the, it is,
1010
00:58:15,160 --> 00:58:18,160
Supreme Court justices are going to elect
be elected.
1011
00:58:18,160 --> 00:58:18,480
Of course.
1012
00:58:18,480 --> 00:58:21,440
Morena. Well, we may be the short term,
but what is that change?
1013
00:58:21,440 --> 00:58:22,280
That's right.
1014
00:58:22,280 --> 00:58:25,280
Maybe the political will get change. And,
1015
00:58:25,440 --> 00:58:26,400
who knows what's going to happen.
1016
00:58:26,400 --> 00:58:29,720
So that's one example of the major trends
1017
00:58:29,720 --> 00:58:32,760
formation, that are happening in Mexico.
1018
00:58:32,760 --> 00:58:36,800
And there were other big,
so, changes this year.
1019
00:58:36,800 --> 00:58:40,680
But I think keeping, in mind
the larger picture,
1020
00:58:40,680 --> 00:58:46,800
I think that these elections, the fact
that Morena has consolidated, the fact
1021
00:58:46,800 --> 00:58:50,520
that that's a new political party,
which is very interesting, right.
1022
00:58:50,520 --> 00:58:52,920
I will add a new political party can
1023
00:58:54,000 --> 00:58:55,840
so quickly become so dominant.
1024
00:58:55,840 --> 00:58:58,840
And I think this is one of the questions
I ask you be,
1025
00:59:00,520 --> 00:59:04,200
can you be, too successful in a democracy
for your own good?
1026
00:59:04,560 --> 00:59:06,760
And that's what people are afraid it.
1027
00:59:06,760 --> 00:59:07,560
Mexico. Right.
1028
00:59:07,560 --> 00:59:11,320
Because we had experience
with another political party
1029
00:59:11,320 --> 00:59:14,560
that was so dominant for 75 years,
the PRI.
1030
00:59:14,840 --> 00:59:16,520
Basically, they run the country.
1031
00:59:16,520 --> 00:59:17,960
There was no opposition.
1032
00:59:17,960 --> 00:59:20,560
So are we running the risk really?
1033
00:59:20,560 --> 00:59:25,200
Go back to that framework
where a party is so dominant that,
1034
00:59:25,200 --> 00:59:28,200
you know, they don't have to negotiate,
they don't have to,
1035
00:59:29,280 --> 00:59:32,400
or really care
about the process of deliberation
1036
00:59:32,400 --> 00:59:37,480
because they are the majority Congress
and they're riding a very, populist boat.
1037
00:59:38,080 --> 00:59:42,680
So I think those are, sort of some issues
that we can think about a lot.
1038
00:59:42,680 --> 00:59:46,080
So the fact gender,
I think that's another important thing.
1039
00:59:48,720 --> 00:59:51,240
How did it happen that a woman was elected
president?
1040
00:59:51,240 --> 00:59:52,200
And I think one thing
1041
00:59:52,200 --> 00:59:55,800
that we need to think about is
it wasn't like it was all of a sudden,
1042
00:59:56,400 --> 00:59:58,920
talking about emerging to the public,
saying
1043
00:59:58,920 --> 01:00:03,840
there had been reforms in Mexico,
especially, the reforms of,
1044
01:00:04,200 --> 01:00:07,800
gender parity, not equity parity.
1045
01:00:08,160 --> 01:00:11,160
The electoral system in Mexico demanded
1046
01:00:11,240 --> 01:00:15,240
that all parties, issue
a slate of candidates
1047
01:00:15,840 --> 01:00:19,320
equally along gender lines, 50 or 50%.
1048
01:00:19,920 --> 01:00:24,960
So this is the first election
if we start probation was fully place.
1049
01:00:25,440 --> 01:00:30,200
And, and it has transformed the elections
in Mexico for Congress
1050
01:00:30,200 --> 01:00:33,600
and for the House of Representatives
and the Senate are women.
1051
01:00:34,240 --> 01:00:36,640
The government,
1052
01:00:36,640 --> 01:00:41,040
the cabinet of empowered is 50% women,
52% male.
1053
01:00:41,560 --> 01:00:42,640
So that is very interesting.
1054
01:00:42,640 --> 01:00:46,160
But this is mandated. But, by the reforms,
1055
01:00:47,440 --> 01:00:48,000
in the,
1056
01:00:48,000 --> 01:00:51,000
in the electoral system
crashing down, of course.
1057
01:00:51,880 --> 01:00:57,000
She is, a well known,
political, politician in Mexico.
1058
01:00:57,000 --> 01:00:59,080
She was the governor of Mexico City.
1059
01:00:59,080 --> 01:01:01,960
And in the old days,
this is another very interesting city
1060
01:01:01,960 --> 01:01:04,240
for those of us
who work in public university.
1061
01:01:04,240 --> 01:01:05,400
She was a leader.
1062
01:01:05,400 --> 01:01:09,880
You see, any woman in the 1990s, that's
how she burst into the public.
1063
01:01:09,960 --> 01:01:11,720
She had,
1064
01:01:11,720 --> 01:01:13,680
the large movement,
1065
01:01:13,680 --> 01:01:17,680
against, the immigration,
the situation in Mexico City.
1066
01:01:17,680 --> 01:01:20,520
So she's been around for quite a while.
1067
01:01:20,520 --> 01:01:25,560
But I think that reform
that demanded, parity between men
1068
01:01:25,560 --> 01:01:30,440
and women in all political position
has made such a tremendous impact.
1069
01:01:30,440 --> 01:01:31,320
And it was a process.
1070
01:01:31,320 --> 01:01:34,400
It's been a long, 20 year
long process of executing that.
1071
01:01:34,440 --> 01:01:36,480
It you see the results here.
1072
01:01:36,480 --> 01:01:37,600
So thank you. So.
1073
01:01:40,440 --> 01:01:41,280
Okay.
1074
01:01:41,280 --> 01:01:42,360
Hello.
1075
01:01:42,360 --> 01:01:45,120
And thank you so much,
Marjorie and David, for organizing this.
1076
01:01:45,120 --> 01:01:47,000
It's really important that,
1077
01:01:47,000 --> 01:01:49,480
although we are looking forward
and we're excited about the U.S.
1078
01:01:49,480 --> 01:01:53,280
election, we're, you know, keeping an eye
on what's happening in those other
1079
01:01:53,280 --> 01:01:54,920
60 plus elections.
1080
01:01:54,920 --> 01:01:57,760
Or at least some of them,
happening in the world.
1081
01:01:57,760 --> 01:02:02,120
So, I'm going to bring to the table
some insights from the,
1082
01:02:02,440 --> 01:02:05,440
European Parliament elections
that took place in June.
1083
01:02:05,960 --> 01:02:10,640
Just some parts that I find interesting,
some trends, some open questions.
1084
01:02:10,640 --> 01:02:13,760
Of course, there are lots of things
we can discuss here.
1085
01:02:14,000 --> 01:02:17,040
I learned that there is faculty
in the room, people
1086
01:02:17,040 --> 01:02:20,680
who might more know
more about the elections than I do.
1087
01:02:20,880 --> 01:02:23,040
But there are also first year
students in the room.
1088
01:02:23,040 --> 01:02:26,320
So I start out
with a little bit of background.
1089
01:02:26,880 --> 01:02:30,320
Why on the European Parliament elections
so interesting?
1090
01:02:30,320 --> 01:02:34,280
Well, they give us a good starting point
to compare election campaigns
1091
01:02:34,280 --> 01:02:38,600
in European countries,
because all of the 27 member states
1092
01:02:38,840 --> 01:02:41,720
have vastly different political systems,
1093
01:02:41,720 --> 01:02:44,720
different media systems,
different political cultures.
1094
01:02:44,800 --> 01:02:48,160
So when they do their national elections
for national governments,
1095
01:02:48,160 --> 01:02:52,240
national parliaments, it's
really difficult to compare, let's say
1096
01:02:52,240 --> 01:02:57,320
Austria to, Sweden, for instance,
or Germany and Poland.
1097
01:02:57,600 --> 01:03:02,040
But in the European Parliament election,
everyone votes at the same time,
1098
01:03:02,480 --> 01:03:05,520
roughly the same day,
according to the same systems.
1099
01:03:05,520 --> 01:03:10,200
And we can really compare how parties
or politicians, campaign across countries.
1100
01:03:10,920 --> 01:03:14,160
The EU elections are pretty big
and relevant.
1101
01:03:14,520 --> 01:03:17,480
So we have 27 member countries.
1102
01:03:17,480 --> 01:03:21,600
That makes 450 million people
who live there.
1103
01:03:22,320 --> 01:03:27,080
An electorate of 375
million eligible voters.
1104
01:03:27,080 --> 01:03:32,200
That's the second largest, Democratic
electorate in the world after India.
1105
01:03:35,040 --> 01:03:38,600
It's a
pretty big parliament with 720 seats.
1106
01:03:39,120 --> 01:03:42,720
And who gets the seat
also has some relation to the population
1107
01:03:42,720 --> 01:03:47,360
size in the member countries,
not just, the parties, that, run there.
1108
01:03:48,200 --> 01:03:52,760
So we can say it's the largest
simultaneous transnational elections
1109
01:03:52,880 --> 01:03:55,880
that we have, in the world.
1110
01:03:56,400 --> 01:03:59,680
And this is happening
every five years since 1979,
1111
01:04:00,360 --> 01:04:03,960
which is why it's so rare that we have
European elections in the same year
1112
01:04:03,960 --> 01:04:08,520
with US elections that are covered
for this very different election cycle.
1113
01:04:08,760 --> 01:04:12,960
And the principle behind the European
Parliament of the national parliaments
1114
01:04:12,960 --> 01:04:14,680
is subsidiarity.
1115
01:04:14,680 --> 01:04:19,560
So the idea is Europe when it's necessary,
national when it's possible.
1116
01:04:19,560 --> 01:04:24,120
So there's some policy fields
that the European Parliament, is
1117
01:04:25,000 --> 01:04:28,040
has the power to, to,
to discuss and decide.
1118
01:04:28,280 --> 01:04:31,680
That's things like customs
and trade agreements
1119
01:04:31,680 --> 01:04:34,680
or currency, like a, common currency,
the euro.
1120
01:04:35,040 --> 01:04:38,400
There are shared powers when it comes to,
agriculture, energy
1121
01:04:38,400 --> 01:04:40,440
research and science and these things.
1122
01:04:40,440 --> 01:04:42,480
And then there are things
that the national governments
1123
01:04:42,480 --> 01:04:46,480
and sometimes regional governments
and parliaments, get to decide things
1124
01:04:46,480 --> 01:04:49,880
like education, culture, defense
and these things.
1125
01:04:50,240 --> 01:04:54,320
So it is we have European parties,
but it's largely the national parties
1126
01:04:54,320 --> 01:04:57,640
that run the campaigns
for the European Parliament elections.
1127
01:04:57,640 --> 01:05:00,640
And then after the election, the parties
1128
01:05:00,640 --> 01:05:05,880
form blocs, basically party groups
in the European Parliament,
1129
01:05:06,440 --> 01:05:08,880
basically like factions that, that work
1130
01:05:08,880 --> 01:05:12,080
together, and that you can see, here.
1131
01:05:12,240 --> 01:05:13,360
And the interesting thing
1132
01:05:13,360 --> 01:05:16,840
I wanted to point out here,
and that's the first trend I wanted to
1133
01:05:16,880 --> 01:05:20,920
to bring to the table
today, is how very strong the far right,
1134
01:05:22,160 --> 01:05:25,160
has been in these, past elections.
1135
01:05:25,280 --> 01:05:26,640
This year.
1136
01:05:26,640 --> 01:05:31,800
So by now, one fourth, 25% of the seats
in the European Parliament
1137
01:05:32,000 --> 01:05:36,080
are in the hands of far
right, parties in France.
1138
01:05:36,080 --> 01:05:40,280
The far right came at first 30%,
which led Emmanuel
1139
01:05:40,280 --> 01:05:44,240
Macron to dissolve the national parliament
and call for snap elections.
1140
01:05:44,400 --> 01:05:45,600
But that was super smart.
1141
01:05:45,600 --> 01:05:47,640
A not so different discussion.
1142
01:05:47,640 --> 01:05:51,720
In Germany, the far right came in second
with 15%, also super strong.
1143
01:05:52,000 --> 01:05:55,440
So now, they are like 25% of the European
Parliament.
1144
01:05:55,920 --> 01:05:58,040
However, they are not united.
1145
01:05:58,040 --> 01:06:01,440
So we now have three groups
that are all far right.
1146
01:06:01,440 --> 01:06:05,640
But they're not united in one, party
group, in Parliament.
1147
01:06:05,640 --> 01:06:08,880
So we have the Patriots for Europe.
1148
01:06:09,080 --> 01:06:10,880
That's
1149
01:06:10,880 --> 01:06:13,480
a party, with, for instance,
1150
01:06:13,480 --> 01:06:18,240
Viktor Orban's Fidesz party, from Hungary,
the Austrian, FPO.
1151
01:06:18,520 --> 01:06:21,680
And there we have
the Europe of the sovereign nations.
1152
01:06:21,680 --> 01:06:25,760
That's basically only the German AfD,
because nobody wanted to be together
1153
01:06:25,760 --> 01:06:27,120
with them anymore, for reasons.
1154
01:06:27,120 --> 01:06:32,440
I'll just, come to,
and we have the, NCR, faction here.
1155
01:06:32,920 --> 01:06:36,480
There you will find the Fratelli d'Italia,
Giorgia Meloni,
1156
01:06:37,120 --> 01:06:40,680
party, or the Polish, Peace party.
1157
01:06:40,680 --> 01:06:44,360
So, those are all far right parties,
but they're not,
1158
01:06:44,920 --> 01:06:48,120
necessarily friends, with, each other.
1159
01:06:48,560 --> 01:06:51,760
And one reason for that,
especially for the isolation of the German
1160
01:06:51,760 --> 01:06:57,800
AfD, is that their, leading candidate,
Maximilian Krah, was really.
1161
01:06:57,800 --> 01:06:59,640
I mean he's a really scandalous figure.
1162
01:06:59,640 --> 01:07:03,280
He was embroiled in all kinds of
scandals, Chinese espionage.
1163
01:07:04,520 --> 01:07:06,960
No close connections to Russia.
1164
01:07:06,960 --> 01:07:10,840
But most importantly, just before
before the election, he gave an interview
1165
01:07:10,840 --> 01:07:14,040
in Italy, and he really played down
the role of the SS,
1166
01:07:14,880 --> 01:07:18,080
and, you know, the Nazi regime.
1167
01:07:18,080 --> 01:07:22,200
And it's just his inability
to kind of distance themselves,
1168
01:07:22,840 --> 01:07:25,560
dealing in any, meaningful way
1169
01:07:25,560 --> 01:07:28,640
with, the Nazi past of Germany
that really,
1170
01:07:29,760 --> 01:07:32,240
causes this isolation of the German AfD
1171
01:07:32,240 --> 01:07:35,720
within the far right, in Europe.
1172
01:07:35,720 --> 01:07:40,480
And here's a comment by a German,
influencer in a very satirical way,
1173
01:07:40,480 --> 01:07:44,680
obviously, who commented
this kind of being kicked out.
1174
01:07:44,680 --> 01:07:47,880
So Marine Le Pen in France
that she will not she will not be in a,
1175
01:07:47,880 --> 01:07:51,880
in a, in a parliament group with AfD
and then Meloni second
1176
01:07:51,920 --> 01:07:55,200
that that so his influence and hot
so he commented,
1177
01:07:55,760 --> 01:08:00,040
see when it comes to far
right extremism, we Germans needn't worry.
1178
01:08:01,200 --> 01:08:02,320
Our far right
1179
01:08:02,320 --> 01:08:06,120
extremists are too extreme
for the other far right extremist.
1180
01:08:06,120 --> 01:08:08,240
So, yeah, we can still do it.
1181
01:08:08,240 --> 01:08:12,800
So obviously a satirical comment, but,
I think it really, really nails it.
1182
01:08:12,800 --> 01:08:15,360
What, what happened there?
1183
01:08:15,360 --> 01:08:18,840
Another trend, somehow connected to
that is the rise of,
1184
01:08:19,480 --> 01:08:22,400
negativity, in campaigning.
1185
01:08:22,400 --> 01:08:27,960
And I only can show you empirical data
for the EU elections in 14 and 2019,
1186
01:08:27,960 --> 01:08:31,040
because for this year,
we're still analyzing the data.
1187
01:08:31,280 --> 01:08:33,360
So this is from
1188
01:08:33,360 --> 01:08:35,840
Facebook post of political parties
1189
01:08:35,840 --> 01:08:38,840
in the two weeks before the election day,
1190
01:08:39,680 --> 01:08:41,320
for this two years, analyzed
1191
01:08:41,320 --> 01:08:44,800
120 party like 15,000 posts and,
1192
01:08:45,600 --> 01:08:48,840
in 11 or 12 countries, not all of them.
1193
01:08:49,560 --> 01:08:52,280
And the dotted line is 2019.
1194
01:08:52,280 --> 01:08:53,720
The black line is 2014.
1195
01:08:53,720 --> 01:08:59,320
And you can see negative emotions,
were up in 2019, negative campaigning
1196
01:08:59,320 --> 01:09:02,720
meaning saying not vote for us with red,
but don't vote for them.
1197
01:09:02,760 --> 01:09:03,720
It's the end of the world there.
1198
01:09:03,720 --> 01:09:06,160
Super bad is populist content.
1199
01:09:06,160 --> 01:09:09,120
Dramatization is also is also
1200
01:09:10,200 --> 01:09:11,880
on the rise.
1201
01:09:11,880 --> 01:09:16,120
And this has not only to do with the far
right of, you know, the usual suspects,
1202
01:09:16,120 --> 01:09:19,480
but we saw in 2019
it's also conservative parties
1203
01:09:19,760 --> 01:09:22,720
who are increasingly picking up
those narratives. Why?
1204
01:09:22,720 --> 01:09:25,200
Because they benefit on social media
from this.
1205
01:09:25,200 --> 01:09:27,440
They get so much more engagement.
1206
01:09:27,440 --> 01:09:30,960
And that's something we can show
in this paper, that, you know, the way
1207
01:09:30,960 --> 01:09:34,720
social media, especially Facebook, is
built around user engagement,
1208
01:09:34,920 --> 01:09:38,760
they really, really benefit,
from negativity.
1209
01:09:38,760 --> 01:09:41,840
And some European parties
have also complained to Meta's.
1210
01:09:41,840 --> 01:09:45,280
I think the platforms
incentivize them to go more
1211
01:09:45,280 --> 01:09:49,760
and more negative when this is not a way
they actually want to talk to, to voters.
1212
01:09:49,760 --> 01:09:51,040
And, potential.
1213
01:09:51,040 --> 01:09:53,880
So we'll see if this continues.
1214
01:09:53,880 --> 01:09:56,360
Has continued this year by end of October.
1215
01:09:56,360 --> 01:09:59,360
I have data,
but I would very much, expect it,
1216
01:09:59,800 --> 01:10:04,160
expect it to another
more of an open question than a trend.
1217
01:10:04,880 --> 01:10:08,120
Is the, the phenomenon of election
denialism?
1218
01:10:08,120 --> 01:10:11,120
And, of course,
you are well aware of this,
1219
01:10:11,120 --> 01:10:15,960
that's been a lot of this,
those false claims of election fraud.
1220
01:10:15,960 --> 01:10:19,120
Of course, if there is election
fraud, one has to be very open,
1221
01:10:19,560 --> 01:10:20,560
and upfront about that.
1222
01:10:20,560 --> 01:10:22,160
But those false claims,
1223
01:10:22,160 --> 01:10:26,320
to kind of undermine the,
the trust in, electronic institutions.
1224
01:10:26,520 --> 01:10:30,440
And my question is
if this is sort of seeping also into the,
1225
01:10:31,000 --> 01:10:35,320
European, discourse,
if we see more of this in the EU,
1226
01:10:36,000 --> 01:10:39,360
I don't know, the very first paper
I ever wrote possible Lopez Obrador
1227
01:10:39,360 --> 01:10:43,160
and, his claims of fraud in 2006,
when he lost the entire,
1228
01:10:45,000 --> 01:10:45,560
so I kind of
1229
01:10:45,560 --> 01:10:48,560
kind of circling back
to, election, election,
1230
01:10:49,560 --> 01:10:50,600
denialism.
1231
01:10:50,600 --> 01:10:55,480
Here, there are some examples here from
Germany, from some regional elections.
1232
01:10:55,480 --> 01:10:58,800
We just had a couple of weeks back
where you can see similar claims,
1233
01:10:58,800 --> 01:11:03,440
like we know from the US, politicians
who say they will only accept the result
1234
01:11:03,440 --> 01:11:08,400
if they like it and called
for their supporters to kind of volunteer
1235
01:11:08,400 --> 01:11:12,640
to monitor, the counting of votes and
all of these things kind of making them.
1236
01:11:12,640 --> 01:11:15,640
But what I yeah, there will be fraud,
especially mail in ballots,
1237
01:11:15,960 --> 01:11:18,280
super fraudulent presumably.
1238
01:11:18,280 --> 01:11:23,360
So we see some of that probably not as
much as in the US, but, I'm very curious.
1239
01:11:23,360 --> 01:11:26,560
And again, an end of October
I will have we're lagging a bit behind,
1240
01:11:26,560 --> 01:11:28,160
but this project unfortunately.
1241
01:11:28,160 --> 01:11:31,120
So I can't give
you any numbers. Right here.
1242
01:11:32,160 --> 01:11:32,760
So what
1243
01:11:32,760 --> 01:11:36,600
is interesting when we compare this
with the US, as I said, it's a really
1244
01:11:36,840 --> 01:11:40,120
large and big, election
year, inclement election.
1245
01:11:41,400 --> 01:11:44,600
But we'll also do us actually
pretty much an outlier system
1246
01:11:44,600 --> 01:11:47,040
with that political system
and perhaps the EU elections
1247
01:11:47,040 --> 01:11:50,440
also an outlier
because it's a transnational, election.
1248
01:11:50,440 --> 01:11:53,440
But I think one thing we definitely have
in common is the vulnerable
1249
01:11:53,720 --> 01:11:56,920
off our elections of election campaigns
when it comes to,
1250
01:11:57,440 --> 01:12:01,000
disinformation campaigns, the role of AI,
the potential
1251
01:12:01,000 --> 01:12:04,000
of seeing more and more deepfakes,
1252
01:12:04,200 --> 01:12:06,680
made with AI.
1253
01:12:06,680 --> 01:12:07,680
This year, of course.
1254
01:12:07,680 --> 01:12:09,320
And in the future.
1255
01:12:09,320 --> 01:12:15,400
So far, there is more anecdotal evidence,
especially from, voices
1256
01:12:15,440 --> 01:12:18,800
from in election in Slovakia, last fall,
1257
01:12:19,440 --> 01:12:22,080
there have been some,
1258
01:12:22,080 --> 01:12:27,360
this information campaign since kind of
mirroring really existing media websites.
1259
01:12:27,360 --> 01:12:31,960
But, you know, just changing the UI
a little bit, that you can have lots of,
1260
01:12:32,800 --> 01:12:35,080
false information on there,
but people actually think
1261
01:12:35,080 --> 01:12:38,400
they are on the, on the website
of a trusted, the news site,
1262
01:12:39,880 --> 01:12:43,200
some sort
of deepfakes, but no real big campaigns
1263
01:12:43,200 --> 01:12:46,640
that could really kind of swing
an election or anything like that.
1264
01:12:46,640 --> 01:12:49,360
Now, we could say we
perhaps were lucky so far,
1265
01:12:49,360 --> 01:12:53,120
but I think, again, with election
denialism, we have to look more
1266
01:12:53,120 --> 01:12:57,960
to the past campaigns and see
especially how this connects with, claims
1267
01:12:57,960 --> 01:13:02,360
of presumed election fraud
if there's no election fraud happening.
1268
01:13:02,360 --> 01:13:06,640
But you claim there is a kind of evidence
and then the ability of creating
1269
01:13:06,640 --> 01:13:09,800
images and videos through France
and I stuff
1270
01:13:10,480 --> 01:13:14,040
ballot boxes and stuff
like that comes in very, handy.
1271
01:13:14,040 --> 01:13:18,560
So the question in the US and in Europe is
how can we safeguard our campaigns?
1272
01:13:19,200 --> 01:13:22,840
But still maintain
freedom of speech?
1273
01:13:24,040 --> 01:13:25,920
We see that, the US
1274
01:13:25,920 --> 01:13:29,880
voters are worried about AI
and the, upcoming elections.
1275
01:13:30,120 --> 01:13:33,600
They also see that the platforms
are responsible,
1276
01:13:34,200 --> 01:13:38,360
to kind of taking care of that
and mitigating their collateral effects.
1277
01:13:39,400 --> 01:13:41,800
We do have some regulation in Europe
1278
01:13:41,800 --> 01:13:46,720
that we do not have, here in the US out
there is
1279
01:13:47,960 --> 01:13:51,720
the Digital Services Act was passed,
last year, the AI act.
1280
01:13:51,960 --> 01:13:55,400
And one thing that's interesting
about the Digital Services Act is that it
1281
01:13:55,400 --> 01:13:58,480
forces platforms to give us some reports,
some transparency.
1282
01:13:58,840 --> 01:14:01,720
So this is, what, X, what's going on?
1283
01:14:01,720 --> 01:14:05,680
X, for instance, they were asked
how many like what are the language
1284
01:14:05,680 --> 01:14:09,240
capabilities
of your content moderators in Europe.
1285
01:14:10,600 --> 01:14:14,360
So we they don't have a lot of content
moderators, 20 something.
1286
01:14:15,000 --> 01:14:17,920
They had one person that spoke Dutch,
1287
01:14:17,920 --> 01:14:21,160
let's say that from 2023, there was
a national election in the Netherlands.
1288
01:14:21,400 --> 01:14:25,160
There's one person that speaks Polish, 81
that speak German. Wow.
1289
01:14:25,760 --> 01:14:26,600
Great.
1290
01:14:26,600 --> 01:14:29,960
So you see, this is
they are not really taking this seriously.
1291
01:14:30,400 --> 01:14:33,040
Just, you know,
if you look at the number of, you know,
1292
01:14:33,040 --> 01:14:37,720
language, language capabilities of content
moderators, that is very speaking.
1293
01:14:37,760 --> 01:14:39,960
How much speaking for itself?
1294
01:14:39,960 --> 01:14:44,480
What we also do have in common
is that for scholars and independent
1295
01:14:44,480 --> 01:14:49,400
monitoring institutions, it's
next to impossible to really monitor
1296
01:14:49,400 --> 01:14:52,520
what's going on social media platforms
in election campaigns
1297
01:14:52,800 --> 01:14:55,800
these days,
because data access was always bad.
1298
01:14:55,800 --> 01:14:59,760
It has become even worse,
in the past years and months.
1299
01:15:00,120 --> 01:15:03,400
So again, the Digital Services Act, in
the EU
1300
01:15:03,600 --> 01:15:07,960
is a little sliver line on the horizon
because it contains one article, article
1301
01:15:07,960 --> 01:15:11,640
40, that gives scholars,
for the first time,
1302
01:15:11,640 --> 01:15:15,760
a legal right to access platform data
for certain kinds of research questions
1303
01:15:15,760 --> 01:15:19,040
when they connect to high risk, things,
in the union.
1304
01:15:19,800 --> 01:15:23,240
If you want to know more about this,
I run a research project,
1305
01:15:23,440 --> 01:15:27,480
that's kind of tracking the application
scholars sent to platforms.
1306
01:15:27,480 --> 01:15:32,040
If you if you apply for access in a
that the answer is the answer yes or no.
1307
01:15:32,040 --> 01:15:37,800
And like, what's the what's the
the reasoning, there and also doing
1308
01:15:37,800 --> 01:15:41,920
some, advisory work for policymakers
on how to implement data access.
1309
01:15:41,920 --> 01:15:44,840
So if you're struggling with this,
also try to figure out how
1310
01:15:44,840 --> 01:15:48,040
this can be useful for us scholars,
not just for European scholars.
1311
01:15:49,160 --> 01:15:49,520
Yeah.
1312
01:15:49,520 --> 01:15:51,080
Talk to me. And I'm stopping here.
1313
01:15:51,080 --> 01:15:52,480
So we still have some time
for this question.
1314
01:15:52,480 --> 01:15:53,280
Thank you.
1315
01:15:53,280 --> 01:15:56,280
1316
01:15:56,640 --> 01:15:57,800
Wow. Well,
1317
01:15:57,800 --> 01:16:02,280
there was quite a wealth of information,
different perspectives
1318
01:16:02,280 --> 01:16:06,600
on from the discursive
narrative level to the symbolic cultural,
1319
01:16:06,920 --> 01:16:11,720
the environmental impacts
and material impacts, economic impacts,
1320
01:16:12,480 --> 01:16:16,560
of these elections that we're seeing,
we want to have some time for you to talk.
1321
01:16:16,560 --> 01:16:19,640
But before we invite question,
1322
01:16:19,640 --> 01:16:22,800
could you at least just turn to each
other, turn to someone near you and say,
1323
01:16:22,920 --> 01:16:24,240
what are you kind of takeaway?
1324
01:16:24,240 --> 01:16:28,520
What's some big takeaway from this
or some question that you have?
1325
01:16:28,560 --> 01:16:31,920
Let's spend one minute talking
with each other, and then we'll take
1326
01:16:31,920 --> 01:16:36,840
whatever time we had left before people
come into the room.
1327
01:16:37,120 --> 01:16:41,320
1328
01:16:43,320 --> 01:16:44,240