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Europe's Right on the Rise |
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Written by James Illingworth and Alan Maass
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Tuesday, 23 June 2009 11:44 |
In an outcome that was mirrored across large parts of Europe, Britain's
governing Labour Party was dealt a crushing defeat in elections for European
parliament and local government offices--and right-wing parties, including the
fascist British National Party (BNP), made unprecedented gains.
With Labour supporters' discontent with Prime Minister Gordon Brown's government
coming to a head with a series of scandals, everyone knew the center-left Labour
Party, traditionally backed by the unions, was in for a bad time in these
elections.
But the actual result was devastating. Labour fell to third place in the
national vote, behind not only the mainstream Conservative Party (known as the
Tories), but the previously fringe UK Independence Party, which plays to
right-wing sentiment in opposing British membership in the European Union.
Also frightening was the success of the BNP, a neo-Nazi organization committed
to an openly stated program of "reversing the tide of non-white immigration."
The BNP won almost 1 million votes across Britain, and gained two seats in the
European parliament, a first for the fascists. Several other parties to the
right of the Tories scored victories.
Among parties to the left of Labour, aside from a strong turnout for the Greens,
who won around 8 percent of the vote nationwide, the results were tiny. There
were few left candidates to vote for--due to battles among different left
forces, only a few organizations ran candidates that could present a genuine
left alternative to Labour.
The picture was similar elsewhere in Europe, with a few exceptions. In some
countries, left-wing candidates scored important successes. Portugal's Left
Bloc, for example, more than doubled its share of the national vote to just over
10 percent, gaining three seats in the European parliament. In Ireland, the
far-left Socialist Party scored a breakthrough victory in the European
parliamentary vote, and the radical coalition People Before Profits did well.
But for each of the success stories, left parties in other countries suffered
disappointing results.
As for the center-left parties like Britain's Labour--many of which are either
leading governments, or have a record of leading them in the recent past--the
election was a disaster. France's Socialist Party got 16.5 percent of the
national vote, close to its worst-ever showing. In Germany, the Social
Democratic Party fell to a historic low of 21 percent.
These parties come from the tradition of social democracy that was associated
with the creation of the European welfare state--a far more generous one than in
the U.S.--after the Second World War. But in the past two decades, the social
democrats have embraced neoliberal measures that expanded the gap between rich
and poor--and none have been bigger boosters of the free market than Labour's
Brown, and his predecessor Tony Blair.
Despite the grip of the economic crisis, the main center-right parties did much
better in these elections, even where they are in office and presiding over
attacks on workers. In France, for example, President Nicolas Sarkozy's Union
for a Popular Majority took first place in the national vote, marking the first
time a sitting French president's party has won a European election since 1979.
Germany's governing Christian Democratic Union also stayed on top.
But the biggest news was the success of the far right, which won breakthroughs
in one country after another. All told, neo-Nazi and far-right parties will hold
more than 40 seats in the new European parliament.
Four of those seats are from Holland, where the Islamophobic Freedom Party led
by Geert Wilders won 16.4 percent of the vote countrywide. In Austria, two
far-right parties shared a total of 18 percent of the vote.
In Hungary, the viciously anti-immigrant Movement for a Better Hungary--which
has a paramilitary unit whose uniforms resemble those of Nazi youth
organizations during the Second World War--won some 15 percent of the vote,
giving it three seats in the parliament. The Greater Romania Party, which spews
its vilest rhetoric against the Roma minority, won two parliamentary seats.
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BY COMPARISON, the right's gains in Britain were actually less sweeping--but
still extremely alarming.
In moving into second place in the national vote, the UKIP gained further
legitimacy for positions it claims are non-racist, but which thrive on
right-wing propaganda against immigrants. The party's chief selling point is
opposition to British membership in the European Union, and it blames
"uncontrolled immigration from the former Warsaw Pact nations of Eastern Europe"
for the crisis in Britain's public services.
The English Democrats Party (EDP), which opposes institutions that have given
power to Scotland and Wales within the United Kingdom, had a more modest showing
nationwide, but it was able to elect a member as mayor of Doncaster.
Doncaster is a former coal-mining town in South Yorkshire and once an
impregnable stronghold of Labour and the unions. The new mayor, who is the son
of a Conservative member of parliament, ran on a platform of slashing the number
of seats on the local council, opposing the city's Gay Pride festival, and
ending translation services for immigrants.
Most worrying of all was the success of the BNP, which increased its share of
the national vote to 6.5 percent, and polled at almost 10 percent in former
industrial areas of northern England and the Midlands, where middle-class and
working-class communities have been hard hit by deindustrialization and the
economic crisis.
As well as winning its first three county council seats, the party elected two
members to European parliament, including Nick Griffin, the party's leader and
national spokesperson. The second new member of parliament, from the Yorkshire
and Humber region, is Andrew Brons, a former chair of the Hitler-worshipping
National Front.
The victories give the BNP a new aura of legitimacy--and an important source of
funding for future activities.
The party has its origins in the British neo-Nazi movement. Though it has tried
to create a veneer of respectability by moving away from its formerly extreme
anti-Semitism, in reality, it has merely replaced Jewish people with Muslims as
its main target for hate. The BNP's membership is limited to so-called
"indigenous Britons" (i.e., whites), and its political program calls for the
expulsion from Britain of all "non-white immigrants."
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HOW COULD such vile racists be gaining ground in Britain? The blame lies
squarely with the New Labour of Gordon Brown and Tony Blair.
During its 12 years in power, the Labour government prepared the social and
political conditions for the BNP to break through--by implementing a neoliberal
economic agenda of cuts and privatization that enriched the fat cats of the
London financial world, while alienating millions of once-loyal working-class
voters.
When the economic crisis hit in earnest last year, Brown opted for more of the
same, doling out billions of pounds to bail out the banks while hundreds of
thousands of workers lost their jobs. Simultaneously, New Labour posed as "tough
on immigration" and helped to whip up Islamophobia in order to justify its role
in the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan.
The recent corruption scandal--sparked off when British newspapers revealed how
members of parliament abused the expense account system to enjoy substantial
perks at taxpayers' expense--was the last straw for many.
Leading Tories were implicated as well, but the presence of New Labour cabinet
members among the crooks lining their pockets while ordinary people struggled to
pay the bills clearly drove more people away from Labour. It's hard to think of
a more fitting symbol of how little now separates the party that supposedly
stands for workers from the hated Tories.
Brown's government is now in a catastrophic crisis. Although the prime minister
announced a "reshuffle" of his Cabinet to distract attention, factionalism is
breaking out among Labour leaders. Right-wing Work and Pensions Secretary James
Purnell resigned and made a public call for Brown to step down. Purnell and
other Blairites in the upper echelons of New Labour want the party to shift even
further to the right. But other party leaders are unconvinced that New Labour
could afford a leadership contest, so Brown may hold onto power in the short
term.
Whatever cosmetic changes take place at the top, though, the Labour Party is
heading for a historic defeat in the next election--the mirror opposite of the
landslide that swept Labour into office in 1997.
The main beneficiary will be the Tories. David Cameron, the current Conservative
Party leader, has tried to broaden the Tories' appeal by adding an
environmentalist veneer to the party's free-market orthodoxies. But a Tory
government would inevitably mean increased attacks on public services and deep
cuts to the welfare state.
Meanwhile, the British left has been unable to capitalize on the discontent with
Labour or popular anger over the economic crisis.
In the European elections, the Green Party managed to re-elect its two members
of parliament and came close to stopping the BNP's Nick Griffin in the North
West region. But much of the socialist movement was divided going into election.
Some united with the left-led National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport
Workers to form the No 2 EU, Yes to Democracy (NO2EU) slate in the European
elections. But the effort was pulled together at the last moment and drew less
than 1 percent of the vote.
The Respect Party, which won a major success several years ago by electing
George Galloway to British parliament, suffered a devastating split last year,
and the remaining organization ran only a handful of local candidates in the
election, giving public support to the Green Party and NO2EU.
The emergence of NO2EU does suggest possibilities for the future--that some of
the more militant unions could lead a break with New Labour and provide a new
left-wing pole of attraction for working-class voters and activists.
But a key question now will be challenging the BNP and trying to blunt its
momentum coming out of the vote. Fortunately, opponents of the Nazis responded
immediately after the election--Nick Griffin's first post-election press
conference, outside the parliament building in London, was met by egg-throwing
protesters organized by the Unite Against Fascism coalition. Griffin had to cut
his appearance short.
Taking on the right and forcing it back will require a united struggle by the
left.
Source: Socialist Worker
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