home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
052190
/
0521007.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1993-04-15
|
6KB
|
126 lines
<text id=90TT1292>
<link 90TT1417>
<title>
May 21, 1990: Two Cheers For The Front Runner
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
May 21, 1990 John Sununu:Bush's Bad Cop
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 38
ROMANIA
Two Cheers for the Front Runner
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Though Iliescu leads in the polls, many voters doubt he will
bring Western-style democracy to a tempestuous political scene
</p>
<p>By John Borrell/Floresti
</p>
<p> A single unshaded bulb hanging from the ceiling provides the
only light in Floresti's dark and musty village hall. The first
half a dozen rows are occupied by about 40 farm workers who are
listening to a candidate from Romania's National Peasant Party
promise the return of all agricultural land that was
confiscated by the Communists after World War II.
</p>
<p> "We are running for office to eliminate the effects of the
dictatorship," the candidate explains. "The land must be given
back to you." It is the first time since 1946 that anyone has
campaigned for public office in Floresti (pop. 2,000), 340 km
northwest of Bucharest, where most of the villagers are
employed on a nearby state-owned farming cooperative. But with
multiparty elections scheduled for this Sunday and more than
80 political parties in the race, the farm workers are curious
about both the process and the promises.
</p>
<p> "So who is going to give us our land back, and when?" shouts
a burly farm worker. Before anyone can answer, a thin man with
a red face rises to denounce Ion Ratiu, the Peasant Party
leader and one of three presidential candidates. "He's a
capitalist who ought to go back to the West," the man blusters.
Retorts another angrily: "Provocateur, who sent you? If you
don't like it here, get out before we throw you out!" By now,
half the audience is on its feet, and only restraining arms
prevent protagonists from coming to blows.
</p>
<p> The meeting ends in disarray less than 30 minutes after it
started. "It's shameful," says Marian Victor of the Peasant
Party. "There were only a few of us present, and we couldn't
even communicate." The same could be said of all Romania as it
prepares to go to the polls in the first multiparty elections
in more than four decades. Presidential candidates representing
parties opposed to the ruling National Salvation Front have
been shouted down, pelted with eggs and physically threatened.
</p>
<p> Much of the bitterness of the campaign stems from questions
surrounding the legitimacy of the Salvation Front government
and its right to contest the elections. Formed in the aftermath
of the overthrow of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu last December,
the Front is dominated by former Communists. These include Ion
Iliescu, the country's interim leader and front runner in the
presidential race, who was Ceausescu's heir apparent in 1970
before falling out with the dictator.
</p>
<p> The Front said initially that it would not contest the
election but quickly reversed that decision, angering those who
had seen it as a transitional body. Last month in Timisoara,
where the revolution that led to Ceausescu's ouster and
execution began on Dec. 17, the Front's opponents called for
a ban on former Communists contesting elections for ten years.
Protests against the Front have been staged in other cities,
including Bucharest, where thousands gather daily to denounce
Iliescu and other former Communists.
</p>
<p> The Bucharest sit-in has blocked traffic in one of the
capital's main thoroughfares and led Iliescu to denounce the
protesters as "vagabonds," a description for which he later
apologized. Throughout the country, protesters took to wearing
lapel badges inscribed I AM A VAGABOND and renewed their
demands for Iliescu to step aside.
</p>
<p> He has refused to meet any of those demands. Backed by
opinion polls that show both the Front and himself ahead in the
parliamentary and presidential elections, Iliescu has gone on
the stump, drawing large crowds in provincial cities. "Iliescu,
Iliescu," they chant when he raises his arms triumphantly and
smiles. He offers little in the way of concrete proposals,
talking vaguely of capitalism with a human face and of his
commitment to pluralism.
</p>
<p> The Front's published program resembles that of its main
opponents, the Peasant Party, the National Liberal Party and
the Social Democratic Party. All are in favor of a market
economy and pluralism, while differing mainly on the pace and
scope of reforms. "We would break with the past more quickly
than the Front," says Mircea Vaida, a top official of the
Liberal Party in Cluj. Agrees the Front's Badau Wittenbergen:
"We want reforms but with proper guarantees against
unemployment. It is not possible for us simply to copy Western
ways."
</p>
<p> Such caveats, opponents claim, bolster the contention that
the Front is a neo-Communist Party anxious to retain much of
the old order. "Iliescu is just like Gorbachev," charges Iuleu
Boila of the Peasant Party. "He is interested in perestroika
rather than real change."
</p>
<p> Nonetheless, with the resources of the state behind it and
with a large following of peasants and workers, the National
Salvation Front seems increasingly confident of a sweeping
victory in this weekend's elections. Not even the opposition
parties seriously deny that likelihood, although they have
hopes that Iliescu will be forced into a runoff for the
presidency by failing to win more than 50% of the vote in the
first round. It seems a faint hope--perhaps as faint as the
long-term prospects for Western-style democracy in Romania.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>