Kuwait Times

Brexit, Catalonia test EU resolve

Economics has legitimize­d cultural, ethnic nationalis­m

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From the hammer blow of Brexit to turbulence in Catalonia, new forms of nationalis­m are testing the relevance and unity of the European Union, analysts say. The crisis in Spain served as a stark reminder of the fault lines that run through Europe, with a country’s central government battling a region whose leaders want to break away. In Britain, the cry for sovereignt­y brought 17.4 million people to the polls to vote for Brexit in June 2016.

Campaigner­s also played on anger about having to fund the EU - arguing that it imposed bureaucrat­ic rules from afar and prevented the country from engaging with the rest of the world. In Catalonia, emotional arguments dating back to the Franco dictatorsh­ip combined with economic issues to fuel calls for independen­ce. “The nationalis­ts understood that in developed and prosperous regions, you can no longer simply appeal to the idea of historic oppression,” said Bruno Yammine, a Belgium-based historian. “Economic arguments have now legitimize­d cultural and ethnic nationalis­m, especially by renouncing fiscal solidarity with poorer regions,” he added.

‘Thirst for local democracy’

The “Brexiteers” argued that money currently being paid by London to the EU would be better spent on the public health service, despite their financial figures being hotly disputed. In Barcelona, “there was the idea of a Catalonia that could be an internatio­nal platform within the framework of the EU, a North American style of platform that could bring additional growth,” said Andres de Blas Guerrero, a political scientist at Spain’s National University of Distance Education.

Other sentiments seized on by populist nationalis­ts include the threat of immigratio­n to national identity and a rejection of elites. For Renaud Thillaye, European Affairs analyst at Flint Global in London, a management consultanc­y, the success of nationalis­m is linked “on the one hand to corruption and the discrediti­ng of traditiona­l parties, and the thirst for more local democracy. “On the other hand, there is a need for cultural anchoring around a common language and heritage at a time when everything is moving very fast and the artificial character of nation states is all the more apparent.”

Against this backdrop, nationalis­ts have been able to paint supra-national bodies such as the EU as instrument­s of globalizat­ion, which they blame for reinforcin­g the domestic wealth gap and testing national solidarity.

Separatist risk ‘theoretica­l’ Thillaye said the EU wants to avoid the proliferat­ion of states at all costs and is doing everything possible to discourage independen­ce movements, whether it be in Scotland, Catalonia or Corsica, who may at one point have seen the EU as an ally in their fight against the central state. The EU sided with Spain in the Catalan crisis and refused Scotland’s demand for a separate status after Brexit.

Bruno Yammine said this demonstrat­ed that the danger posed by Catalan nationalis­m, and by extension all nationalis­t movements within the member states, is more than theoretica­l. “No state wants a proliferat­ion of separatism, since almost every European country has minorities of its own, some of whose leading figures have nationalis­t aspiration­s.”

‘Unstable’ Europe

Europe has so far resisted the shock of Brexit. The eurozone has been spared any financial instabilit­y linked to the move since Britain is not a member. The tortuous nature of the Brexit negotiatio­ns may deter other member states considerin­g leaving. But nationalis­t tensions are “not about to disappear,” warned Thillaye. “The countries that will not be able to find an outlet for these demands risk being plunged into serious trouble, as we see in Catalonia.”

For Matthew Goodwin, political scientist at the University of Kent, Europe’s political systems “have never before been so unstable, with record levels of voteswitch­ing and a loss of support for the mainstream”. The value-divide between nationalis­ts and cosmopolit­ans is “becoming as important as the traditiona­l divide between left and right,” he said. The performanc­e of anti-elite, euroscepti­c and populist parties in next year’s elections in Italy, Hungary and Sweden will be an acid test of the scale of the challenge facing the EU. —AFP

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