[PP-discussions] PPSE Votes to Leave Pirate Parties International (PPI)
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PPSE Votes to Leave Pirate Parties International (PPI)
May 10, 2015 ˇ by Andrew McCallum ˇ in Europe, Pirate Party News
The Pirate Party of Sweden (PPSE) has become the latest national party
to leave Pirate Parties International (PPI), following a vote taken at
the currently ongoing PPSE General Assembly.
The Assembly approved the Board’s proposed motion to end PPSE’s observer
membership by 62 votes to 8 against, with 13 blank votes. In its motion
the Board stated that “[d]uring our two years as observers, we have not
noticed many improvements in the organization. Indeed, it has been worse
on many levels and it is important to highlight that we are not
satisfied with the organization.”
This sentiment was echoed by many participants in the debate. “I have
lost all confidence that the PPI can be mended – they have had many
chances and failed. It is time for us to leave.” “PPI has not achieved
the change we wanted when we went in as observers in the organization.
Today there are more internal problems than ever…”
The PPSE stresses that its decision to end its observer membership will
not end its association with PPI altogether. “[This] does not mean that
we need to stop cooperating with PPI or its members, but it clearly
marks that we expect more of the organization.” The Board goes on to
re-affirm that the PPSE still believes in and wants to be a part of the
international pirate movement and points to a new organization, with a
focus on collaboration, initiated by the Pirate Party of Australia
(PPAU) – a shared resource portal for all Pirate Parties at
http://pirateint.org.
PPI was formed in 2010 to serve as a worldwide organisation for Pirate
Parties. PPI advocates on the international level for the promotion of
the goals its members share, such as protection of human rights and
fundamental freedoms in the digital age, reform of copyright, privacy,
transparency and free access to information. However, several member
parties began to express reservations about the organization,
particularly in relation to financial issues, PPI’s goals and ways of
working, the acceptability and credibility of its statutes, and its
internal culture of ‘harshness’ and ‘personal attacks’.
The Pirate Party UK (PPUK) worked actively with PPI from 2013 to 2014 in
an attempt to find solutions to these problems, but concluded in a
report it shared publicly at the PPI General Assembly in 2014 that while
“the UK wishes to see Pirate Parties International become an effective
coordination organisation for the Pirate movement and to enable national
parties to have a voice within transnational and international
organisations… [we] are as far away from that now as we were at the last
GA.”
PPAU terminated its membership of PPI in February this year, explaining
that it “no longer believes that there is any potential for reform left
in PPI, and we have spent all of the energy we are willing to in pursuit
of that end.” The PPI board made a response to their withdrawal.
PPUK also terminated its membership in February, concluding that “Over
the years PPI has become less and less reflective of what we believe in
as a party – as an organisation PPI hasn’t been as transparent as we’d
like, or as democratic. It really is about the organisation. Not the
people, not the movement, and certainly not the ideas. We have a job to
do and for now, at least, PPI is getting in the way.”
The Pirate Party of Belgium (PPBE) followed in March, suspending its
membership and indicating that “As there is a decentralised
(non-authoritative) alternative in the works at Pirate International,
which matches our own way of working much more, we felt it was better to
focus our energy on those positive initiatives.” However, their General
Assembly later decided to reject the suggestion from their board since
the members still believed there were reasons to stay and reform PPI
from the inside. “Belgian Pirates have to take their responsibilities
about PPI and decide what to do next. Staying members without caring is
not an option.”
In March the Pirate Party of Iceland (PPIS) overwhelmingly voted to
leave Pirate Parties International. Arnaldur Sigurđarson, member of the
Pirate executive council, told the Pirate Times “PPI has been pretty
much useless when it comes to its objectives which should be to
encourage international cooperation between Pirate Parties.”
At the time of writing, PPI still has 41 full members. However, the
growing mutiny must give it cause for concern. Whether or not it can
reform itself sufficiently to stem the flow of departing member Parties
is a moot point, and one which will no doubt be subject to much
discussion within those Parties over the coming weeks and months.
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