On Monday 9
March, Sabine Laruelle and Patrick Dewael, the two royal negotiators sent out
by king Philip seventeen days ago, are expected to report to the palace what
their chances are to form a new federal government for Belgium. They have been
trying to get a centre-left coalition over the lowest threshold needed to speak
of what seems to be a government. But they have ran into difficulties.
Since they were appointed on 19 February
Dewael and Laruelle have not made one single communication, and tried to stay
in the shadow of the corona-turmoil. But there are inevitably news-leaks. These
indicate that both have been trying to bring together socialists, liberals,
greens and the Flemisch Christian democrats around the table. This would lead
to a centre-left coalition with 87 of the 150 seats in the federal parliament.
To circumvent the many vetoes already
expressed during 284 days of failed negotiations, they proposed an ‘emergency
cabinet’, whereby the caretaking minority government of acting prime minister
Sophie Wilmes (picture) would be
joined by the socialists and the greens. The scenario was already as far that
the number of ministers for each party had been written down. The emergency
claimed could be corona, the budgetary situation, eventually the new migration
crisis, anything that would be suitable. A similar ‘emergency cabinet’ was
created each time with success after other unworkable election results in 1992
and 2007.
An attempt to form a centre-left coalition,
based on the notion that the previous centre-right cabinet of Charles Michel
had been voted down by the voters on 26 May 2019, was already made by Paul
Magnette, the new president of the Parti Socialiste, when he was negotiator for
the king (‘informateur’) between 5 November and 9 December 2019. He failed,
because of disagreements within the Flemish liberal party - rumours had it that
he offered the premiership to its president, Gwendolyn Rutten, but that others
in the party opposed this, a rumour denied by her and never confirmed by him -
and because he only invited the Flemish Christian democrats in a later round of
discussions, which the latter took as an offence.
The low threshold-scenario seems to have ran
rapidly into troubles, especially among the Greens who did not want to engage
for a government that would initially only agree on a budget for 2020 (with
inevitably quite strong cuts). Dewael and Laruelle then choose to depose a
quite large note with proposals for a full-fledged government, and bring all
parties concerned together tomorrow Sunday. It will however not happen.
Last Thursday the 5th of March, Koen
Geens, the Flemish Christian democratic minister of Justice and negotiator for
the king between 31 January and 14 February, wrote an article on his personal
website and took care to draw the attention of the whole press to it. In it the
central theme was a plea for a new institutional reform for Belgium, a seventh
one after the first six since 1970.
His arguments were that you anyway need a new
procedure for the formation of federal governments, and that the many half-baked
compromises on the division of competences from the past should be cleaned-up.
With nine federal and regional ministers with competences on Health (and in
principle all complementary) holding a press conference on corona earlier this
week, he seemed to have a point.
Geens thus signalled that 1) after his failure
of 14 February, he still has ambitions and 2) more explicitly than ever for
both himself and his party he wants a reform of the institutions, which was
anathema up to now for all other parties except the Flemish nationalists of
N-VA. Quite explicit is one phrase in his article: ‘we should only continue to
administer together those competences where we (Flemings and French-speaking
Belgians) think that it is a plus-value to do so’
That sounds quite close to the ‘confederalism’
that the N-VA has been advocating. Indeed for a real institutional reform, even
one without changes in the constitution, you need a majority in each linguistic
group in the parliament, for which on the Flemish side you would need in all thinkable
scenario’s in the present federal parliament the support vote of the N-VA
(because they have together with the extreme left and right a negative Flemish
majority).
But take care. Although Geens’ party, the
CD&V, now led by its new president Joachim Coens, the former CEO of the
Port of Zeebruges, has always said it would not enter a federal government
without the N-VA, some other iron might be in the fire. Geens’ proposal
could as well be the hot potato that the other parties have to swallow to let
the Flemish Christian democrats enter into the proposed centre-left coalition.
In that case some kind of institutional reform could be started, negotiated and
even agreed upon inside the new government, but its execution postponed for after
new and early parliamentary elections. Monday we will know probably more.
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