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Freedoms and Flashpoints: Elections Around the Globe in 2024

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A discussion with diverse regional experts about the many significant elections that have already or will soon take place in 2024.


Freedoms and Flashpoints:
Elections Around the Globe in 2024

Democracy, Freedom and Truth Series of the International Institute

Tuesday, October 8, 2024
12:30 pm – 2:00 pm
Bunche Hall, Room 10383
RSVP required: https://ucla.in/4cYbBYW

Four panelists will each speak briefly about important elections in India, Mexico, Latin America and the European Union, respectively, and the issues that these elections have brought to the fore. The audience will then be invited to participate in a larger conversation, considering what these and other electoral flashpoints reveal about the current shifting world order in advance of the U.S. presidential election in November 2024.

 

Speakers

Susanna Hecht, Luskin School of Public Affairs, Institute of Environment and Sustainability, Latin American Institute, UCLA

Hecht has academic appointments in the Luskin School of Public Affairs and the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability at UCLA. She also serves as director of the Center for Brazilian Studies of the Latin American Institute. She is proficient in numerous languages and her publications focus focused on such far-reaching topics as migration, urbanization, the Amazon and natural resources in South America.

Hecht will address three extremely “dicey” elections in countries that have Amazon sovereignties: Venezuela (poster country for election fraud), Bolivia (country of a staged “auto coup”) and Peru. All three are flailing if not failed states, with elections in these countries having implications for their capacity to govern critical large areas of the Amazon, with far broader effects at the level of local systems, climate and the rise of clandestine economies.



Ulrike Klinger, Thomas Mann House and European University Viadrina, Frankfurt/Oder

Klinger is currently a Thomas Mann Fellow. She is professor and chair of Digital Democracy, as well as a member of the board of directors of the European New School of Digital Studies at European University Viadrina, Frankfurt/Oder.

Klinger will discuss the new European Parliament that was elected in June 2024 in relation to the upcoming U.S. election, giving a comparative perspective on democratic vulnerabilities, democratic backsliding and safeguarding core democratic institutions. She brings a longitudinal perspective to her consideration of the role of election campaigns on social media, together with the successes of far-right parties and the divisions within them.



Tejas Parasher, Department of Political Science and International Institute, UCLA

Parasher, assistant professor of political theory, has a joint appointment in the department of political science and the International Institute at UCLA. He is the author of “Radical Democracy in Modern Indian Political Thought” (Cambridge, 2023). His research explores the political philosophy of collective self-determination, political representation and statehood.

Parasher will discuss the distinctive problem of democratic backsliding across global elections in 2024, using the Indian general parliamentary elections in April-May to speak more generally about current issues of constitutional erosion and electoral autocracy worldwide.



Gaspar Rivera-Salgado, Latin American Institute and Labor Center, UCLA

Professor Rivera-Salgado is director of the UCLA Center for Mexican Studies and project director at the UCLA Labor Center, where he is a member of the core faculty in the UCLA labor studies program. He directs the Global Labor Initiative with an emphasis on cross-border, worker-to-worker collaborations between the U.S., Mexico and Canada.

Rivera-Salgado will address the June 2024 landslide victory of Mexico’s first female president, Claudia Sheinbaum, with attention to both the power Sheinbaum assumes —with significant ability to pass constitutional reforms — and the challenges she will face, given Mexico’s complex political dynamics and endemic security and rule-of-law challenges.

 

Moderators

Marjorie ElaineAssociate Vice Provost, UCLA International Institute and Professor of Education, UCLA School of Education & Information Studies

David Kim, Associate Vice Provost, UCLA International Institute and Professor of European Languages & Transnational Studies

 

 

 



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Transcript:

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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

240

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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

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was a little,

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too optimistic, too exaggerated,

that saying that this marks

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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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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

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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?

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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

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almost an executive power

to amend the Constitution.

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And this is something that has happened

in India once before, during a period

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called the emergency, right?

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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

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that was really striking to me,

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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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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,

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but also for the protection

of sort of basic

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civil

liberties and individual rights, right.

307

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And so this

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election became framed as an election for

the values of constitutional liberalism

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as much as or more than an election

between different competing

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visions of nationalism,

which is what I, I think the contest

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between the BJP and other parties

had been through the 20 tens.

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You know, whether or not you imagine

India to be a secular republic or not,

313

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whether or not you imagine, national

you know, what you imagine

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your vision of national security to be.

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I think much of the debate had been about

nationalism and what I'm really struck by

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is that in 2024,

the debate seems to have shifted

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to towards a defense of liberal values

and sort of basic liberal,

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what we might call basic liberal values.

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So a lot of the rhetoric against

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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

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of pluralist

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democracy, separation of powers

and individual rights.

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Right.

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So, so there were lots of opposition

rallies held through March,

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which were literally titled

Save the Constitution,

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right.

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And copies of the Constitution

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became this kind of totemic symbol

that people were holding up.

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And I think this is really new.

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I found this as someone who works on

the Indian Constitution

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in competitive perspective.

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I found this kind of mass uptake

of a constitutional language of liberal

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right to be very new, right.

335

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As I mentioned, it's different.

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It was it struck

me as being quite different

337

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from how the debate

between the BJP and its,

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opponents had been happening since 2014,

which is more about nationalism.

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But it was also different

from the inter brief

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interruption of democratic politics

in India in the mid 1970s.

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Right, which I just mentioned earlier.

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So this period called the emergency,

where, martial law is,

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is put into place

under emergency measures.

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And, and democracy

is effectively suspended.

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There's a lot of violations

of civil liberties and so on.

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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

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of the emergency

of martial law, of emergency powers

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was as a defense of democracy

and popular sovereignty, right?

350

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The power of the people

that this is not a democratic, act.

351

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Right.

352

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And so what we need

is a defense of democracy.

353

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We need more robust forms of democracy.

354

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It's a critique of kind of one party rule

that doesn't seem to be happening now.

355

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The opposition to Modi,

356

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to the BJP in 2024 seems to be enveloped

in this liberal language of freedom

357

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and individual rights,

which is new to me, like at least

358

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at the mass level, seems new to me

as a dynamic in Indian politics.

359

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And I think this is where,

this is where I just want to close in.

360

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I think this this is something

361

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really interesting, like something

really interesting is happening,

362

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I think both in the Indian case

and I think more broadly, right, that

363

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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

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opposition

to perceived erosion of democracy

367

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is actually framed,

not in the language of democracy itself,

368

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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

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in much of the country,

much for much of the 20th century.

371

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So this is new and then I think globally

as well, what it what it really shows.

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I think it's signaled

something that that, you know, there's

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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

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of popular sovereignty

and charismatic leadership, but is deeply

376

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skeptical, critical, and even rejects

right frameworks and so on.

377

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And in opposition to illiberal democracy,

I think the uptake of liberalism itself,

378

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this kind of reclamation

of the language of liberalism,

379

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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

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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

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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