Politics is always a tough game and nowhere more so than in a society devastated by a massively damaging war, on top of all of the problems of trying to develop this still dirt-poor country. Political deals are therefore often done despite personal differences and this may again be the case following the parliamentary elections.
It is this sometime fraught environment that has also led to outbursts of violence, as opposite camps compete for scarce resources. The 2007 elections were held very much in the shadow of the 2006 violence that brought East Timor to the brink of civil war. Despite a strong international security presence, those elections were marred by considerable violence and much destruction.
By contrast, the 2012 elections have been remarkably calm. There have been a few relatively minor disturbances compared to 2007. But as the shape of the political landscape becomes increasingly clear following Monday's ballot, tensions may again rise.
In particular, Fretilin appears adept at turning out a consistently strong single party vote, if to date less able to secure majority support from non-Fretilin parties. Should it receive the single largest vote, as it did in 2007, Fretilin will probably claim, as it has done since 2007, that under Section 106 of the East Timorese constitution, the president is obliged to select the new prime minister from the party with the most votes in parliament.
Had Mr Guterres won the presidency, this would have been the likely outcome. However, Mr Ruak may adopt his predecessor's interpretation of the constitution, which says the prime minister can also be selected on the basis of commanding an alliance constituting a majority on the floor of the parliament. This is where the real tensions will be, as they were in 2007.
The UN is scheduled to draw down its presence by the end of the year and the Australian-led Stabilisation Force is scheduled to withdraw. The largely peaceful political environment to date suggests it is now time for the international community to let East Timor stand on its own two feet, and that is the preferred option within East Timor.
How the country goes into the parliamentary elections and, more importantly, how it comes out of them, will be the true test of whether East Timor has genuinely consolidated its democratic process. It will also be the test of whether East Timor can remain a stable, developing state.
Professor Damien Kingsbury is co-ordinator of the Timor-Leste Friendship Network/Deakin University Observer Mission to East Timor's 2012 elections.
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