Monday, November 26, 2012

Third Wave Politics: Secessionist Parties in Spain Gains Political Footing

In the information age, forces of decentralization will function as the key agents of social change.

In the realm of politics, such evolutionary transition will likely be channeled through secessionist movements.

In Spain, the secessionist parties of Catalonia may have just gotten the momentum that could trigger a potential chain of events.

From Bloomberg,
Pro-independence parties in Catalonia won a regional vote, strengthening a drive for a referendum on secession in defiance of Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.

Catalan President Artur Mas, who called early elections to force the debate on independence, won 50 of the 135 seats in the regional assembly for his Convergencia i Unio party, down from 62, with 99 percent of the vote counted. The separatist Catalan Republican Left, known as the ERC, more than doubled its seats to 21 from 10. Two smaller parties that also back a plebiscite secured 16 seats.

Rajoy, weakened by recession and speculation that Spain needs a European bailout, says a referendum on secession is unconstitutional. Mas’s losses showed his bid for a mandate backfired, leaving him dependent on anti-austerity separatists to govern Spain’s largest regional economy.

“With a majority, Mas could have negotiated for all kinds of goodies to postpone the referendum but clearly that’s not an option anymore,” Ken Dubin, a political scientist at Carlos III University and IE business school in Madrid. “He was hoping he’d have a stronger hand to negotiate some intermediate status, but his bluff has been called.”

Rajoy’s People’s Party won 19 seats, a gain of one. The Socialists took 20 seats, down from 28.

Mas has pledged a referendum within four years. In contrast, the ERC would be willing to declare independence unilaterally in 2014.

The above developments reminds me of, and appear as gradual confirmation of the predictions of futurist Alvin Toffler as elucidated in his highly prescient 1980 book, The Third Wave (p.317)
National governments, by contrast, find it difficult to customize their policies. Locked into Second Wave political and bureaucratic structures, they find it impossible to treat each region or city, each contending racial, religious, social, sexual or ethnic group differently, let alone treat each citizen as an individual. As conditions diversify, national decision-making remains ignorant of the fast-changing local requirements. If they try to identify these highly localized or specialized needs, they wind up deluged with overdetailed, indigestible data…

In consequence, national governments in Washington, London, Paris or Moscow continue, by and large, to impose uniform, standardized policies designed for a mass society on increasingly divergent and segment publics. Local and individual needs are forgotten or ignored causing the flames of resentment to reach white heat. As de-massification progresses, we can expect separatist or centrifugal forces to intensify dramatically and threaten the unity of many nation-states.

The Third Wave places enormous pressures on the nation-state from below.
It is happening.

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