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                <title>Debates Were to be Held in the Parliament, but it Proved Impossible: The
                    Federal Assembly and the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia in 1989<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn2" n="1">This paper was written as part of a
                        research project on the “Czechoslovak dissent as a spiritual, cultural and
                        political phenomenon at the times of normalization, revolution and
                        transformation (1969-2000)” that has been supported by a grant from the
                        Czech Science Foundation (GACR, GA15-16256S).</note></title>
                <author>
                    <persName>
                        <forename>Adéla</forename>
                        <surname>Gjuričová</surname>
                    </persName>
                    <roleName>researcher</roleName>
                    <roleName>PhD</roleName>
                    <affiliation>Institute of Contemporary History of the Czech Academy of
                        Sciences</affiliation>
                    <address>
                        <addrLine>Puškinovo náměstí 9</addrLine>
                        <addrLine>Prague 6</addrLine>
                        <addrLine>16000</addrLine>
                        <addrLine>Czech Republic</addrLine>
                    </address>
                    <email>tzahradnicek@seznam.cz</email>
                </author>
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                <edition><date>2015-12-03</date></edition>
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                    <orgName xml:lang="sl">Inštitut za novejšo zgodovino</orgName>
                    <orgName xml:lang="en">Institute of Contemporary History</orgName>
                    <address>
                        <addrLine>Kongresni trg 1</addrLine>
                        <addrLine>SI-1000 Ljubljana</addrLine>
                    </address>
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                <pubPlace>http://ojs.inz.si/pnz/article/view/131</pubPlace>
                <date>2015</date>
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                <title xml:lang="sl">Prispevki za novejšo zgodovino</title>
                <title xml:lang="en">Contributions to Contemporary History</title>
                <biblScope unit="volume">55</biblScope>
                <biblScope unit="issue">3</biblScope>
                <idno type="ISSN">2463-7807</idno>
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                <p>Contributions to Contemporary History is one of the central Slovenian scientific
                    historiographic journals, dedicated to publishing articles from the field of
                    contemporary history (the 19th and 20th century).</p>
                <p>The journal is published three times per year in Slovenian and in the following
                    foreign languages: English, German, Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, Italian, Slovak
                    and Czech. The articles are all published with abstracts in English and
                    Slovenian as well as summaries in English.</p>
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                <p>Prispevki za novejšo zgodovino je ena osrednjih slovenskih znanstvenih
                    zgodovinopisnih revij, ki objavlja teme s področja novejše zgodovine (19. in 20.
                    stoletje).</p>
                <p>Revija izide trikrat letno v slovenskem jeziku in v naslednjih tujih jezikih:
                    angleščina, nemščina, srbščina, hrvaščina, bosanščina, italijanščina, slovaščina
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                    <term>Czechoslovakia 1989</term>
                    <term>Parliamentarism</term>
                    <term>The Federal Assembly</term>
                    <term>The Communist Party of Czechoslovakia</term>
                </keywords>
                <keywords xml:lang="sl">
                    <term> Češkoslovaška 1989</term>
                    <term>parlamentarizem</term>
                    <term>zvezni parlament</term>
                    <term>komunistična partija Češkoslovaške</term>
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        <front>
            <docAuthor>Tomáš Zahradníček<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn1" n="*">researcher, PhD,
                    Institute of Contemporary History of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Puškinovo
                    náměstí 9, Prague 6, 16000, Czech Republic, <ref target="mailto:tzahradnicek@seznam.cz"
                        >tzahradnicek@seznam.cz</ref>
                </note></docAuthor>
            <docImprint>
                <idno type="cobissType">Cobiss type: 1.01</idno>
                <idno type="UDC">UDC: 328(437):323.27"1989"</idno>
            </docImprint>
            <div type="abstract" xml:lang="sl">
                <head>IZVLEČEK</head>
                <head type="main">V PARLAMENTU NAJ BI POTEKALE RAZPRAVE, VENDAR SE JE TO IZKAZALO ZA
                    NEMOGOČE: ZVEZNI PARLAMENT IN ŽAMETNA REVOLUCIJA NA ČEŠKOSLOVAŠKEM LETA
                    1989</head>
                <p><hi rend="italic">Leta 1989, ko se je zrušil komunistični režim, se je na
                        Češkoslovaškem pogosto ponavljala zahteva, da bi bilo treba pomembno
                        politično razpravo o usmeritvi države voditi zlasti v parlamentu. Vendar se
                        je parlament vse leto izmikal bistvenim političnim razpravam. Zakonodajno
                        telo ni postalo politični oder in forum za pomembne razprave ali prizorišče
                        merjenja moči nasprotnikov. Članek opisuje poskuse pooblastitve parlamenta
                        in analizira razloge za njihov neuspeh. Osredotoča se zlasti na nekaj tednov
                        po padcu berlinskega zidu, ki so na Češkoslovaškem dosegli vrhunec z
                        izvolitvijo Václava Havla in Aleksandra Dubčka na vrhovni ustavni funkciji
                        predsednika in predsednika zveznega parlamenta. </hi></p>
                <p><hi rend="italic">Ključne besede: Češkoslovaška 1989, parlamentarizem, zvezni
                        parlament, komunistična partija Češkoslovaške</hi></p>
            </div>
            <div type="abstract">
                <head>ABSTRACT</head>
                <p><hi rend="italic">During 1989, the year of the collapse of the Communist regime,
                        a claim was often repeated in Czechoslovakia that substantive political
                        debate about the direction of the country ought to be held particularly in
                        the parliament. Yet the key political debates shun away from the parliament
                        for the entire year. The legislature did not become the stage for politics,
                        a forum for substantive debates or the arena for competing forces. The
                        article maps the attempts to empower the parliament and analyses the reasons
                        for their failure. Particular focus is given to the few weeks after the fall
                        of the Berlin Wall that culminated in Czechoslovakia with the election of
                        Václav Havel and Alexander Dubček to the supreme constitutional posts of the
                        President and Chairman of the Federal Assembly.</hi></p>
                <p><hi rend="italic">Keywords: Czechoslovakia 1989, Parliamentarism, The Federal
                        Assembly, The Communist Party of Czechoslovakia</hi></p>
            </div>
        </front>
        <body>
            <p>During the breakthrough year of 1989 a claim was often repeated in Czechoslovakia
                that substantive political debate about the direction of the country ought to be
                held particularly in the parliament. Yet the key political debates shun away from
                the parliament for the entire year. The legislature did not become the stage for
                politics, a forum for substantive debates or the arena for competing forces. This
                study maps the attempts to empower the parliament and their failure. Particular
                focus is given to the few weeks after the fall of the Berlin Wall that culminated in
                Czechoslovakia with the rise of Václav Havel and Alexander Dubček to the supreme
                constitutional posts of the President and Chairman of the Federal Assembly.<note
                    place="foot" xml:id="ftn3" n="2">The best summary publications about the
                    Czechoslovak November and December 1989: James Krapfl, <hi rend="italic"
                        >Revolution with a Human Face: Politics, Culture, and Community in
                        Czechoslovakia, 1989-1992</hi> (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2013).
                    Jiří Suk, <hi rend="italic">Labyrintem revoluce. Aktéři, zápletky a křižovatky
                        jedné politické krize (od listopadu 1989 do června 1990)</hi> [Through the
                    Labyrinth of the Revolution. Actors, Plots and Crossroads of A Political Crisis
                    (from November 1989 to June 1990)] (Praha: Prostor, 2003).</note></p>
            <p>The Berlin Wall fell on 11 November 1989. On 17 November police in Prague intervened
                against student demonstration in a manner that triggered mass demonstrations in the
                coming days in Czechoslovakia as well. Most gatherings took place just a few metres
                from the Czechoslovak federal parliament – the Federal Assembly, which, however did
                not merit their attention. During the first street protests the massive flow of
                protesters repeatedly headed towards the parliament. Yet that was not their
                destination: the crowd passed the building without major interest and continued a
                few steps further to the headquarters of the Czechoslovak Radio to demand true
                information about the developments in Prague. The initial ignorance of the federal
                parliament building by the protesters shows their realistic assessment of the role
                of the legislature and its crew in the power gear.</p>
            <p>To enhance the role of representative assemblies during socialism was one of the
                slogans of Mikhail Gorbachevʼs reforms. They had been also translated, quoted and
                repeated in Czechoslovakia. The parliament was to enhance its autonomy and become “a
                powerful agent of socialist democracy.”<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn4" n="3"
                    >Gorbachev speaks of “Soviets” that were known as the “National Committees” in
                    Czechoslovak terminology, whilst the three supreme assemblies were called
                    differently: The Czech National Council, the Slovak National Council (the
                    supreme soviets in the republics), and the Federal Assembly. In his criticism of
                    the existing situation Gorbachev used to say: “... the role of the Soviets was
                    weakened. What emerged was what we call the replacement of the roles and
                    activities of the state and administrative bodies by the party organs. (...) In
                    brief, there was a specific deformation of the entire activity of the democratic
                    body which owes its existence to our socialist revolution. Thus the major task
                    that arose in front of us during the reconstruction: to fully renew the role of
                    the Soviets, as the bodies of political power, as bearers and powerful carriers
                    of socialist democracy”. ̶ Michail Sergejevič Gorbačov, <hi rend="italic"
                        >Přestavba a nové myšlení pro naši zemi a pro celý svět </hi>[Perestroika
                    and New Thinking for Our Country and the Whole World] (Praha: Svoboda, 1987),
                    96-97.</note> Possible outcome was only tested by individuals in Prague before
                the Autumn of 1989. Among them was Evžen Erban, retired high official of the
                Communist Party. As the first and only more noteworthy politician he invited Václav
                Havel for a meeting in the Summer of 1989. At one point of his long political
                monologue he told Havel: “I might be arrested in the afternoon ...” to add: “They
                cannot! They cannot! I have parliamentary immunity!” and pulled out his
                parliamentary ID card.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn5" n="4">Václav Havel seemed so
                    captivated by that moment that he has not forgotten about it when, from the
                    distance of a few weeks, he recounted the unique encounter of 15 November to
                    Irena Gerová. Irena Gerová, <hi rend="italic">Vyhrabávačky: Deníkové zápisy a
                        rozhovory z let 1988 a 1989</hi> [Digs: Diary Notes and Interviews from 1888
                    and 1989] (Praha, Litomyšl: Paseka, 2009), 137. For additional testimonies about
                    Erbanʼs activities see Zdislav Šulc, <hi rend="italic">Z jeviště i zákulisí
                        české politiky a ekonomiky</hi> [From the Stage and Backstage of Czech
                    Politics and Economics] (Brno: Doplněk, 2011), 197.</note> The scene offers a
                glimpse on some significance attached to parliamentary immunity when deciding about
                the degree of political courage vis-à-vis political breakthroughs. Yet there is only
                limited evidence of the kind in Czechoslovakia.</p>
            <p>When testing the limits of how far one could have gone in using the federal
                parliament and uncensored rostrum, Lubomír Štrougal went farthest. Another of the
                political veterans, having served the top power posts for thirty years, Štrougal
                withdrew to seclusion probably in hope that he would be invited back. In the Summer
                of 1989 he reminded the Party leadership of their guilt for the failure of the
                earlier reform attempts. He skilfully used a language different from that prescribed
                by the Party leadership. Instead of reconstruction he spoke of “radical reform” and
                criticised the abandonment of economic policies of the Prague Spring.<note
                    place="foot" xml:id="ftn6" n="5">“Politics is the art of the possible, whilst
                    the possible was affected not only by internal, but also international context.
                    (...) The abandonment of the economic reform in the early 1970s was a grave
                    mistake,” stated Štrougal. ̶ <hi rend="italic">Společná česko-slovenská
                        digitální parlamentní knihovna</hi> [Common Digital Czecho-Slovak
                    Parliamentary Library], Federal Assembly 1986-1990, Joint Sessions of the House
                    of People and the House of Nations, Stenographic records, 14<hi
                        rend="superscript">th</hi> session, 20. 6. 1989, accessed October 30,
                        2015,<ref
                        target="http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/slsn/stenprot/014schuz/s014017.htm"
                        >http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/slsn/stenprot/014schuz/s014017.htm</ref>.
                    Cf. Jaromír Sedlák, <hi rend="italic">Muž nad stolem, aneb Byl jsem Štrougalovým
                        poradcem</hi> [A Man Over The Table or I Was Štrougalʼs Adviser] (Praha:
                    BVD, 2010), 131.</note> His address on 20 June 1989 to the plenary session of
                the Federal Assembly met with silence among the MPs and the media.</p>
            <p>Another attempt was made a few months later by Štrougalʼs successor in the post of
                the federal Prime Minister, Ladislav Adamec. As constitutional official the Prime
                Minister was answerable to the federal parliament. At the same time, as member of
                the Communist Party, he was bound to conformity with the Party leadership. In the
                Autumn of 1989 Adamec tried to weaken the dependence on the Party leadership by
                transferring the hitherto internal discussion from the Party grounds to the
                parliament. Yet the report he had drafted was not approved by his superior Party
                bodies. Hence on 11 November 1989 the Prime Minister, bound with discipline, had to
                read to the Federal Assembly statements that included some points that were in
                contradiction to what he had wanted to say. Nonetheless, he did not give in and
                spoke later in the debate together with other MPs. With a slight delay he presented
                his own version of the thesis about the need for political reform. Those passages
                were, however, later censored by the media upon intervention from the Party
                headquarters. Such was the infamous fate of the key attempt to transfer political
                debate from Party corridors to the parliament.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn7" n="6"
                    >Miloš Hájek, <hi rend="italic">Paměť české levice</hi> [The Memory of the Czech
                    Left] (Praha: Ústav pro soudobé dějiny AV ČR, 2011), 295.</note></p>
            <p>The attempt by Adamec did not become publicly known and has not entered history: in
                the days that followed it was outshone by new, more far reaching events. The Civic
                Forum was established as a wide coalition of those outraged by police brutality
                against the demonstration in Prague on 17 November 1989. After a few days of mass
                rallies it became apparent that the retiring power structures were giving up their
                power quite willingly. Guided by the logic of the existing power system, the
                attention focused on the development within the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia.
                The parliament and other political institutions respected the hierarchy.</p>
            <p>Personnel changes in the presidium of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of
                Czechoslovakia were bound to signal a major power shift. The Central Committee was a
                federal body: two thirds out of the hundred and fifty full members were Czechs. The
                assembly of the actual power holders convened on 24 and 25 November.<note
                    place="foot" xml:id="ftn8" n="7">Recordings of both session, after which the
                    leadership was altogether replaced: <hi rend="italic">Poslední hurá.
                        Stenografický záznam z mimořádných zasedání ÚV KSČ 24. a 26. listopadu
                        1989</hi> [The Final Hooray: Stenographic Record from Extraordinary Sessions
                    of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia on 24 and 26
                    November 1989] (Praha: Agentura Cesty, 1992).</note> A few candidates for
                political leadership spoke actively, including the two aforementioned speakers from
                the parliament – Lubomír Štrougal and Ladislav Adamec. Yet none of them was given a
                mandate. A dramatic clash of long warring factions gave rise to the Communist Party
                leadership to neutral, feeble candidates. The choice meant actual and virtually
                immediate extinction of the influence of the Party headquarters.</p>
            <p>The disintegration of the old institutional centre opened space for activities at
                other platforms. The first in line to benefit from this for some time was the
                federal Prime Minister Ladislav Adamec. He held operational power and entered, on
                his own, into talks about further developments with the Civic Forum. The demands by
                the Civic Forum headed towards transformation of the political system: a revision of
                the Constitution, preparation of elections, changes in state posts. All that called
                for the involvement of the parliament.</p>
            <p>As the events evolved, the significance of the parliament rose notably. Yet there was
                a glitch: mandates were required in order to move political debates to the
                parliament. Nevertheless, none of the new members of the temporarily governing group
                surrounding Prime Minister Adamec had them. Adamec himself was not member of the
                parliament. Naturally, the Civic Forum did not have any parliamentary
                representatives. Meeting in the federal government building, only one of the
                seventeen people who gathered on 28 November as part of the delegations of the
                federal government and the Civic Forum to plan the future of their country, held
                parliamentary mandate: Bohuslav Kučera, the Chairman of the Czechoslovak Socialist
                Party.</p>
            <p>Who then actually was represented in the parliament? Who were the people who held, at
                the moment of political change, the 350 mandates? The national key served as the
                basis of parliamentary mathematics at the Federal Assembly. At the core of the
                entire complex structure of the institution was representation of deputies from both
                parts of the federation in the two Houses of the Federal Assembly. The
                representation in one of them, the House of Nations, was equal. Moreover, the
                deputies from the Czech Republic and from Slovakia voted separately on
                Constitutional changes and other major issues subject to debate on which the
                Constitution stipulated “a ban on majorisation”. Hence the need for identical
                consensus by both Czech and Slovak majority. In the other chamber, the House of
                People, the twice more populous Czech Republic had the corresponding majority of
                mandates.</p>
            <p>Additional crucial parliamentary mathematics was based on power control through the
                privileged and disciplined Communist Party. The thoroughness that gave the Party
                members priority rights and leading posts was, in the case of the parliament,
                brought to perfection. Following the elections in 1986, 69 percent of MPs came from
                the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn9" n="8">For the
                    list of MPs elected in 1986 with their political identification and other
                    characteristics see <hi rend="italic">Československo dnes: Zastupitelské sbory,
                        vlády, diplomatické styky, školství, zdravotnictví, ekonomika, kraje
                        ČSSR</hi> [Czechoslovakia Today: Representative Assemblies, Government,
                    Diplomatic Relations, Schools, Healthcare, Economics, and Regions in CSSR]
                    (Praha: Pressfoto, 1987), 20-56.</note> The second most numerous group was the
                “non-partisan” members, representing 18.3 percent. It was an atomised crowd of women
                and men organisationally linked to the apparatus of the Communist Party.<note
                    place="foot" xml:id="ftn10" n="9">The easiest way to describe this is an
                    atomised team of reliable friends of the Party in power, representing some
                    features prescribed by the doctrine of socialist parliamentarism that detailed
                    all qualities and their proportion as ought to be present in the
                    assemblies.</note> The only four individual organisations with some degree of
                autonomy were represented far more scarcely. The two Czech political parties, the
                Czechoslovak Socialist Party and the Czechoslovak Peopleʼs Party held identical 5.5
                percent of mandates in the Federal Assembly. Each of the two Slovak parties, the
                Freedom Party and the Party of Slovak Revival held only 1.1 percent.</p>
            <p>A simple look at the data that were undisclosed at the time in the raw form, shows
                quite clearly the developmental options for the Federal Assembly: the fundamental
                question was what would the total of 87 percent of MPs representing the Communist
                A-team (the faction of the Communist MPs) and the associate B-team (non-partisan
                MPs), the hitherto pillars of power do. What would they do in the uncertain times
                when their power centre was falling apart?</p>
            <p>The first joint session in the revolutionary weeks was called for Thursday 29
                November. The main points in the agenda arose from the government talks with the
                Civic Forum. The deputy Prime Minister in the Adamec cabinet was to address them. On
                their way to the parliament the MPs had to pass by instructions from the
                revolutionary street, saying: “Deputies, vote for your voters, not for
                    yourselves!”<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn11" n="10">“Poslanci, hlasujte za své
                    voliče, ne za sebe!,” <hi rend="italic">Svobodné slovo</hi>, November 30, 1989,
                    1.</note> The joint session of the two Houses opened after lunch in somewhat
                chaotic atmosphere. “Quite an unrest reigned in the building of the Federal Assembly
                during the lunch break,” recalled MP Karel Löbl later. “We did not have any
                information about the agenda of the joint session. It seemed that an unusual number
                of guests were present. One could hear the echo of the protesters chanting outside
                by the statue of St. Wenceslas. (...) When the hitherto Chairman Indra stepped down,
                Slovak Communist Janík, lacking relevant experience, took over chairing the session.
                Moreover, the atmosphere in the Federal Assembly building echoed responses to the
                morning closed session of the Communist faction where the Minister of Defence
                General Václavík was allegedly in a warring mood when reporting on the readiness of
                the military to intervene. Being non-Communist, I was not there. The non-Communist
                MPs were, however, disturbed by that the Communist MPs had already available in
                advance some printouts of the agenda of the afternoon session.”<note place="foot"
                    xml:id="ftn12" n="11">Karel Löbl, <hi rend="italic">Naděje a omyly. Vzpomínky na
                        onu dobu</hi> [Hopes and Errors. Memoirs of An Era] (Praha: Academia, 2012),
                    641-2.</note></p>
            <p>At their joint session, the two Houses of the Federal Assembly quickly met all
                fundamental demands by the Civic Forum, yet by means most advantageous for the
                parliamentarians. Within a few hours the discredited veteran Alois Indra disappeared
                as the leader of the Federal Assembly, as did the passages in the Constitution about
                the leading role of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia and of Marxism-Leninism. A
                commission for the oversight over the investigation of the intervention on 17
                November was set up. All that happened broadcasted live by the Czechoslovak
                Television and the Czechoslovak Radio.</p>
            <p>Yet the parliament also adopted its own resolution on the political situation.
                Speakers from different political currents represented in the parliament agreed in
                that the political decision-making finally got to the parliament from the Party
                bureaus, as well as from the streets and squares. It belonged there and was to
                remain there. The resolution adopted by both chambers of the Federal Assembly as
                “the representative of the people of Czechoslovakia” subscribed to all “progressive
                demands that lead to further development of socialist societal relations, to the
                improvement of socialist democracy and living conditions of the people.” It reminded
                that a number of reform laws have reached an advanced stage of draft and were to be
                adopted within “a few days”, whilst MPs were drafting additional ones. At the same
                time they explicitly mentioned the need to adopt new regulations for the press,
                association, and the right to petition and defence law. Furthermore, “at the same
                time we deem it of prime duty to promptly complete the work on the new
                Constitution.” The parliament further emphasised both steps that preceded the
                adoption of resolutions and meant satisfaction of the main demands of those on
                strike. That meant setting up the parliamentary commission and abolition of the
                Constitutional article about the leading role of the Communist Party of
                Czechoslovakia. Constitutionally speaking – and altogether in contrast with the
                vision of the revolutionary forces – the Federal Assembly became the sovereign.
                Whilst its declaration did not explicitly emphasise that and only hinted at it by
                praising the government for “the dialogue with the representatives of civic
                initiatives”, by expressing support to the planned changes in the government and
                also with a few formulations attempting to define the government powers: “The
                Federal Assembly commits the government of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic to
                carry out dialogue whilst being aware of responsibility for the socialist future of
                our nations and ethnic groups. At the same time it commits it to systematically
                continue in following the foreign policy line contained in its manifesto adopted in
                November 1989 at the joint session of the Federal Assembly.” Finally, the Federal
                Assembly stated: “We assure the people of our republic that we shall continue to do
                our utmost to secure content life of the peoples in our socialist republic in line
                with the principle: 'All power in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic belongs to the
                working people.'”<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn13" n="12">“K současné
                    vnitropolitické situaci. Prohlášení FS ČSSR“ [On the current political
                    situation. Declaration by the Federal Assembly of CSSR], <hi rend="italic"
                        >Svobodné slovo</hi>, November 30, 1989, 3.</note></p>
            <p>The parliamentary attempt to take over activity as an indispensable institution was,
                in the hours that followed after the end of the televised broadcast, commented upon
                far less than was the audience experience of it. The breakthrough events were
                increasingly broadcast by the state television and radio. The first televised live
                broadcasts from Wenceslas Square were aired on 22 November, a week prior to the
                broadcast from the Federal Assembly. Ever longer broadcasts and transmissions
                followed, all of which were less and less tailored to satisfy the needs of the
                leadership of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia.<note place="foot"
                    xml:id="ftn14" n="13">The director general of Czechoslovak Television Libor
                    Bartla announced on the news on 23 November that the television was directly run
                    by the federal government; i.e. it was the government instead of the hitherto
                    unlawful direct control by the apparatus of the Central Committee of the
                    Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. Mirka Spáčilová, “Televize v rukou vlády?”
                    [Television in the Hands of the Government?], <hi rend="italic">Mladá
                        fronta</hi>, November 24, 1989, 5. Cf. Milan Šmíd, “Česká média a jejich
                    role v procesu politické změny roku 1989” [Czech Media and Their Role in the
                    Process of Political Change in 1989], accessed May 15, 2013, <ref
                        target="http://www.louc.cz/pril01/listopad.pdf"
                        >http://www.louc.cz/pril01/listopad.pdf</ref>.</note> The highlight of the
                development came as soon as Saturday 25 November when the first federal channel
                showed alternatively live broadcasts of thanksgiving mass for the canonisation of
                Agnes of Bohemia with Cardinal František Tomášek serving at St. Vitus Cathedral;
                from press conference on the extraordinary session of the Central Committee of the
                Communist Party of Czechoslovakia; and from the biggest of mass demonstrations in
                Prague, which was alternated with a concurrent conference of the Prague branch of
                the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia held in the Palace of Culture. In the evening
                after the extended main news, the television repeated twice a special televised
                address by the new secretary general of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia Karel
                Urbánek. In between, within an improvised 45-minute bloc of interviews “On Current
                Issues”, Václav Havel spoke for the first time more continuously on cameras.</p>
            <p>The programme deserves recognition for the speed, quality and representative nature
                of political debate on television and its broadcasts, that was achieved as early as
                during the weekend of 25 and 26 November. Apart from the television, other media,
                radio and daily press tried hard as well. It ought to be noted in order to
                understand the preserved scope of – largely disenchanted – responses to the first
                live broadcast from the Federal Assembly in the afternoon of Wednesday 29 November.
                From the perspective of television viewers, the session of the legislative body was
                to be yet another part in the series on the revolution. The core roles that
                otherwise were to be played by the parliament, had been already well served by other
                fora, as had been also noted by MPs. Compared to the televised platforms, some
                representatives had been missing altogether whilst others were superfluous. The
                final impression was thus somewhat skewed and incoherent with the ongoing debates in
                Prague and Bratislava.</p>
            <p>Those characteristics come out most clearly in the case of Anton Blažej who became,
                for three weeks, the leading figure of the emancipation effort at the Federal
                Assembly. Rector of the Technical University in Bratislava since 1969, Blažej
                appeared in front of the cameras on 29 December as spokesman of the Communists in
                the parliament. He gave a major political address about the emergent situation. On
                behalf of the Communist majority he recognised and welcomed the de facto completed
                régime change: “We, the Communist MPs, have to primarily state in public that those
                were our own faults and mistakes, as well as the mistakes of the Party, our
                erroneous interpretation of socialism, our flawed understanding of the leading role
                of the Communist Party ...” He explained to the viewers that the federal parliament
                was being transformed along with the wider changes, and was gaining stronger
                position. He criticised the previous policy, welcomed constitutional changes and
                talks with the Opposition, and stated that the Communists would try to succeed in
                the coming elections: “Communist MPs support most actively the democratic elections
                and the emergence of the coalition government. If we wish to genuinely unite on the
                principles of building modern, democratic, human, and industrially advanced
                socialist Czechoslovakia, I think we have every capacity to find a common
                ground.”According to Blažej, within the coming hours the Federal Assembly was to
                meet all student demands it was able to satisfy, and the youth would then be free to
                part and return to their studies.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn15" n="14"><hi
                        rend="italic">Společná česko-slovenská digitální parlamentní knihovna</hi>
                    [Common Digital Czecho-Slovak Parliamentary Library], Federal Assembly
                    1986-1990, Joint Sessions of the House of People and the House of Nations,
                    Stenographic records, 16<hi rend="superscript">th</hi> session, 29. 11. 1989,
                    accessed October 30, 2015, <ref
                        target="http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/slsn/stenprot/016schuz/s016001.htm"
                        >http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/slsn/stenprot/016schuz/s016001.htm</ref>.</note></p>
            <p>It would have been a fine address and perhaps even effective, had it not been given
                by an unknown man in his sixties and without Miloš Jakeš and other infamous faces of
                the old leadership seated to his left. They evidently considered it their duty not
                to be missing in their seats at the presidium. Even though they no longer had any
                influence on the content of Blažejʼs speech or on anything else what was going on
                that day in the Federal Assembly, with their mere visual presence they set the
                background to the effort of most speakers. They sat without responding to Blažej or
                the others who were escalating the general condemnation of the previous decades and
                the criticism of particulars. Yet, according to the rules of procedure, as members
                of the presidium they were entitled to priority intervention in the debate. From
                among the Czech politicians representing real power, only the Minister of Defence
                General Milan Václavík was to speak. He was invited directly by the deputy chairman
                of the Czechoslovak Socialist Party Karel Löbl to tell the plenary whether there
                were any grounds for concern about military intervention. The Minister, dressed in
                uniform as was customary, indignantly rejected the concern.<note place="foot"
                    xml:id="ftn16" n="15">Karel Löbl, <hi rend="italic">Naděje a omyly. Vzpomínky na
                        onu dobu</hi> [Hopes and Errors. Memoirs of An Era] (Praha: Academia, 2012),
                    641. Address by Löbl and Václavík: <hi rend="italic">Společná česko-slovenská
                        digitální parlamentní knihovna</hi> [Common Digital Czecho-Slovak
                    Parliamentary Library], Federal Assembly 1986-1990, Joint Sessions of the House
                    of People and the House of Nations, Stenographic records, 16<hi
                        rend="superscript">th</hi> session, 29. 11. 1989, accessed October 30, 2015,
                        <ref
                        target="http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/slsn/stenprot/016schuz/s016004.htm"
                        >http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/slsn/stenprot/016schuz/s016004.htm</ref>.</note></p>
            <p>On behalf of the Czech part of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, two common MPs
                spoke up: Jana Pekařová and Hana Návratová. It was their address that, in the coming
                days, triggered major debate within the Czech context. One might rightly assume that
                theirs were to be complementary speeches to that given by Blažej. The Czech
                women-mothers spoke after a man, an academic with his rational arguments. The
                division was common in similar arrangements and the two MPs introduced themselves to
                the viewers and listeners accordingly. After the conflict in the Communist faction
                at noon, it was unlikely to be an authoritatively drafted script for the debate, but
                somewhat an intuitive balancing and repetition of morning debates in front of the
                television cameras. According to the testimony by Ms Návratová, MP, the Communist
                MPs no longer had any firm leadership that day after the noon meeting of the
                faction, and their presentations came out in an improvised manner.</p>
            <p>In case of the Czech female MPs on television the impression was not given that much
                by their message, but their looks and presentation. In a concentrated form the
                addresses contained vast amount of patterns and canonical formulations by lower rank
                officials who reproduced the official propaganda with least investment in thought or
                language, yet with high personal commitment. That immediately triggered allergic
                reactions among a part of audience in spite of the fact that the addresses by the
                two MPs were de facto quite forthcoming. Both were plainly supportive of the Adamec
                cabinet against possible attacks by the Party apparatus. Yet most audiences had been
                unable to decode this. Not only were they accustomed to “switch off” when listening
                to official speeches. The speeches suggesting emancipation of Communist MPs from the
                leadership by the Party apparatus that were in part pursuing the pre-November
                institutional attempts and intraparty struggles, were unintelligible to the
                uninitiated audience. Within the context of the new discourse and situation they
                came across as inappropriate and out of sync with the debate on the squares.</p>
            <p>The Adamec cabinet had an opportunity on the day to test its ability as the new
                centre of power to mobilise the majority in both Houses. The test brought relatively
                positive results: except for a handful of succinct commentaries, its opponents from
                the Communist Party were silent in the plenary. Support to the federal government
                and to the Prime Minister personally came out from most speakers. For instance,
                Slovak independent MP Gejza Mede appealed: “We, the parliament, have already shown
                that we are at the level that we can criticise the government when appropriate and
                in the interest of the society, of our voters. Yet has this parliament reached the
                level that it can help the government when help is needed?”<note place="foot"
                    xml:id="ftn17" n="16"><hi rend="italic"> Společná česko-slovenská digitální
                        parlamentní knihovna</hi> [Common Digital Czecho-Slovak Parliamentary
                    Library], Federal Assembly 1986-1990, Joint Sessions of the House of People and
                    the House of Nations, Stenographic records, 16<hi rend="superscript">th</hi>
                    session, 29. 11. 1989, accessed October 30, 2015, <ref
                        target="http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/slsn/stenprot/016schuz/s016002.htm"
                        >http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/slsn/stenprot/016schuz/s016002.htm</ref>.</note>
                Prime Minister Adamec and his team followed the debate on television and were
                responding to some statements by telephone. “Adamec followed my address on
                television and immediately phoned my secretariat,” recalls Karel Löbl who has known
                Adamec well for the nearly two decades of their service to the Czech government.
                “His secretary Dáša only got hold of me the next day when the Prime Minister thanked
                me for support and critical suggestions, and expressed belief in positive
                developments. I acquired an impression from the debate that he was not fighting as
                much the emerging Civic Forum, but some people in his own Party.”<note place="foot"
                    xml:id="ftn18" n="17">Löbl, <hi rend="italic">Naděje a omyly</hi>,
                643.</note></p>
            <p>The first debate evidenced fairly advanced split in the Czech and Slovak politics,
                different role of debates in the two national communities at the Federal Assembly,
                as well as the different position and perspective of the Communist Parties in Czech
                and Slovak politics. Though the Communist faction formally presented all
                Constitutional changes, a number of disparate groups were within the brand, all
                standing on historical crossroads where they split into a number of groups. Anton
                Blažej was given space in front of the cameras. As the subsequent debate and events
                over the coming weeks and months showed, the rector from Bratislava used, in an
                improvised manner, his perspective and rhetorical skills. Yet de facto he did not
                represent any significant faction within the disintegrating Party. The moments that
                were deciding their fate occurred elsewhere, mainly in the central apparatuses in
                Prague and Bratislava and within the executive.</p>
            <p>The other components of the parliament to draw attention by their activity during the
                first televised debate were the smaller Czech and Slovak political parties. The
                Czech Socialists, who emerged strong with a team of five well prepared speakers
                during the debate over the first point on the agenda, were gradually joined by
                others. Thus during the evening tuning of the parliamentary declaration in the
                plenary, each particular matter was discussed by a Czech and Slovak Communist MP
                along with MPs from the Czechoslovak Peopleʼs Party, the Party of Slovak Renewal,
                and the Freedom Party. The common problem of all these voices lay in the proportion
                between their quantity and representativeness. Unlike the readers of this text,
                television viewers were not warned in advance about the weight of individual
                organisations. Thus the debate might have led them to a false conclusion about the
                political weight of individual addresses.</p>
            <p>The assessment of the four legal political parties differed substantially in the
                Czech and Slovak society, ranging from quite benign ideas about the prospective role
                of these parties as the nuclei of pluralistic political life (what was the evident
                long-term aim of, for instance, their newspapers), to bitter condemnations of the
                operetta mini-parties led by police agents and frightened corrupted officials whose
                activity created smokescreen for democratic socialism.</p>
            <p>The particular status of these parties within the political system emerged as an
                improvisation in an effort to retain, in the newly seized countries in the Soviet
                bloc, some ornamental differences related to local customs.<note place="foot"
                    xml:id="ftn19" n="18">Non-Communist parties as part of the state-socialist
                    governments worked in East Germany (4), Czechoslovakia (2+2), Poland (2) and
                    Bulgaria (1), as well as in Vietnam (2 destroyed in 1988) and China (8). In
                    Hungary, Romania, Yugoslavia and other countries of the Soviet bloc
                    non-Communist parties were altogether suppressed.</note> It was similar to the
                Moscow decision to retain Presidency in Czechoslovakia, a post that was functionally
                superfluous and inexistent in the Soviet model. The Soviet political reforms at the
                end of 1980s led to democratisation of internal life of the Communist Party. They
                did not offer any example for the leaders of non-Communist parties in the Soviet
                satellites. Not that the leaders of those parties did not know what could be
                expected of them. Visions of equality and greater share in the government were a
                natural part of their existence. Throughout the forty years all such efforts ended
                where they began. Other organisations were not allowed to take part in the
                decision-making. They were merely permitted to elaborate or provide for the adopted
                decision. It was the Communist Party that had the patent to govern. The situation at
                the end of the 1980s seemed to a part of the lower rank officials of both larger
                Czech satellite parties, the Peopleʼs and Socialist, as untenable. Pressure on the
                leadership was rising and the activities in both parties were called a “reviving
                current.”</p>
            <p>The idea that they would significantly increase their influence in the future was
                largely based on analogies with Czechoslovakia’s interwar politics. Similarly to
                other areas, such as the economy or culture, there was a widespread belief in the
                Czech society that the future development would return to the developmental trends
                suppressed or eliminated by the Communist rule. Other future was hardly
                conceivable.</p>
            <p>Hence the quite widespread belief that the Socialists and Populars represented,
                albeit in a distorted form, traditional mass political currents identified with by a
                substantial part of the population, and that some sort of restoration of influence
                was about to come. Václav Havel thought along the same lines. In the middle of the
                Summer of 1989, he grasped an accidental informal opportunity to send, faced by a
                number of witnesses, a flirty message to the central secretary of the Czechoslovak
                Socialist Party, Jan Škoda, addressing his former schoolmate and fellow scout with
                an old nickname: “Dear Nosák [Nosey], I hope we meet soon at some roundtable. Václav
                    Havel.”<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn20" n="19">Gerová, <hi rend="italic"
                        >Vyhrabávačky, </hi>51.</note></p>
            <p>The Czechoslovak Socialist party was the first to join the newly formed coalition as
                soon as in the first hours of the demonstrations against the police intervention on
                17 November. When Škoda, directly invited by Havel, came to the founding meeting of
                the Civic Forum, he was listed among the representatives of the dissident groups and
                strike committees. In the tumultuous events of the coming days the Czech Socialists
                were present and accepted everywhere, and, given their mediation skills, they were
                also liked to be seen in the old government institutions and in the headquarters of
                the Civic Forum. The chairman of the party, Kučera, ceremoniously used his many
                posts in the political system to involve the Civic Forum in the game and in the
                removal of the Communist Party headquarters. The star day came during the
                parliamentary debate in front of the television cameras on 29 November.</p>
            <p>Whatever was said above about the party of Czechoslovak Socialists also held true
                with some variations for the Czechoslovak Peopleʼs Party. The first major difference
                was the threefold membership base: there were about fifteen thousand socialists and
                some forty thousand Populars.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn21" n="20">Löbl, <hi
                        rend="italic">Naděje a omyly</hi>, 583.</note> The other distinction was
                such a cautious party leadership that, apart from pacifying its own fellow party
                members, throughout 1989 it did not exert any noteworthy activity. In order for the
                Peopleʼs Party to join the main stream of political events, the leadership had to be
                replaced, which happened on Monday 27 November.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn22"
                    n="21">Břetislav Daněk, <hi rend="italic">Československá strana lidová – její
                        krize a obroda </hi>[Czechoslovak Peopleʼ Party – Its Crisis and
                    Restoration] (Praha: Vyšehrad, 1990), 130.</note> With the new leadership, the
                Czechoslovak Peopleʼs Party joined the Czech Socialists. Richard Sacher attended
                with Jan Škoda as an ally leadership meetings about further action at the Civic
                Forum. The new party chairman, Josef Bartončík, showed himself in live televised
                broadcast as skilled speaker and strategist.</p>
            <p>None of that could be said of any of the Slovak parties. Their status was a magnitude
                weaker, although some symmetry in the political system concealed the reality. The
                deputy chairmen of the Federal Assembly included Josef Šimúth, the chairman of the
                Party of Slovak Renewal (renamed Democratic Party from 1 December) as well as Ján
                Pampúch, deputy chairman of the Freedom Party. Yet each had only four MPs in both
                chambers of the Federal Assembly, including their own mandates. The nature of the
                groupings that were not exceeding fourteen hundred members across Slovakia in the
                Autumn of 1989<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn23" n="22">Lubomír Lipták, <hi
                        rend="italic">Politické strany na Slovensku, 1860–1989</hi> [Political
                    Parties in Slovakia 1860–1989] (Bratislava: Archa, 1992), 293-300.</note> and
                their sparse representation in the executive institutions caused that, in
                Bratislava, they did not play any visible role similar to that assumed by the
                Socialists and Populars in the Czech Republic during the fall of the old régime. On
                29 November in front of the television cameras at the Federal Assembly they tried as
                best as they could, yet their diligence added the deliberations blindingly grotesque
                features. In the silence of the parliamentary constitutional majority, Josef Šimúth
                managed, throughout the day, to deliver to the cameras three major speeches. That
                made him the busiest speaker of the day.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn24" n="23"
                    >Bohuslav Kučera, the chairman of the Czech Socialists, was the only one to be
                    at the microphone more often than Šimút. Yet the former only five times glossed
                    the procedure or specified some situations as one who attended the earlier talks
                    between Adamec and Havel. He managed to deliver two of his own speeches on
                    that.</note> He touched upon a number of substantial political and economic
                issues. As the first MP in the plenary of the Federal Assembly he also managed to
                criticise the planned Constitutional changes and to demand a better role for
                Slovakia.</p>
            <p>When exploring the response to the first televised broadcast from the federal
                parliament, the sources unveil a few discrete scenes. Joining the winning
                revolution, the media aired in devastating condemnations in the coming days. “The
                live broadcast from the parliament beats the worst of expectations. I am in no mood
                for this farce,” Václav Bartuška, one of the leaders of the student committees in
                Prague, noted in his diary. He did not endure watching the broadcast, at the end of
                which he was elected by the parliament for the parliamentary commission for the
                oversight over the investigation of the police intervention on 17 November. <hi
                    rend="italic">Mladá fronta</hi>, the daily of the Socialist Youth Union,
                reported with the same air of disdain. To describe the broadcast, it used the most
                emotional statements by the most radical segments of the society, the leaders of the
                student strike committees at the Prague schools. After a week of reign over public
                spaces in the centre of the capital city, they only had condemnation and ironic
                comments for the sticking and dashed spectacle from the parliament: “There is no
                life to it. It is a typical example of speaking in the supreme institutions. (...)
                The winter hibernation that breaths from the parliament is truly striking.”<note
                    place="foot" xml:id="ftn25" n="24">Zdeněk John and Petr Šabata, “Studenti
                    poslancům: Budíček” [Students to the Deputies: Wake Up Call], <hi rend="italic"
                        >Mladá fronta</hi>, November 30, 1989, 1-2.</note> The comment by one of the
                revolutionaries applied here to the debate, its proceedings and aesthetic. Yet it
                altogether missed the point that the live broadcast was just showing the key
                postulates by the student rebellion being met.</p>
            <p>Those most vocal voices, however, were by far not the only feedback to confront the
                MPs after the television première of the live broadcast from the Federal Assembly in
                the days to come. The abolition of the postulate of the rule of the Communist Party
                transformed the holders of the federal mandates into a choir without which no
                further step was possible, as all actors were quick to realise. The federal
                executive was leaving and the preparations for the early elections, which no one
                doubted anymore, would not do without a number of legislative measures.</p>
            <p>When the Federal Assembly reconvened to address these issues two weeks later, it
                offered an altogether different picture: most of the legislature came back to life.
                The familiar faces of the old régime left their visible seats and joined the MPs
                down below. The new spokesmen of the Communists led by Anton Blažej revelled with
                confidence and latching activity. The altogether worst proposal for the Civic Forum
                that came out from the televised session on 13 December 1989 was Blažejʼs suggestion
                that the new President was not to be elected by the Federal Assembly but the people
                in a referendum. That dramatically lowered Havelʼs chances and raise the hopes of
                the members of the then establishment (such as Adamec) or the figures of 1968
                (Alexander Dubček or someone else). From the perspective of the revolutionaries, the
                very fact that the parliamentary soil came to life as the key playground without the
                Civic Forum having control over it, was bad enough news. The student siege of the
                building and pressure on the MPs in their constituencies, both applied already for a
                number of weeks, were instruments with limited effect.</p>
            <p>Following the resignation of the hitherto officials, Blažej was elected chairman of
                the House of Nations on 12 December. He gave a programmatic address about the new
                role of the parliament as an active and autonomous institution with its own
                specialist base that “will not only be considering government proposals, but will
                also be presenting its own initiatives,” whilst “starting to execute a genuine
                control over the government” and becoming “the conscience of the work of the
                government.” The Federal Assembly would thus earn “respect and gain authority prior
                to the elections” which, as Blažej rightly predicted, would be held in about six
                months. It was to be used in order “not to lose continuity and to create real
                conditions for the functioning of the parliamentary system within the context of
                legal democratic state.”<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn26" n="25"><hi rend="italic"
                        >Společná česko-slovenská digitální parlamentní knihovna</hi> [Common
                    Digital Czecho-Slovak Parliamentary Library], Federal Assembly 1986-1990, The
                    House of Nations, Stenographic records, 6<hi rend="superscript">th</hi> session,
                    12. 12. 1989, accessed October 30, 2015, <ref
                        target="http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/sn/stenprot/006schuz/s006001.htm"
                        >http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/sn/stenprot/006schuz/s006001.htm</ref>.</note></p>
            <p>The next two weeks had shown that the development was to follow a different path. The
                Civic Forum established itself as the new power hub. A part of the elderly political
                establishment of the old régime was withdrawing to privacy and the youths were
                offering themselves to serve the new régime. Its fundamental institution became “the
                government of national unity” which was the name for the reshuffled federal cabinet
                with multiple representation with former dissidents complementing the ranks of
                relatively unknown bureaucrats.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn27" n="26">Government
                    posts in the previous régime were not held by the actual rulers who were based
                    at the superior Party apparatus; federal ministers were hardly present in the
                    media, their names and faces were hardly discernible even by political
                    professionals. Václav Havel, as can be seen in the recordings of meetings within
                    the Civic Forum, took a while to remember the name of Marián Čalfa, Adamecʼs
                    successor in the post of the federal Prime Minister. Čalfa was in the government
                    since 1987 and was deputy to Adamec in the last year.</note> The government
                emerged outside the parliament and without participation by MPs: none of the
                ministers were members of the Federal Assembly. The government was named on 10
                December by President Gustav Husák who abdicated immediately afterwards to free his
                Presidential post.</p>
            <p>Blažejʼs vision that the parliament would oversee the new executive proved to be an
                illusion. In a few days everything was the other way round. It was Václav Havel and
                his colleagues from the leadership at the Civic Forum to design the progress of the
                key moments of the next sessions as a staged production. They discussed in detail
                individual roles with relevant actors or sought willing executors among MPs.<note
                    place="foot" xml:id="ftn28" n="27">Meeting of representatives of the Civic Forum
                    Coordination Centre and the Coordination Committee of the Public Against
                    Violence on co-optations of deputies to the Federal Assembly and on the election
                    of its chairman and presidium, 22 December 1989. ̶ Jiří Suk, <hi rend="italic"
                        >Občanské fórum, listopad-prosinec 1989, 2. díl – dokumenty</hi> [Civic
                    Forum, November–December 1992, volume 2: Documents] (Praha-Brno: Doplněk, 1998),
                    261.</note> Except for those who retreated to seclusion and Blažej, all
                officials within the Federal Assembly came forward. Already a favourite in the
                Presidential elections to be held in a few days by the federal parliament following
                the desires of the Civic Forum, Havel explained to his less initiated colleagues:
                “Everything has been agreed with the people, they all know it and are prepared for
                the arrangement (...) Apart from Mr Blažej. The arrangement has not been agreed with
                    him.”<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn29" n="28">Suk, <hi rend="italic">Občanské
                        forum</hi>, 262-3.</note></p>
            <p>The concept of “national unity” in Czechoslovakia at the break of 1989 and 1990 went
                without the autonomously acting institutions. Blažej was removed from his post on 28
                December having led the Federal Assembly for three weeks. The new leadership of the
                Communist Party that arose from the extraordinary Congress on 20 and 21 December
                1989 agreed with the reshuffle in the leadership of the House of Nations. Blažej was
                replaced by Jozef Stank, another Slovak with Communist membership. Although, at the
                time of the election, he identified with the agenda of his predecessor, in practical
                politics of the coming months he became a willing executor of the will of the new
                President and of “the government of national understanding.”</p>
            <p>The parliament soon returned to the dependence on the executive. Blažejʼs failed
                attempt for the more independent parliamentary politics was among many failures,
                albeit the most visible and interesting. Overall statistics lay beneath: none of the
                350 holders of the federal mandates as of 17 November 1989 served a year later in
                any significant post; only a handful were given further federal mandate in the next
                elections but none have appeared in the governments. Such degree of discontinuity
                was not a norm but an absolute exception in Czechoslovak political institutions
                where, for example, Marián Čalfa, the former deputy of Adamec, was the federal Prime
                Minister until the summer of 1992.</p>
            <p>The main reason is called co-optations: the replacement of a part of deputies. It was
                created by agreement between the old and new political forces at a roundtable and
                was part of conciliatory accord about the occupation of governmental posts, the
                office of the President and early elections. The present power apparatuses – the
                leadership of the Civic Forum and its Slovak counterpart, the new leadership of the
                Communist Party of Czechoslovakia and the four non-Communist political parties –
                agreed that, within the framework of the politics of “national understanding”, they
                would bring to the Federal Assembly MPs from the Civic Forum; at the same time, the
                individual parties could replace their MPs at their own discretion.<note
                    place="foot" xml:id="ftn30" n="29">For details of the genesis and the process
                    see the study by Petr Roubal in this issue.</note> The new political élites thus
                gained the missing political representation and, from Spring 1990, the role of the
                parliament has indeed increased. Only it did not happen through the rising authority
                of MPs, but by their replacement for political officials who gained their de facto
                power before and elsewhere. They moved their political debates to the parliament,
                having taken over parliamentary seats by the means of revolution. The list of their
                names shows that they were renowned dissidents, skilled leaders of local rebellions
                of November 1989 in the regional centres or political talents of the Communist Party
                grabbing high posts in the rejuvenating apparatus. Whilst it holds true that none of
                the three hundred and fifty holders of the federal mandates as of 17 November 1989,
                none of the deputies became any significant political or public figure in the coming
                years, the opposite holds true for the one hundred and fifty co-opted deputies:<note
                    place="foot" xml:id="ftn31" n="30">For a list of co-opted MPs see Petr Roubal,
                        <hi rend="italic">Starý pes, nové kousky. Kooptace do Federálního
                        shromáždění a vytváření polistopadové politické kultury</hi> [Old Dog, New
                    Tricks: Co-optations in the Federal Assembly and the Development of the
                    post-November Political Culture] (Praha: Ústav pro soudobé dějiny Akademie věd
                    České republiky, 2013), 94-102.</note> among them were two future Presidents, a
                number of Ministers, Constitutional Judges as well as a range of other leading
                figures in the coming two decades of Czechoslovakia and, after 1992, in the Czech
                Republic and the Slovak Republic.</p>
        </body>
        <back>
            <div type="bibliography">
                <head>Sources and references</head>
                <listBibl>
                    <head>Literature:</head>
                    <bibl><hi rend="italic">Československo dnes: Zastupitelské sbory, vlády,
                            diplomatické styky, školství, zdravotnictví, ekonomika, kraje ČSSR</hi>
                        [Czechoslovakia Today: Representative Assemblies, Government, Diplomatic
                        Relations, Schools, Healthcare, Economics, and Regions in CSSR]. Praha:
                        Pressfoto, 1987.</bibl>
                    <bibl>Daněk, Břetislav. <hi rend="italic">Československá strana lidová – její
                            krize a obroda</hi> [Czechoslovak Peopleʼ Party – Its Crisis and
                        Restoration]. Praha: Vyšehrad, 1990. </bibl>
                    <bibl>Gerová, Irena. <hi rend="italic">Vyhrabávačky: Deníkové zápisy a rozhovory
                            z let 1988 a 1989</hi> [Digs: Diary Notes and Interviews from 1888 and
                        1989]. Praha, Litomyšl: Paseka, 2009. </bibl>
                    <bibl>Gorbačov, Michail Sergejevič. <hi rend="italic">Přestavba a nové myšlení
                            pro naši zemi a pro celý svět</hi> [Perestroika and New Thinking for Our
                        Country and the Whole World]. Praha: Svoboda, 1987.</bibl>
                    <bibl>Hájek, Miloš. <hi rend="italic">Paměť české levice</hi> [The Memory of the
                        Czech Left]. Praha: Ústav pro soudobé dějiny AV ČR, 2011.</bibl>
                    <bibl>Krapfl, James. <hi rend="italic">Revolution with a Human Face: Politics,
                            Culture, and Community in Czechoslovakia, 1989-1992.</hi> Ithaca:
                        Cornell University Press, 2013.</bibl>
                    <bibl>Lipták, Lubomír.<hi rend="italic"> Politické strany na Slovensku,
                            1860–1989</hi> [Political Parties in Slovakia 1860–1989]. Bratislava:
                        Archa, 1992.</bibl>
                    <bibl>Löbl Karel, <hi rend="italic">Naděje a omyly. Vzpomínky na onu dobu</hi>
                        [Hopes and Errors. Memoirs of An Era]. Praha: Academia, 2012.</bibl>
                    <bibl><hi rend="italic">Poslední hurá. Stenografický záznam z mimořádných
                            zasedání ÚV KSČ 24. a 26. listopadu 1989</hi> [The Final Hooray:
                        Stenographic Record from Extraordinary Sessions of the Central Committee of
                        the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia on 24 and 26 November 1989]. Praha:
                        Agentura Cesty, 1992. </bibl>
                    <bibl>Roubal, Petr. <hi rend="italic">Starý pes, nové kousky. Kooptace do
                            Federálního shromáždění a vytváření polistopadové politické kultury</hi>
                        [Old Dog, New Tricks: Co-optations in the Federal Assembly and the
                        Development of the post-November Political Culture]. Praha: Ústav pro
                        soudobé dějiny Akademie věd České republiky, 2013.</bibl>
                    <bibl>Sedlák, Jaromír.<hi rend="italic"> Muž nad stolem, aneb Byl jsem
                            Štrougalovým poradcem</hi> [A Man Over The Table or I Was Štrougalʼs
                        Adviser]. Praha: BVD, 2010.</bibl>
                    <bibl>Šmíd, Milan. “Česká média a jejich role v procesu politické změny roku
                        1989” [Czech Media and Their Role in the Process of Political Change in
                        1989]. Accessed May 15, 2013, <ref
                            target="http://www.louc.cz/pril01/listopad.pdf"
                            >http://www.louc.cz/pril01/listopad.pdf</ref>.</bibl>
                    <bibl><hi rend="italic">Společná česko-slovenská digitální parlamentní
                            knihovna</hi> [Common Digital Czecho-Slovak Parliamentary Library],
                        Federal Assembly 1986-1990. Accessed October 30, 2015. <ref
                            target="http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/index.htm"
                            >http://www.psp.cz/eknih/1986fs/index.htm</ref>.</bibl>
                    <bibl>Suk, Jiří. <hi rend="italic">Labyrintem revoluce. Aktéři, zápletky a
                            křižovatky jedné politické krize (od listopadu 1989 do června 1990)</hi>
                        [Through the Labyrinth of the Revolution. Actors, Plots and Crossroads of A
                        Political Crisis (from November 1989 to June 1990)]. Praha: Prostor,
                        2003.</bibl>
                    <bibl>Suk, Jiří. <hi rend="italic">Občanské fórum, listopad-prosinec 1989, 2.
                            díl – dokumenty</hi> [Civic Forum, November–December 1992, volume 2:
                        Documents]. Praha, Brno: Doplněk, 1998. </bibl>
                    <bibl>Šulc, Zdislav. <hi rend="italic">Z jeviště i zákulisí české politiky a
                            ekonomiky</hi> [From the Stage and Backstage of Czech Politics and
                        Economics]. Brno: Doplněk, 2011.</bibl>
                </listBibl>
                <listBibl>
                    <head>Newspaper sources:</head>
                    <bibl>John, Zdeněk and Petr Šabata. “Studenti poslancům: Budíček” [Students to
                        the Deputies: Wake Up Call]. <hi rend="italic">Mladá fronta</hi>, November
                        30, 1989, 1-2.</bibl>
                    <bibl>Spáčilová, Mirka. “Televize v rukou vlády?” [Television in the Hands of
                        the Government?]. <hi rend="italic">Mladá fronta</hi>, November 24, 1989, 5. </bibl>
                    <bibl><hi rend="italic">Svobodné slovo.</hi> “K současné vnitropolitické
                        situaci. Prohlášení FS ČSSR“ [On the current political situation.
                        Declaration by the Federal Assembly of CSSR]. November 30, 1989, 3.</bibl>
                    <bibl><hi rend="italic">Svobodné slovo</hi>. “Poslanci, hlasujte za své voliče,
                        ne za sebe!,” November 30, 1989, 1.</bibl>
                </listBibl>
            </div>
            <div type="summary" xml:lang="sl">
                <head type="main">V PARLAMENTU NAJ BI POTEKALE RAZPRAVE, VENDAR SE JE TO IZKAZALO ZA
                    NEMOGOČE: ZVEZNI PARLAMENT IN ŽAMETNA REVOLUCIJA NA ČEŠKOSLOVAŠKEM LETA
                    1989</head>
                <head>POVZETEK</head>
                <docAuthor>Tomáš Zahradníček</docAuthor>
                <p>Študija je osredotočena na vlogo češkoslovaškega zveznega parlamenta v političnem
                    prevratu leta 1989. Na podlagi institucionalne perspektive predstavlja novo
                    analizo prelomnih tednov. Z vidika parlamenta so bile spremembe nenavadno hitre.
                    V nekaj tednih od padca berlinskega zidu do konca leta 1989 je državi uspelo
                    zamenjati izvršilno oblast (zlasti predsedstvo – Václav Havel je nadomestil
                    Gustáva Husáka), pri čemer parlament ni odigral pomembne vloge.</p>
                <p>Predhodna vlada in vodje Državljanskega foruma so sklenili dogovor, ki je
                    vključeval tudi naloge, ki bi jih moral izpolnjevati parlament, tako da je bila
                    odločitev formalno ustrezna. Ključna pogajanja se sploh niso približala
                    parlamentarnemu odru.</p>
                <p>Medtem so si številni tedanji poslanci, izvoljeni leta 1986, pa tudi parlament
                    kot institucija, razlagali zlom predhodne strukture moči kot priložnost za
                    neodvisnost, zato so se poskušali vključiti v pogajanja, vendar brez uspeha.
                    Slovaški poslanec Anton Blažej, ki se je javno zavzemal, da bi neodvisni
                    parlament postal »vest vlade«, je na čelu zveznega parlamenta preživel samo tri
                    tedne, preden ga je odslovila nova izvršilna oblast z novoizvoljenim
                    predsednikom Havlom.</p>
                <p>Istočasno so v parlament začeli vstopati predstavniki nove oblasti in zasedli
                    prazne sedeže poslancev, ki so odstopili ali bili razrešeni. Po skoraj dveh
                    mesecih improviziranja se je parlament spet vključil v politiko. To se ni
                    zgodilo zaradi njegove neodvisnosti ali splošnih volitev. Formalnopraven prihod
                    predstavnikov nove oblasti na vodilne položaje je bil resnično revolucionarno
                    dejanje. Institucionalna perspektiva nam omogoča, da precej jasno prepoznamo
                    tovrstno naravo te politične spremembe.</p>
            </div>
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    </text>
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