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Sunday, November 08, 2020 The next 10 weeks could be rocky ⦠even rockier than the rest of 2020. President Donald Trump has yet to concede the election to President-elect Joe Biden, and the transition to the 46th U.S. presidency will be anything but smooth. But fear not: Plenty of nations have survived these kinds of democratic potholes in the past. This OZY Special Dispatch takes you through modern historyâs most tumultuous global political transitions. OZY Editors run until you win Joe Biden lost his two previous presidential campaigns in 1988 and 2008 before triumphing this year. But heâs not alone â others before him have had similarly challenging paths to power that have been decades in the making.
[1. Mexican Maverick]() Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador declared victory on the night of the presidential election before the results rolled in. Then, after he narrowly lost the vote, he [told millions of supporters he had been defrauded](, led giant protests through the capital, demanded a recount and â in front of his followers â declared himself the countryâs â[legitimate president](.â Sound familiar? In fact, you could think of Obrador as Trump in reverse. AMLO, as he is widely known, was the opposition leader, not the incumbent, in 2006 when he challenged his narrow loss on the streets of Mexico City for a period of months. Then in 2012, he again came in second in the presidential race and alleged that the winner, President Enrique Peña Nieto, had [bought votes](. In 2018, AMLO would no longer need to level such charges; he won without dispute. The moral of the story? Donât count Trump out in 2024. 2. Brazilâs Poster Boy The [markets were terrified]( when former trade unionist Luiz Inácio âLulaâ da Silva won the [Brazilian presidency on his fourth attempt]( in 2002, after losing in 1989, 1994 and 1998. Brazil was in the middle of a debt crisis and the leftist leader had dithered on committing to a resolution. But Lula moderated his position, while also ushering in some of historyâs biggest social welfare programs, such as the [Bolsa FamÃlia]( cash transfers for 50 million low-income Brazilians, spawning copycat initiatives in multiple nations. By 2009, Lula had an unlikely fan: U.S. President Barack Obama. Americaâs 44th commander in chief described Lula as the â[most popular leader on earth](.â 3. Indian Ocean First Perseverance pays. No one knows that better than Wavel Ramkalawan â and the small nation of Seychelles. The popular Indian Ocean island country was long a democracy in name only. A [military coup in 1977](, a year after the country gained independence, led to one-party rule under the Seychelles Peopleâs Progressive Front. Even after other parties were allowed to contest in the 1990s, the SPPF repeatedly won presidential elections. Ramkalawan, a priest and the nationâs principal opposition leader, fought and lost the presidential vote five times â in 1998, 2001, 2006, 2011 and 2016 â before [finally winning this year]( in what was the nationâs first-ever peaceful transfer of power. [dive into ancient history]( The coolest new streaming platform is finally here. With [CuriosityStream]( you can dive into history and explore nonfiction films and series. Interested in something else? They have [thousands of documentaries]( on topics ranging from food to space exploration to animals. Best of all, for a limited time, OZY readers can spark their curiosity and get a full year of access for only $1.25 per month with an annual plan using code OZY. [SIGN UP NOW]( by hook or by crook Those addicted to power often donât give up easily. [1. Greece, 1967]() Progressive former Prime Minister Georgios Papandreou was widely expected to return to power in national elections that year. The countryâs military â a key power behind the scenes in Greek politics at the time â didnât like him, and decided to preempt the popular vote. A team of [colonels grabbed power](. The countryâs King Constantine II swore in the military junta that would eventually rule until 1974. Itâs a stain the now 80-year-old king â who later claimed he had no choice â has struggled to erase, even though the monarchy itself ended in 1973. 2. India, 1975 The Indian National Congress, the party of Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru that led Indiaâs freedom struggle, had been the countryâs only political formation in power for three decades since independence. But by 1975, Nehruâs daughter and then-Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was facing growing street protests. Then came the biggest blow she would face in her political career: A [court ruled her election illegal]( on charges that she had misused government machinery for her campaign. That meant she would have to resign as prime minister. Instead, she imposed a state of national emergency, suspending civil liberties, arresting opposition leaders and curbing press freedoms. But two years later, she partly repaired her reputation, lifting the emergency and allowing [fresh elections in which a united opposition trounced her](. building consensus Yet when the future of their country is at stake, some statesmen have chosen to turn their political enemies into their closest aides for national unity. 1. South Africa, 1994 In the countryâs first free and fair elections, where voters of all races were allowed to participate, Nelson Mandela was elected president, hammering the final nail in the coffin of apartheid. Days later, [Mandela would build on his vision]( for a ârainbow nationâ â picking his closest electoral rival, former Prime Minister F.W. de Klerk, as one of his deputy presidents, and another political opponent, Mangosuthu Buthelezi, as his minister of home affairs. 2. Afghanistan, 2014 The war-torn country was headed for a crisis akin to what Mexico faced in 2006 with AMLOâs protests. Ashraf Ghani won a tight presidential race against Abdullah Abdullah by a narrow margin, prompting the latter to form his own parallel government. The state was set for a deepening of ethnic tensions â [Ghani is a Pashtun]( leader while Abdullah has the support of northern communities including the Tajiks. That would have been an ideal situation for the Taliban to spread further mayhem in Afghanistan. Instead, in a remarkable show of leadership, [Ghani and Abdullah came together in a power-sharing arrangement](, with Ghani as president and Abdullah as the governmentâs chief executive. After a [similarly contested vote in 2020](, theyâve again come together to share power. dictators to democrats Itâs hard to believe, but some authoritarian leaders have turned to democracy â and quietly ceded power. [1. Joachim Chissano]() A [revered freedom fighter]( who helped defeat Portuguese colonialists, Chissano became the socialist president of Mozambique â then a single-party state â in 1986. But as a civil war raged, he negotiated a peace deal with rebels in 1992 and agreed to democratic elections. He won those in 1994 and 1999 before stepping away, respecting the two-term limit. 2. Mathieu Kérékou The Berlin Wall had just fallen in 1989 when the army major turned socialist leader of the small West African nation of Benin decided to transition the country to a multiparty democracy. In the 1991 elections held after nationwide consultations, Kérékou contested, lost and calmly gave up power. The first democratic transfer of power in postcolonial West Africa set an example that the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Republic of Congo, Togo, Burundi, Rwanda and Niger would all follow in the 1990s. And unlike many such tectonic shifts that have been stained by civil wars, Beninâs transition was totally peaceful. [Read More on OZY](
[3. Mikhail Gorbachev]() For some socialists, it was the end of a dream. For others, it was the demise of what started out as a revolutionary ideal but became a monster resembling the imperialist powers it had promised to counter. And for still others, it was the culmination of decades-long efforts to bring down what President Ronald Reagan called an â[evil empire](.â Whatever your view, there has been no political transition in the past century more significant than the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Itâs easy to think of that moment as inevitable, but the countryâs then-leader [Mikhail Gorbachev]( could have easily continued like his predecessors, using the ruthless military and intelligence infrastructure at his disposal. Instead, after surviving a coup attempt, he allowed Ukraine, Belarus and others to gain independence from the USSR and paved the way for its dissolution. kings who showed the way Not all monarchs have waited until public pressure â or the threat of a revolution â forced them to embrace democracy. 1. Juan Carlos I He was widely expected to continue Francisco Francoâs authoritarian rule after the Spanish dictatorâs death in 1975. Carlos was king of Spain, and had worked closely with Franco. But instead, he reinstituted democracy. And thatâs not all. In 1981, military leaders led by Lt. Col. Antonio Tejero [plotted and executed an audacious attempt at a coup](, entering Parliament with 200 soldiers and holding legislators hostage for 18 hours. But unlike Constantine II of Greece, Spainâs king didnât compromise with democracy. He ordered the army to take on Tejero and his men, who eventually surrendered. 2. Jigme Singye Wangchuck The monarchy commands absolute respect and adulation in the Himalayan nation of Bhutan, its position unchallenged. Yet in 2008, the king announced that [Bhutan would transition to a parliamentary democracy](. In three national elections since then, Bhutan has each time voted for a new government, demonstrating a [hunger for change its own people hadnât recognized]( with the first murmurings of democracy.
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