Extremists Threaten To Unseat Mainstream Rivals In European Parliament

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First Posted: 05-19-09 05:45 PM   |   Updated: 06-19-09 05:12 AM

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From Stockholm to Sardinia, Waterford to Warsaw, a noisy and eclectic band of nationalists and eurosceptics are on the campaign trail hoping to unseat their mainstream rivals in the European Parliament.

Dutch anti-Islamists, Hungarian nationalists, Italian separatists and an Irish-backed anti-Lisbon Treaty party are all clamouring for seats when Europe goes to the polls between 4 and 7 June. And a combination of dismally low voter turnout and the economic downturn looks set to play into their hands in the vote. Job losses and the grimmest economic forecasts in decades have created the ideal conditions for single-issue candidates and marginal groups hostile to the EU to win seats in the Strasbourg assembly.

"It's a worrying trend" says Urszula Gacek, a centre-right Polish MEP whose country is itself home to several arch-conservative Catholic parties and headed by a eurosceptic President, Lech Kaczynski. "The extremists are better at mobilising their voters, by playing on citizens' fears and talking up the need for protectionism and the closing of borders."

Many, like Ms Gacek, view the possible arrivals from the extreme fringes of the political landscape with a trepidation bordering on fear, fretting that their new fellow parliamentarians will attempt to hobble the workings and powers of the institution to which they are seeking election. "It is bad enough having our sessions broken up by anti-EU ranters from the United Kingdom Independence Party [Ukip], but what if these people actually get power now?," says one Portuguese deputy.

During their last pre-election session of parliament in Strasbourg, chatter about the looming changes to the balance of power dominated the corridors. Over glasses of wine in the parliament's bars, politicians pondered about possible alliances to disrupt the traditional dominance of the centre-right and the socialists. One prospect is the establishment of a new eurosceptic faction, thanks to the British Conservatives' much criticised plan to abandon the powerful centre-right, umbrella grouping European People's Party. The Conservatives are now reportedly seeking to team up with Irish businessman Declan Ganley's Libertas, a pan-European movement set up specifically with the ambition of derailing the Lisbon Treaty.

More worrying is the threat from the far-right, which could well include the British National Party (BNP). The BNP is poised to win at least one seat and has been seeking "greater co-operation between European nationalists". Last month, Nazi salutes greeted the BNP's deputy leader, Simon Darby, at a far-right rally in Milan, organised by Roberto Fiore, an Italian MEP and head of Forza Nuova, which seeks the expulsion of about 150,000 Roma gypsies from Italy.

"It's really very ironic that these groups have decided to go European, given that they are all basically campaigning against the EU," says the Green Party's co-president Monica Frassoni. But she points out that these parties are so rooted in domestic politics that Romanian and Hungarian groups campaigning on an anti-Roma gypsy ticket are unlikely to get into bed with, for instance, the Vlaams Belang, which wants independence for Flanders. "I can't see how they will organise themselves into a credible new faction given the complete disarray and isolation they've faced before."

A new party of far-right groups, Identity, Tradition, Sovereignty, collapsed spectacularly just weeks after its creation in 2007, when Italy's Allessandra Mussolini hurled verbal abuse at her "scum" Romanian colleagues, and Poles were left fuming over Austrian mutterings about the need to change the Polish-German border - a far cry from the cosy European spirit that has seen even British members grow used to kissing their foreign colleagues on both cheeks.

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"Inevitably it all dissolved into a shambles and now they will never make up the numbers they need to create a new political entity," says Andrew Duff, a British Liberal MEP, referring to recent changes to triple to 28 the minimum number of politicians needed to form a viable political grouping. Only a group can wield power at the parliament, he says, as they can chair committees and sway voting. "Independent members count for nothing, which is why the risk posed by these extremists is in reality so insignificant."

At the other end of the scale, the parliament risks being seen as a depository for outlandish wannabes or failed has-beens. France's fallen political star, the former justice minister Rachida Dati (UMP), can at least boast cabinet experience, unlike the string of female soap-opera starlets and models being fielded by Italy's Silvio Berlusconi for his centre-right party, to the outrage of his wife, who last week filed for divorce, calling the move "shameless".

In Britain, the former Apprentice star and Met Office worker Katie Hopkins announced she will stand as the sole candidate for the Katie Olivia Hopkins Independent Party in Exeter. "It makes us look like a bunch of amateurs," said one Dutch MEP.

Although the parliament has massively increased its powers since it became a democratically elected chamber three decades ago and now wields its zeal for regulation wherever it can, the world's only trans-national parliament still leaves most Europeans cold: two-thirds say they know little or next to nothing about what it does and only one-third plan to vote next month, one poll found. "Everyone is worrying about the economic crisis, but people don't necessarily believe that the parliament can address it," says Ms Frassoni.

Its 785 MEPs like to blame the media for the plummeting public interest, accusing it of failing to report on its achievements in swaying legislation on issues as diverse as working hours for employees, EU environmental targets and mobile phone roaming charges. Instead, the assembly's reputation is all-too-frequently dogged by scandals over MEP allowances and the extravagant idiosyncrasy of being the only parliament in the world with two houses.

MEPs and armies of assistants and translators leave the gleaming steel-and-glass hemisphere in Brussels once a month to travel several hundred miles to Strasbourg for a four-day plenary session in a time-honoured practice branded the "travelling circus', "Euro gravy train" or any variation of the two.

The monthly move to France of thousands of staff wheeling boxes of documents as well as the upkeep of a state-of-the-art premises which stands mostly empty costs European taxpayers about €200m a year. Even if Strasbourg's restaurants buzz with the nightly patronage of the MEPs during sessions, many elected representatives don't even bother to show up. "We had around 150 colleagues missing during the last session, which is completely unacceptable and dangerous as it skews voting results." says the British Liberal MEP Andrew Duff. "Some Mediterraneans hardly ever show their face".

Others seethe with frustration at the parliament's reluctance to self-reform. "In the past, Strasbourg was a symbol of Franco-German reconciliation. Now it's a symbol of waste," says Alexander Alvaro, a German Liberal MEP who wants to scrap the Strasbourg location - a historic arrangement enshrined in EU treaties. However, there are signs the European Parliament is getting the message. New rules on allowances will curb some of the excess. And if Ireland passes the Lisbon Treaty in a second referendum in the autumn, Strasbourg will be conferred with a greater say over justice, immigration and foreign policy, rather than wasting its breath on passing resolutions on matters beyond its remit.

Ironically, the europhobes and extremists may find themselves wielding real power rather than just disrupting hand-wringing debates on the situation in Burma or the disappearance of the brown bear.

Related article: Mary Dejevsky: My generation has failed to promote vision of Europe

Read more from the Independent.




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From Stockholm to Sardinia, Waterford to Warsaw, a noisy and eclectic band of nationalists and eurosceptics are on the campaign trail hoping to unseat their mainstream rivals in the European Parliamen...
From Stockholm to Sardinia, Waterford to Warsaw, a noisy and eclectic band of nationalists and eurosceptics are on the campaign trail hoping to unseat their mainstream rivals in the European Parliamen...
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Don't equate legitimate EU-skepticism with far right racist groups.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 AM on 05/22/2009
- Paulo1 I'm a Fan of Paulo1 41 fans permalink

I wish them all luck and good campaigning, When all of the so-called mainstream politicians seem so bland we need a little radicalism to remind us all of what politics can become if we don't take it seriously

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:03 PM on 05/20/2009
- rwext I'm a Fan of rwext 8 fans permalink

extremism,,,,, Progressives in Europe too

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:02 AM on 05/20/2009
- JiminNC I'm a Fan of JiminNC 268 fans permalink
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The missing link to American republisaurs - wow Darwin was right!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:44 AM on 05/20/2009

This is a terrible article for trying to associate "Euro skeptics" with right wing extremists. Being a euro skeptic is similar to being anti-globalization and has nothing to do with hateful extremism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:50 AM on 05/20/2009
- TrnsNtnl I'm a Fan of TrnsNtnl 2 fans permalink

The hateful extremist just give the spear a nice point that can be referanced easily. Eurocentrism is a global problem no matter how you cut it. The unique brand of EuroAmerican capitalism we are spreading through out the world cannibalises other cultures until they become completely dependant on the foreign way of life introduced.... Its not going to help global peace, the environment or quashing of extremist. Uhg.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 05/20/2009
- loki I'm a Fan of loki 128 fans permalink
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Wow they have republican parties there too?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:33 AM on 05/20/2009
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Even here in Finland the "nationalist party", True Finns, has made ground since the economic crisis started. These people love the attention but they forget one thing: The average person on the street only turns to them when things are bad like they are now and they abandon them when things are good.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 AM on 05/20/2009
- loki I'm a Fan of loki 128 fans permalink
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Just like religion. People usually turn to the church when things are bad for them. Its what groups like these thrive on. Fear. Same way the GOP gets its members. They cant speak of anything of substance, so they speak of fear.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:34 AM on 05/20/2009
- JerryLevy I'm a Fan of JerryLevy 54 fans permalink
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Let's see, the GOP gets its members through fear. What is so fearful about lower taxes, opportunity, a strong defense, and personal responsibility? Did the democrats win the last election by spreading fear about growing deficit spending killing our economy and disaster in Iraq? That's no more fear (or hypocracy) than the appeal made by the GOP.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:02 AM on 05/20/2009
- Khirad I'm a Fan of Khirad 271 fans permalink
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I've long since been watching groups like the BNP. Anybody seen Pink Floyd's 'The Wall'? There you go:

Would you like to see Britannia,
Rule again, my friend?
All you have to do is follow the worms.
Would you like to send our colored cousins,
Home again, my friend?
All you need to do is follow the worms.

They're all over Europe, even Greece has its own, Chrysi Avyi.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 PM on 05/19/2009
- KarateKid I'm a Fan of KarateKid 314 fans permalink
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They, even after centuries, always revert back to their cro magnon heritage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 PM on 05/19/2009
- overcat I'm a Fan of overcat 25 fans permalink

While the extreme right fringe in Europe is generally as repugnant as the extreme right fringe anywhere, the unfortunate reality is that in too many cases they are simply filling a void that the center left has left wide open for them. Take the Dutch example - an extremely tolerant, open and accepting society has stepped back a bit from that mode due to far too many instances of violent anti-tolerance assertiveness on the part of a rather small minority of Islamist extremists against homosexuals, women, Jews and others who don't conform to extreme Islamist values. A high functioning society does not want the very values that make them high functioning to be supplanted by a code for living that the natives largely consider to be foreign, inequitable and counter to cherished personal liberty. Push back can and often does go too far, but it's not as though the Dutch just woke up one day and and decided to eye Islamists with suspicion. Theo Van Gogh murdered, gays routinely set upon and attacked by groups of young Islamic men, women considered to be "immodest" assaulted and raped, and expression deemed unacceptable by an imported religious standard threatened with if not met with violence. These sorts of things create an ideal environment for extremists when the mainstream does not curb them effectively.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:16 PM on 05/19/2009

...and all of this responsibility goes to 2% "Islamist"????

What a JOKE you are....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 PM on 05/19/2009
- GunneraGirl I'm a Fan of GunneraGirl 123 fans permalink
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Very interesting problem facing Europeans right now. Thank you for your post.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 PM on 05/19/2009

European right-wing nationalists are a political curiosity. Nothing more. They will never get any serious political power in their own countries nor within the greater EU itself. They just dont have enough mainstream or grass-roots support. Europe is overwhelmingly liberal and left wing.

Every time a Euro Nationalist party organizes a march there are usually twice as many counter-protesters

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:52 PM on 05/19/2009
- Hnorc I'm a Fan of Hnorc 20 fans permalink

You might want to read the history of the Nazi Party. People thought they were a joke too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:43 AM on 05/20/2009

"A high functioning society does not want the very values that make them high functioning to be supplanted by a code for living that the natives largely consider to be foreign inequitable and counter to cherished personal liberty." You're up to your armpits in irony here. Nearly every single power in modern Europe was once a colonial power in Africa, South America, North America, Asia, and the Near East where for centuries they did exactly what you describe to natives populations who were themselves, more often than not, "high functioning", living in accordance with values developed over centuries. Upon arrival of the Europeans, populations were decimated by the sword, the gun, and a variety of diseases for which they had no immunities, slavery was instituted, natural resources were absconded with; then the society was reconstituted around values, religion, and legal institutions, "which the natives largely considered to be foreign, inequitable, and counter to cherished personal liberty", all enforced by foreign military and police forces, and finally, the entire imperialist cake was topped with a sugary icing of paternalism, the infamous "white man's burden;" implying that this "shock doctrine" was nothing more than a helping hand, offered by wise adults to races of small children. If the presence of Muslim immigrants in Europe can be used as an excuse for the rise of right wing extremism, I'd suppose that centuries of colonial exploitation might have been expected to produce a few natives who were less than appropriately thankful...for generations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:35 PM on 05/20/2009
- TheBaffler I'm a Fan of TheBaffler 42 fans permalink
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Yeah, you ziofascists are instead the voice of reason and tolerance.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:09 PM on 05/20/2009
- Spencaa I'm a Fan of Spencaa 13 fans permalink

I find this whole European Parliament to be interesting. A leigislative body that spans several countries? I wonder how many parties they have?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 PM on 05/19/2009
- AhnAmuru I'm a Fan of AhnAmuru 10 fans permalink
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Why the fuss?

In the US they're called Republicans (conservatives), in the Middle East Hizbollah / Hamas.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 PM on 05/19/2009
- KarateKid I'm a Fan of KarateKid 314 fans permalink
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Even after all these centuries, they can't shake their Ne ander thal heritage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:39 PM on 05/19/2009
- moflard I'm a Fan of moflard 12 fans permalink

Make up what passes for your mind, Neandertal or Cro Magnon, you can't have both.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:35 AM on 05/20/2009
- KarateKid I'm a Fan of KarateKid 314 fans permalink
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Even after all these centuries, they can't shake their Neanderthal heritage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 PM on 05/19/2009

I take it you are not an evolutionary biologist.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 AM on 05/20/2009
- scampy123 I'm a Fan of scampy123 3 fans permalink

These are the people who would like the war criminal Tony Blair as president of the EU?
Is it any wonder the majority of Europeans want this expensive shambles shut down?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 PM on 05/19/2009
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