“Democracy on Layby – Pay Later, Maybe”
In a stunning display of fiscal innovation, the government
has apparently discovered that elections cost money.
Yes, after gearing up the nation for municipal elections,
voter registration underway, and everyone dusting off their “I Care About
Drains” speeches, someone in Treasury may have finally opened Excel.
“Wait… TWO elections? In THIS economy?”
Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka, in what can only be
described as political version of checking your wallet after ordering dessert,
says government is now reconsidering whether the September municipal elections
should proceed.
Apparently the problem is timing.
There’s the Constitution review. Then possible referendum. Then
electoral law changes. Then the general election.
And somewhere in between, Fiji is expected to also afford
democracy.
A shocking oversight.
The municipal hopefuls must be devastated.
One aspiring councilor had already taken selfies beside
blocked drains, shaken hands with every shopkeeper from Nausori to Lautoka and promised
LED streetlights, lower rates, better roads, cleaner markets, and possibly
world peace.
Now he’s being told “Hold that thought.”
The real question is whether democracy in Fiji now operates
like a Vodafone prepaid plan:
Insufficient balance. Please top up to continue service.
Let’s not pretend nobody sees the political chessboard here.
Municipal elections were supposed to be the warm-up match: a
national stress test, a popularity thermometer, a rehearsal dinner before the
general election wedding.
But now someone may be saying “What if the rehearsal goes
badly?”
That changes everything.
In the end, Fiji may become the first democracy where
elections are postponed because democracy itself is too expensive to maintain
at full subscription level.
Still, hope remains.
