You see young people going around in Scruton T-shirts (Andy Hall/Getty Images)

A spectre is haunting Europe ā the spectre of Sir Roger Scruton. Three years after his death, the professorās philosophical ghost is still present, and is reaching echelons of influence that eluded him in his lifetime. For the first time, self-proclaimed Scruton acolytes have climbed to the top of European political parties ā and governments ā in Italy and in Sweden.
For while ScrutonāsĀ attachment to conservatism was deep, his philosophy was usually couched in terms few leaders of the political Right would use. It involved, he wrote in the introduction to A Political Philosophy,Ā āthe conservation of our shared resources ā social, material, economic and spiritual ā and resistance to social entropy in all its formsā. His conservatism was, above all, conservationist: constant care for institutions, customs, and family.
These beliefs necessitated a healthy distance from the most politically successful British-Conservative movement of his lifetime, Thatcherism, whose figurehead failed to conserve a great deal. Scruton welcomed her confrontation with relatively recent excrescences on the British body politic: overweening unions, a culture of decline-management, scorn for patriotism. And he initially hailed Thatcherās coming as āa miracleā, celebrating her as āthe greatest woman in British politics since Elizabeth Iā. But his support never entailed full alignment, and he was wary of her free-market absolutism and her lack of interest in less tangible ideals, such as beauty.
Thatcherite conservatism, much less that of Scrutonās stamp, has been historically rare in the European continent, often dismissively referred to as āAnglo-Saxonā. And this was particularly true in Sweden and Italy. The Swedish Social Democrats governed for most of the post-war period, and their model of well-funded social protection and generous international development aid was largely accepted by the centre-Right. Italy was led into the Eighties by Christian Democrat coalitions, politically centrist in nature. And when their standing declined in the early Nineties, weakened by corruption allegations, they were succeeded by Forza Italia, a new party created and financed by the media oligarch Silvio Berlusconi, who promised business-like efficiency with little ideological change. But, in the form of Giorgia Meloni and the Sweden Democrats, both countries now have avowed Scrutonians at the heart of their governments.
Though dedicated to the English conservative tradition, Scruton had intervened in European politics within his lifetime. In 2006, he gave a speech at the invitation of the Vlaams Belang (Flemish Interest) party, a strongly anti-immigrant, Flemish nationalistĀ and Eurosceptic group which at the time was Belgiumās largest party. He told the audienceĀ what they already believed ā that immigration and the European Union would destroy Flanders ā and tested out a neologism of his own, āoikophobiaā (derived Greek for home) meaning a rejection both of the family, and oneās native culture. The oikophobe, he said, ārepudiates national loyalties and defines his goals and idealsĀ againstĀ the nation, promoting transnational institutions over national governmentsā¦ defining his political vision in terms of cosmopolitan values that have been purified of all reference to the particular attachments of a real historical communityā.
Though it gained little traction in 2006, this is the Scruton that Meloni and Matthias Karlsson, the leading intellectual of the Sweden Democrats, have adopted. In her autobiography,Ā I am Giorgia, Meloni describes Scruton as the greatest influence on her party, indeed the most important guide to all European liberal-conservative forces. Citing him in several passages, she admits: āIām quoting him too often, but itās his own fault for writing so many interesting things.ā From Scrutonās 2014 book, How to be a Conservative, the Italian prime minister highlights Scrutonās debt to Edmund Burke: society is a contract between the living, the dead and the unborn; a ācivil association among neighboursā is superior to state intervention; āthe most important thing a human being can do is to settle down, make a home and pass it on to oneās childrenā.
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