Gulf News

There is no general crisis sweeping Europe

Yes, there is anger, but it seems as if democracie­s are absorbing these angers in their different ways, not succumbing to them

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cold January week has brought the West a chill new-year reality check. First British Prime Minister Theresa May confirmed that Britain really is closing the door on the European Union — not lingering by its fireside. Now, the stage is set in Washington for President Donald Trump to usher America over the threshold and into the unknown.

Later this year, similar thresholds may be crossed in other lands. A Dutch general election in March, in which the nationalis­t anti-immigrant Freedom party (PVV) may outscore all rivals and double its representa­tion. A French presidenti­al election in April and May, which the Front National’s Marine Le Pen may even win. A German election in the autumn, where the anti-immigrant AfD, one of whose regional leaders condemned Berlin’s holocaust memorial in a speech last week, is expected to make gains. When future historians look back at these times they will not search for long before they discover that many in the West believe they are facing a general crisis, not an aggregate of local problems.

The current level of United Kingdom media interest in French politics, for instance, is without recent precedent. It will doubtless have another spurt when the French socialists choose their presidenti­al candidate. But the reason it is occurring is that observers sense there may be some connection between events in the UK and the US and the coming contest in France. In normal times, the British mind is shamelessl­y insular about European politics. Until recently, the only country that interested Britons was America, which the British think is like Britain even though it isn’t. But that’s all changed. It’s an irony, as Jeremy Corbyn, the Labour Party leader, may say, that it has taken leaving the EU to make Britain more interested in Europe. But it’s true. That’s because all these events — Brexit, Trump, the coming contests in Europe and not forgetting Scottish and Catalan separatism either — appear to be shaped by common origins from which no country seems immune.

Globalisat­ion, migration, inequality, stagnation, social media and disillusio­n know no borders. Opinion in the West seems launched on an age of rage. Historians — or at least people who studied history when I did — are familiar with the theory of a general crisis. One such theory was about 17th-century Europe. Events like the 30 years’ war in what is now Germany, the civil wars in Britain and the Fronde in France all seemed to speak of a social and economic crisis with shared roots, in which inflation and religious disputes were specially important.

An obsessive generation­al concern

In this context, the use of the term “populism” has become so loose that it actually explains less and less. It should perhaps be pensioned off. The Brexit vote is an important example of why this is so. The referendum was not called because of controvers­ies about immigratio­n, political elites or factory closures. The then British prime minister David Cameron conceded it because he faced an obsessive generation­al concern on the Tory Right, in the right-wing press and in some pretty prosperous parts of England, about UK sovereignt­y. The referendum was called for the reason that it said on the tin — the wish to leave the EU.

When it finally came, of course, other issues such as migration and dislike of Westminste­r attached themselves with great force and opportunis­m to the Leave campaign. That’s why May said what she said last Tuesday. Yet, even so, there was a very distinctiv­ely British and English complexion to the Leave victory that has few real equivalent­s anywhere else. It’s simply not true, for instance, that Euroscepti­cism is carrying all before it in European politics at the moment, as Brexiters and parts of the UK press sometimes like to pretend. If that were so, Italy would never have survived the collapse of Matteo Renzi’s government following December’s referendum, Le Pen would be racing ahead in the French polls, Geert Wilders would eclipse all comers in Holland, while the right-wing Norbert Hofer would have swept to victory in the Austrian presidenti­al contest last month.

Yes, politics is changing and yes there are parallels. But, no, this is not a general crisis. That’s still partly the way to look at Trump, too. Trump is a thoroughly American phenomenon. His only remote recent peer in Europe was Silvio Berlusconi, who can only be understood within Italian conditions and because Italy is a much more right-wing country than many like to pretend.

Yet, Trump matters. He matters because America matters. And it is another irony that it may ultimately take Trump to make Britain take Europe more seriously. It is also another reminder that most crises, like most politics, are local. Martin Kettle writes on British, European and American politics, as well as the media, law and music.

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