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JDHURF
24th April 2008, 01:01
Has anyone else been following the situation in Nepal?

Maoist Rebels Win Majority in Nepalese Assembly
Maoist rebels in Nepal say an end to monarchy is near, following their surprise victory in last week’s national elections. The Communist Party of Nepal is expected to come out with more than half the seats in the constituent assembly when final results are released. Maoist officials say one of their first orders of business will be to abolish the monarchy and declare a republic. We speak with New York-based journalist Kashish Das Shrestha, and we go to Nepal to speak with anthropologist Mary Des Chenes.
http://www.democracynow.org/2008/4/16/maoist_rebels_win_majority_in_nepalese

Barely two years after ending an armed insurgency that killed more than 13,000 people, Nepal's former Maoists rebels have stunned themselves, the Nepalese people, and the world with a landslide win in constituent assembly elections that could profoundly change Nepali politics.
The goal of last Thursday's election was to fulfill two Maoist demands: write a new Constitution and end the country's 240-year monarchy. But concerns are growing that Nepal's moderate political parties – which coaxed the Maoists into mainstream politics and forgave past atrocities in the interests of peace – might be sidelined and a more radical agenda prevail.
What matters now, analysts say, is how the Maoists themselves interpret the will of Nepalis. "If they take this as an endorsement of their policy of mass annihilation of class enemies, it will be a catastrophe," says Yubaraj Ghimire, editor of Newsfront weekly. "If they take this as people's recognition of them as the key agent of change, it will be easy for Maoists to work and good for the country as well."
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0415/p01s02-wosc.html
I am well to the left of the following analysis, but it remains one of the better anlayses that has yet been published:

Victory of Nepalese Maoists in elections – where to now?

By Fred Weston and Pablo Sanchez
Thursday, 17 April 2008
As we write these lines the votes cast in the recent Nepalese elections are still being counted, but with most of the first-past-the-post seats declared and more than 4.5 million votes checked, the Maoists have achieved an outstanding result, a clear indication that the masses desire a radical change.
For the first time in eight years the Nepali people have been able to express their views in an election, and there is no doubt what those views are! These were the first elections since the October movement that had led to the Maoists being brought back into "legality" and also into a coalition government with the mainstream political forces.
There were months of negotiations about which electoral system should be adopted, which also saw the army in parliament, and this was then followed by a bloody electoral campaign. In fact the celebration of the elections on the terms demanded by the Nepali Congress terms, i.e. before the declaration of a Republic, is an indication of how much the Maoists have been willing to concede.
They have in fact come a long way since the days of their guerrilla campaign, which saw them control a large part of the country. From that position, they have given up the armed struggle, agreed to integrate their armed groups into the official army and even agreed to join a government with bourgeois parties. This is all in line with a classical Maoist outlook, which states that because Nepal is so underdeveloped the immediate perspective is not one of a struggle for socialism, but some form of bourgeois democracy, i.e. the "first stage" of the two-stage theory.
However, the way the masses have voted would indicate that they are very much intent on leaping over the first stage and move towards socialism. The fact that they voted so massively for a party that is called Communist and up until very recently was attempting to come to power through the armed struggle, would confirm that. So far, the Maoists have won 116 seats out of the 218 declared in the first-past-the-post part of the election, out of a total of 240.
The great losers in these elections are the Nepali Congress, that gained only 32 seats. This reduces it to the same level as the other, more "moderate" Communist Party, the CPN-UML, which has gained 31 seats. The CPN-UML had in fact pulled out of the government becoming the main opposition party, due to its bad electoral result. The regionalist Madhesi parties won around 30 seats, and they are the only real force that remains that can defend the keeping of the monarchy.
One of the ironies of this situation is that the Maoist leaders were so pessimistic about their own prospects that they feared a majority first-past-the-post electoral system. That explains in part why the electoral system adopted has been a mix, a hybrid, between seats elected on a proportional representation (PR) basis and a section of first-past-the-post seats. In the end the PR section is going to save the face of the bourgeois parties, especially the Nepali Congress, who would have been completely smashed if all the MPs had been elected on the basis of a majority system.
In the complicated system they have adopted, the two votes, PR and first-past-the-post, were not linked to each other. In any case, the results so far would indicate that the Maoists will get around 30% overall, while both the Congress and CPN-UML stand at around 20%, and the regionalists will score less than 10%.
The new Parliament is made up of 601 MPs, of which 335 will be elected by the PR system, 240 by the majority system and 26 are to be appointed by the government. This will very probably mean the Maoists will be by far the biggest force, but possibly short of getting an absolute majority. This would allow them to form an alliance of the left forces (the five communist organisations with electoral representation in the Chamber) which would have a clear majority in parliament.
Here again, we see the massive shift to the left: the combined vote of the two main Communist parties stands at about 50%! Thus rather than seeking any alliances with the parties that represent the weak Nepalese bourgeoisie, the two main Communist parties should be thinking in terms of a United Front without bourgeois parties and leading the masses in the struggle for socialism. Unfortunately, it is unclear what parliamentary tactic the Maoists will adopt.
They have two options now. The first is to refuse any alliance with bourgeois parties, unite all the Communist forces, and by mobilising the masses outside parliament lead them in the struggle for a socialist Nepal. The other option is to enter into negotiations with forces such as the Nepali Congress on the basis that this is the so-called "democratic stage" of the revolution. This would also involve holding back the masses and explaining to them that it is necessary to join forces with the so-called "progressive wing of the bourgeoisie."
Maoists send a soothing message to bourgeois
As could be expected, Prachanda and other Maoists leaders have been very quick to issue statements calming down anyone who might think that the former guerrilla leaders may go "too radical". Prachanda in talks with the Indian Foreign Minister, Pranab Mukherjee and EU foreign affairs officials said that, "he avowed his commitment towards the peace process, multiparty democracy and economic development". (Nepal news.com, April 17, 2008). This is in line with the policies of the Maoists leaders of rejecting any move towards socialism, sticking to their programme of "social development" of Nepal within the confines of capitalism, while abolishing the monarchy.
The Nepalese masses will be expecting serious change from this new parliament. In fact the Maoists will now come under enormous pressure to deliver the goods. But they will also come under huge pressure from the bourgeois forces both in Nepal and internationally. These will put in motion their machinery to make sure that the Maoists resist the pressure from below and do not go too far in their social and economic policies. Meanwhile the Terai and Madhesi regionalist movements will be used to continue their campaign against the democratically elected government.
It is clear that the Nepali ruling class is deeply divided between a staunchly monarchist wing on the one hand and those that see Gyanendra as a dead weight, who because of his stupidity and stubbornness was responsible for the Maoist victory. This king took the crown after the dramatic events in 2001, when ten members of the royal family were massacred by the crown prince, including the king and queen, who then took his own life.
The following year in October the new king, Gyanendra, dismissed the prime minister and his cabinet. He accused them of "incompetence" after they had dissolved parliament and had proven incapable of holding elections due to the ongoing insurgency. The king thought that the insurgency was merely a question of incompetence of the ministers. He was completely out of touch with the real situation on the ground.
In June 2004 although he did not re-establish parliament, he reinstated the most recently elected prime minister who formed a four-party coalition government. But then again blaming it for its inability to tackle the Maoist insurgency he dissolved the government in February 2005 and declared a state of emergency, imprisoning party leaders, and assuming power directly. The state of emergency was brought to an end in May 2005, but the king held on to absolute power until April 2006.
That was when three weeks of mass protests forced the king to reconvene parliament. Reality was beating the king on the head repeatedly, but he seemed incapable of really understanding what was happening, believing he could dictate as in the past. In spite of the king, in November 2006 a deal, a peace accord, between the government and the Maoists, allowed for an interim constitution to be promulgated. It was on this basis that the Maoists were allowed to enter parliament in January 2007.
That same accord entailed a new Constituent Assembly whose task it would be to draw up a new constitution. The recent elections are part of that process. All this has been done in spite of the king, not thanks to him. The more serious and far-sighted bourgeois leaders, clearly receiving advice from imperialism, understood that in the face of such mass opposition they could not continue to rule in the old way. As they had done previously in South Africa with the ANC, in Palestine with the PLO, and even in the North of Ireland with Sinn Fein, they understood that the only way of stabilising the situation was to open negotiations with the recognised leaders of the masses. In this case that was the leadership of the Maoist guerrillas.
By making "democratic" concessions to these leaders, who were already inclined to accept the market economy, i.e. capitalism, as the base upon which all political developments should be based, they hoped to use them to hold the masses back from overthrowing the system s a whole.
A recent statement by the President of the Federation of Nepalese Chamber of Commerce and Industry (FNCCI), Kush Kumar Joshi, is an indication of this. He has said that the incoming Maoist-led government should adopt a "liberal" economic policy. We can expect much more of this kind of "advice" both from the bourgeois commentators inside Nepal and internationally. It is rather unfortunate that the Maoist leaders seem to give more credence to the opinions of these people rather than to those of the millions of workers and poor who have elected them.
What will happen to the king is not totally clear, although it does seem that on this question at least a move towards a republic is inevitable. The king himself is an unpredictable figure, but his personal position is not the unimportant issue here. The bourgeois can easily accept that he must go, if in exchange they can get the Maoists to accept a moderate stance.
One thing is clear: this electoral victory is proof of the power of the Nepali masses and it also is a vote of confidence in those who led the guerrilla struggle for over a decade. It clearly shows the willingness of the masses to transform society, and it would be criminal not capitalise on all this support. There is the danger that by accepting a bourgeois parliamentary "stage" the Maoists will be sucked into spending a lot of time in committees and elections. The new Assembly now has the task of voting on a new Constitution, probably holding a referendum, which would then be followed by new elections. This is the terrain that the bourgeois politicians prefer. They are experts in dragging out processes, delving into the detailed minutiae of each legal change. In the meantime the masses will be expecting alleviation from the miserable conditions they live in.
The population of Nepal stands at around 30 million, and a few figures give an idea of the level of underdevelopment of this country. It is among the poorest countries in the world. Three quarters of the population still makes a living from agriculture. GDP per capita stands at only US$1,100 per year. Almost one-third of its population lives below the official poverty line, unemployment stands at the staggering level of 42% and more than half the population is illiterate. Inflation officially stands at around 9% but is obviously much higher, especially in the recent months with massive food price hikes.
The Maoists therefore now have a big responsibility on their shoulders. They will not be able to tackle the serious economic problems if they form an alliance with any of the bourgeois parties and if they spend most of their time discussing constitutional change. The masses have voted not for talks but concrete action against poverty
The bourgeois are preparing a trap for the Maoists. In fact Koirala, the current President, has already called for a coalition government and all the pressure will be on the Maoists to go as slow as possible. If they do this it will only strengthen the right wing and the bourgeoisie. A clear indication of the tactics the ruling class are adopting comes from the chairman of the country's chamber of commerce who has praised the Maoist leaders for their promise to "listen to the private sector" when working out economic policy. By this it seems the Maoist leaders are preparing to "manage capitalism". In line with this are declarations by Prachanda in favour of a "mixed economy".
The Royal Army is also falling into line with the needs of the moment. It has expressed its commitment to work under the direction of an elected government, and carry on the discussions concerning the integration of the guerrillas into the national army under UN control. The only demand of the military leaders is that the army should not be "politicised". By this they mean the Communists should not meddle in the affairs of the army. They conveniently ignore their own "political" role in a decade of struggle against a communist orientated guerrilla movement. The Maoists are now pushing for the full integration of its former guerrillas into the army.
The Maoists will undoubtedly continue to have genuine mass support for some time. They have only just been elected and the masses will have a degree of patience. Thus they will have some breathing space, but so will the bourgeois and the imperialists, who are manoeuvring behind the scenes. As part of this process, the Maoists will most likely push for the abolition of the monarchy and for the introduction of other democratic measures, all things that the Marxists would support. Senior Maoist leaders have in fact "urged the country's beleaguered King Gyanendra to step down ‘gracefully'," according to BBC News, (April 16, 2008). However, the fact that they "urge" the king to go, rather than mobilise a mass movement behind this demand, is an indication of their approach.
The mass of workers, peasants and poor in general will be waiting for the proposals any new government will make concerning their real concrete living conditions.
What government now?
Prachanda has said that they are for an economy in which capitalists can make profit. He also excluded any "dictatorship of the proletariat". In his address to the business leaders in Kathmandu after the election the Maoist Chairman announced that power will not be used tyrannically, but for the welfare of the people and the country. (Kantipur online, April 16, 2008). Here the "people and the country" clearly means all the classes put together. The problem is that under capitalism you can either defend the interests of the working people or that of the capitalists (and landlords); you cannot satisfy both!
The Maoist Chairman has said that his government will adopt a "new transitional economic system" for economic growth, and he also added that political development is intertwined with the economy. In their manifesto for the Constituent Assembly, the former rebels envisaged a new "transitional economic policy" with medium level development over the next 10 years, high level growth in 20 years and ultra-high level development in the country in 40 years' time. This is perfectly in line with the traditional thinking of the Maoists: first there has to be economic development and only much later can we envisage any form of socialism. The difference here is that there is no mention of socialism, only "ultra-high" levels of economic development, under capitalism!
All this is posed in a completely abstract manner. The most powerful economy in the world, that of the USA, is clearly already in recession. The economy in the EU countries is slowing down. This will inevitably have a knock-on effect around the world and little Nepal cannot escape from the same process. Capitalist growth in China has clearly influenced the leadership of the Nepalese Maoists. They now seem to be "Dengists" rather than Maoists!
They have swallowed the whole idea of capitalist-type development. Following on from the industrialists' and businessmen's demands for better security, the Maoist Chairman remarked that an industrial security force will be formed during the process of army integration. He further stressed on the need for a new policy for taxation.
The Maoist second-in-command Dr Babu Ram Bhattarai has also assured that the government led by the Maoists will move ahead with the Public Private Partnership (PPP) theory. This is a very dangerous turn after more than a decade of struggle and sacrifice. Convincing the capitalists and imperialists to contribute to improving the conditions of the masses is going to be a very difficult task indeed. The Maoists are trying to please the masses and the capitalists at the same time; this is not going to be possible.
Dr Bhattarai, in a recent interview, in fact said:
"China eliminated the feudal system during Mao's regime. It established a solid foundation for economic growth. We could have thought of making rapid economic progress had the country been liberated from the age-old feudal system. When you inject new technology after the foundation for economic growth has been established, you can achieve such development. We don't have such a foundation now. Once we restructure the state and involve the private sector, it will be possible to achieve rapid economic growth. We would implement a transitional economic policy during such an interim period which involves public and private partnership.
"We can't think of developing this country in the absence of domestic and foreign investments. Technological inputs are of equal importance. So, we will follow the policy of attracting domestic and foreign investments. For that to happen, we have to put an end to political instability."
No doubt the imperialists will be delighted to hear these words. Here are the former leaders of a powerful guerrilla army, adopting a completely pro-market position. The Nepali Maoists are attempting to apply Deng's line to their little, underdeveloped country. But there are some important differences: Nepal has not had a period of 30 years of planned economy that built up the basic infrastructure of China, followed by more than 20 years of industrialization based on capitalist methods. Nepal is too weak, its material base is too limited, for this kind of "modern capitalism" to emerge. At best, under capitalism, Nepal will simply be the victim of this or that imperialist power. In the present context it will be a point of conflict between Indian capitalism and China.
Nepal is at a historic turning point: if the Maoists put forward a bold economic programme of socialist transformation, along with the abolition of the monarchy, they would have the overwhelming support of the masses. The bourgeois, the right-wing forces and the imperialists are very weak in Nepal. In fact they can only hold the situation if the Maoist leaders accept the role the imperialists have reserved for them. If the Maoists go down this road it will be a huge mistake that will be paid for dearly by the masses in the years to come.
The Maoists leaders need to understand that in the current stage of capitalism (and in a situation where the world is heading towards a major economic crisis) there is no room for any stable economic development over a decade, let alone over 40 years!
The masses of the Indian subcontinent are on the move. We saw this clearly when up to three million people turned up to welcome Benazir Bhutto on her return to Pakistan. In India we have seen powerful strikes and even an 80 million strong general strike a couple of years ago. The future is one of growing instability, economic crisis and social turmoil, not one of stability and economic growth. The Bhutanese Maoists have launched a guerrilla war, further confirming this point.
The problem of the Nepalese Maoists is that they have a narrow national outlook. They cannot see the growing class conflict all around the world. They cannot understand the severity of the economic crisis that is developing. The future in the whole region is one of intensified class struggle. This is the perspective they should base themselves on. Although Nepal is too small and underdeveloped to build socialism on its own, it can become the spark that sets the whole subcontinent ablaze.

Severian
26th April 2008, 21:08
Has anyone else been following the situation in Nepal?


Maoist Rebels Win Majority in Nepalese Assembly

Hype. The final results are now in, and the CPN(Maoist) won about 100 of 335 proportional-representation (PR) seats. That's in addition to 120 of 240 First-Past

The Maoist showing in this election is suprisingly high, but well short of a majority. The overall picture of Nepali politics is different, but not fundamentally transformed. I suggest reading some Nepali press, readily available online.

Link: (http://www.kantipuronline.com/kolnews.php?nid=145039) The proportional part of the results are now in


Table of CA seats under PA attained by various parties
Party PR CA seats 1 CPN-Maoist 100
2 NC 73
3 CPN-UML 70
4 MPRF 22
5 TMDP 11
6 RPP 8
7 CPN-ML 8
8 PFN 5
9 CPN-Joint 5
10 NSP-M 5
11 RPP-Nepal 4
12 RJP 3
13 NPF 3

Plus various others with one or two seats. 335 total seats PR. Plus 240 seats FPTP, 120 of them for the CPN(M).



In fact the CPN(Maoist) is the single largest party, with about 38% of the seats, well short of a majority. A single Maoist party, running against fractured liberal and social-democratic factions, did better in first-past-the-post (FPTP) than in the proportional part of the elections. In the F-P-T-P elections, they didn't need a majority to win a district- just more than any other single candidate.

So they exactly half of the F-P-T-P seats, but less than a third of 30% of the proportional seats. Anyone who expected a Maoist majority in the CA was thinking wishfully or not at all.

Inevitably, since no one party has a majority, negotiations are underway for....some kind of coalition government, as before. The balance of office-holding within that coalition government may well be different, but it's not even certain that the Maoists will hold the prime minister post at this point. In theory, the other parties holding 62% of the seats could form a coalition without them. Probably there will be another broad coalition, however.

The Maoists responded to the initial election results by proposing that the liberal Congress Party and social-democratic CP(United Marxist-Leninist) remain in the coalition government, while those parties expressed reluctance to do so - probably bidding up their price. Highly ironic, since party which maintained even some pretense of revolutionary politics would be reluctant to enter coalition governments with capitalist parties, not vice versa.

And of course holding political office is a very different thing from holding political power. There is the state machinery of army, cops, courts, and bureaucracy.

It's also significant, that the Madheshi People's Rights Forum, an organization of the historically oppressed Madheshi ethnic group, ran in these elections for the first time and emerged as the 4th-largest party in the Constituent Assembly. How that will affect the negotiations for a coalition government, I don't know.

But it should be noted that there's been no love lost between the MPRF and the CPN(Maoist). The CPN(M) has denounced the MPRF as separatist, and floated various conspiracy theories rather than admitting that centuries of oppression might be the cause of protests by the oppressed nationalities. Apparently the CPN(M) is only for the rights of Nepal's minorities rhetorically and on the condition that those minorities follow the orders of the Maoist leaders.

In one notorious incident, the CPN(M) attempted to attack and break up a MPRF rally in the town of Gaur. Participants in the attacked rally fought back and killed many of the Maoist attackers.

****

Now this is surprising and significant as a symptom of what Nepali working people are thinking and feeling. Especially surprising as even the CPN(Maoist) had acted as if it didn't expect to do that well, working to postpone the elections, at one point threatening to disrupt them under thin pretexts.

You quote somebody writing:
"However, the way the masses have voted would indicate that they are very much intent on leaping over the first stage and move towards socialism. The fact that they voted so massively for a party that is called Communist and up until very recently was attempting to come to power through the armed struggle, would confirm that."

That would only be true if they'd voted for a party which has, or seemd to have, something to do with socialism. If "armed struggle" was an indication of that, George Bush would be the world's biggest communist revolutionary. The CPN(M) ran a Shining Path-like forced-labor state in the "liberated areas". And today it doesn't even promise "socialism".

This surprisingly strong Maoist electoral showing does indicate something, though. I'd suggest there's at least three factors.

1. Simple voter intimidation/preventing rivals from campaigning in some areas. The CPN(M) has long ruled the peasantry by terror. Even with their army in cantonments, their Young Communist League is notorious for acts of thuggery.

The interim government and other parties have been amazingly tolerant of these acts, probably afraid to derail the peace process.

For example:
Link-Kantipur Online (http://www.kantipuronline.com/kolnews.php?nid=145037)


Maoists cut off water pipe in Panchthar for not voting Maoist


Kantipur Report

PANCHTHAR, April 25 - Maoist cadres have cut off the water pipeline at Southern Angnapanch and Dhukuri VDCs in Panchthar district saying that the villagers did not vote the CPN-Maoist candidates in the Constituent Assembly (CA) election. The Dhukuri residents had been consuming water from the same pipeline since three years which was brought from the resource of Hyanghyang River. Around seventy families of the area had been relying on the source for water.The Maoists cut off the water pipes at the four places and hoisted their party flags saying that the next government is going to be led by their party, Consumers’ Committee Secretary Chandra Dahal said.
The Maoists cut off the water supply pipe so as to inflict torture to the people who cast their votes for the Nepali Congress in the CA election, locals said.2. Protest votes for a party which does represent a radical challenge to the status quo - though I'd say not a progressive one. Possibly the largest factor.

Ever since the mass upsurge that brought down the power of the monarchy, the liberal and social-democratic parties have hesitated, vacillated, delayed, and changed little. So has the interim coalition government formed by those parties and the Maoists.

There have been many strikes, demonstrations, and traffic blockages by workers' unions and organizations of the oppressed nationalities.

Those actions would seem to express a desire for change and impatience with the inaction of the interim coalition government, and so would the protest vote for the CPN(Maoist).

3. An element of the Maoists' appeal is a Nepali nationalism that includes anti-Indian and anti-Madheshi chauvinism, and opposition to "separatism" of the oppressed nationalities. There's also a certain law-and-order appeal in the midst of uncertainty, change, and chaos. It's difficult to be certain how much this reactionary element of their appeal is responsible for attracting votes.

***

The most significant and positive thing about these elections is simply the fact that they happened. They've been long postponed, and many important questions about Nepal's future have been similarly postponed until the Constituent Assembly meets.

The fact that they have finally occurred, combined with the continuing mass organization and actions of working people and the oppressed nationalities, are reasons to hope for progress in the Nepali class struggle. For the final burying of the monarchy, the prevention of any right-wing coup or return to repressive forms of bourgeois rule, and for working people taking maximum political space to organize and fight under the bourgeois democracy.

That Nepal will be a republic is an almost fully resolved question; the formalities of this can even be a distraction from the real questions of the day. On the other hand, workers' power and socialism are unfortunately not on the immediate agenda, and there is no sizable party seeking to put them there.

Or even seriously claiming to seek that. The lack of false and deceptive claims to a socialist revolutionary policy is actually positive.

But there are a lot of unresolved questions that will be resolved under the pressure of mass action. Land reform, for example, and the demands for autonomous regions by the oppressed nationalities. Working people have the chance to take significant political space and gain experience in organizing and fighting. Working people who have been traditionally ground down and kept out of active politics are emerging as self-acting political people.

That's all more significant than the electoral showings of various anti-worker parties....even if the Maoists had won a majority.

leftclick
27th April 2008, 20:27
I am with the kasama project and we are collecting resources on South Asian revolutions, especially those in Nepal and India. There are important revolutionary developments in the region that are woefully under-reported, and mis-reported, in the US. We felt the need to create something that can serve as a central hub of information and generate well-informed discussion. We've already got a some good postings, but would encourage others to participate in fleshing out the site and promoting it as well.

We're interested in promoting critical discourse, not just cheerleading, so even articles or posts unsupportive of the revoution will be considered as long as they are substantive.

Unfortunately, I can't post any links in this message but if you PM me, I can give you the link.

Die Neue Zeit
27th April 2008, 20:47
Why can't the CPN(M) enter into a coalition with the CPN(UML)? :confused: They'd get over half the seats there.

Random Precision
28th April 2008, 07:17
The Constituent Assembly has 601 seats, only 240 of which are elected directly. 335 are assigned to the parties in a rather complex electoral arrangement, and the rest are appointed.

Here are the final results, including elected and proportioned seats:

CPN (Maoist): 220
Nepali Congress: 110
CPN (Unified Marxist-Leninist): 103
Madeshi Janar Adhikar Forum: 52
Tarai-Madhesh Loktantrik Party: 20
Rastriya Prajatantra Party: 8
CPN (Marxist-Leninist): 8
Sadbhavana Party: 9
Janamorcha Nepal: 7
CPN (Unified): 5
Rastriya Prajatantra Party Nepal: 4
Rastriya Janamorcha: 4
Nepal Workers Peasants Party: 4
Rastriya Janshakti Party: 3
Sanghiya Loktantrik Rastriya Manch: 2
Nepal Sadbhavana Party (Anandidevi): 2
Rastriya Janamukti Party: 2
Nepali Janata Dal: 2
CPN (United): 2
Dalit Janajati Party: 1
Nepa Rastriya Party: 1
Samajbadi Prajatantrik Janata Party: 1
Chure Bhawar Rastriya Ekta Party: 1
Nepal Loktantrik Samajbadi Dal: 1
Nepal Parivar Dal: 1

Apparently the liberals in Nepali Congress and the reformists in CPN(UML) are only willing to form a coalition with the Maoists if a constitutional amendment is passed allowing a simple majority in the Constituent Assembly to dismiss the Prime Minister and disband the government (currently only a two-thirds majority can do this). Unsurprisingly, the Maoists aren't about to risk what little mandate the election gave them.

http://www.thehimalayantimes.com/fullstory.asp?filename=aNPata0sjqzpca3Ra8qa.axamal&folder=aNPataiaoanaaal&Name=National&sImageFileName=&dtSiteDate=20080428

Guerrilla22
28th April 2008, 07:37
As a political party they will only be able to do so much as the Nepalese political structure allows.

Severian
28th April 2008, 16:55
Apparently the liberals in Nepali Congress and the reformists in CPN(UML) are only willing to form a coalition with the Maoists if a constitutional amendment is passed allowing a simple majority in the Constituent Assembly to dismiss the Prime Minister and disband the government (currently only a two-thirds majority can do this). Unsurprisingly, the Maoists aren't about to risk what little mandate the election gave them.

http://www.thehimalayantimes.com/fullstory.asp?filename=aNPata0sjqzpca3Ra8qa.axamal&folder=aNPataiaoanaaal&Name=National&sImageFileName=&dtSiteDate=20080428

Thanks for the full election results.

I'm not sure what you mean by the last sentence. The provision requiring a two-thirds majority to dismiss a Prime Minister is pretty obviously undemocratic and probably should never have been adopted.

Right now the Congress Party is using this provision to try to hold onto the Prime Minister post despite its poor showing in this election. So yeah, it should be repealed.

The article quotes some Maoist: "The idea itself breaches the spirit of the popular mandate expressed through the election as well as the interim constitution that calls for a consensus-model and not a majority-model government,” Devkota said.

What? There's no popular mandate for the Maoists to retain the PM post without the support of other parties. And for PM to hold on to the post despite the opposition of a majority of the Constituent Assembly would certainly not be a "consensus-model"!

They're just coming up with random excuses.

It doesn't seem likely that other parties will install Prachanda as PM if they're not able to remove him again. They're not going to put a noose around their own necks - probably.

Prachanda may become PM, but other parties will extract a high price for that.

Other conditions have been mentioned, including the full disarmament of the Maoist army and the dissolution of the Young Communist League thug squads.

***

Richter, why would you expect a CPN(M) - CPN(UML) coalition especially? Just because of their names?

The CPN(UML) is a social-democratic party - historically those have been more comfortable in coalitions with liberal capitalist parties than with more radical parties (in this case radically reactionary.)

Die Neue Zeit
28th April 2008, 17:01
^^^ Not at all. Precisely because of their equally anti-worker nature did I expect the two "Communist" parties - and please read my recent "Great Betrayals" chapter-section in Article Submissions - to form a coalition together.