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- <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>
-
-