Geert Wilders and Tom van Grieken smiling for the camera. (Horacio Villalobos#Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)

Of the torrent of elections scheduled throughout the world this year, the most transformative promises to span an entire continent. In all of the 27 nations which constitute the European Union, and which will ask their citizens to vote for EU parliamentarians in early June, at least one New or far-Right party is now active. In several (Finland, Italy, Slovakia, Sweden), they form part of a coalition government of the Right. In three (Hungary, Italy, Slovakia), they lead the government.
And, if 2023 closed with the surprise victory of Geert WildersĀ and his Freedom Party in the Netherlands, the year ahead promises much of the same. The Austrian Freedom Party is by some wayĀ the countryās most popular, and thus likely to win the parliamentary election in the autumn. In Belgium, which holds parliamentary elections in June, the New Right Vlaams Belang currently seems likely to win the election in Flanders, the larger and richer of the countryās two regions, while it also leads the overall polling. Both it and its closest rival, the New Flemish Alliance, seek independence from Belgium to form a separate Flemish state.
The symbolism of the rise of the New Right, in the state which hosts the European Unionās own capital, cannot be missed. But the same holds across the EUās other lynchpin nations. Even Emmanuel Macron is said to believe that it will be Marine Le Pen who will wave from the steps of the ElysĆ©e Palace in 2027. In Germany, theĀ Alternative fĆ¼r DeutschlandĀ continues its climb, and theĀ cordon sanitaire around mainstream collaboration with the party is likely to be breached this year. The AfD are certainly game: in a talk last month with Norbert Kleinwaechter, deputy leader of the partyās Bundestag grouping, I was told that āthere is not so much difference between the CDUās programme and oursā. In many German states ā especially in the east, where the AfD is the strongest party ā members of mainstream parties and the New Right have (as yet unofficial) dealings. As in Sweden, parliamentary arithmetic cannot be ignored forever and the centre-right will need the New Right if it is to govern.
Here we are seeing the EUās darkest nightmare of populist insurgency made flesh. France and Germany have, for decades, underpinned a leadership which has projected a commitment to āever closer unionā, and sought energetically to realise it in practice. But while few of these New Right movements seek secession from the EU, their collective policy might be understood as ānever closerā, effectively tearing the rhetorical heart out of the supernational project. If the New Right is successful, the EU itself will find itself commensurately, possibly terminally, enfeebled.
This is one of the most important continental trends of the century so far. In most commentary and reporting on the subject in the West and other democracies, it is regarded as an unspeakable political disaster, opening a space for the possibility of authoritarian governance everywhere. The preferred position is reflexive: to assume these parties are continuing to act as vehicles for an extremism which hides beneath their apparent commitment to democracy. Yet such an approach ā with constant references to fascist or Nazi roots, which many of these parties do have ā does little, ironically, to hold them to account. It is more than time to treat them as we do Left-wing parties in Italy, Germany, Portugal and Sweden with communist roots, as well as all others lacking totalitarian connections: to discount the most obvious slurs, and instead attempt to understand, clarify and critique their policies and rhetoric. Only this way can we understand the true nature of the New Right, and what its continuing rise this year will augur.
For instance, many of these organisations embrace economic and social policies commonly found in the programmes of social-democratic parties, which sit alongside their Euroscepticism, opposition to the rough end of globalisation and support for families. But within this field they vary widely. The two parties whichĀ surged into government in September 2022 ā the Sweden Democrats and Giorgia Meloniās Fratelli dāItalia ā explicitly favour national and social conservatism, derived from the British Right, with the late Sir Roger Scruton as the presiding inspiration. Both parties support Ukraine, are pro-Nato (though Sweden is still impeded from joining because of a Turkish veto), and are socially moderate.
By contrast, the far-Right parties of central and Eastern Europe tend towards a harsher, even insurgent, political approach, in part reflecting the more recent post-communistĀ adoption of parliamentary democracy and liberal institutions. The Bulgarian Vazrazhdane (Revival) is the standoutĀ party here,Ā growing rapidlyĀ from its founding in 2014 to the third-largest party in parliamentĀ in the 2023 elections. It, by contrast, is pro-Russian, anti-American, opposed aid to Ukraine, and hostile to gay rights. In June last year, a group of protestors, reportedlyĀ led by a Vazrazhdane deputy, stormed a screening of the Belgian film Close, about an intimate friendship between two teenage boys.
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