6 September 2010 / REUTERS, BRUSSELS
Belgium plunged back into political crisis on Saturday as the politician trying to broker formation of a government quit, almost three months after an election.
King Albert accepted the resignation of French-speaking Socialist leader Elio Di Rupo, the second mediator who has failed to bridge the divide between French and Dutch speaking parties that besets Belgian politics. Di Rupo’s failure brings closer the possibility of a fresh election to try to produce a viable coalition government. The perennial failures of governments that must represent both sides of the linguistic divide mean that Belgium has learned to live with power vacuums at the center. But its national debt is as large as its annual economic output, and it can ill afford political paralysis at a time when financial markets are on the look-out for budgetary laggards. The king’s next step was to ask one representative of each community -- the Francophone speaker of the lower house of parliament, Andre Flahaut of the Socialist Party, and the speaker of the Senate, Danny Pieters of the Flemish separatist party N-VA -- to mediate to restart the talks.