The National - News

The politics of distrust and divisivene­ss are on the rise throughout Europe

- COLIN RANDALL Colin Randall is a former executive editor of The National, and writes on the UK and France

Amid the profound uncertaint­y, hopes and fears that dominate thoughts as Europe enters 2024, some prediction­s can be made with confidence and have the power to impose radical change on the continent and its way of life.

Beyond reasonable doubt, the terrible suffering of Gaza, itself following the horrendous attack of October 7, will continue to cause not only deep shock but deep division across Europe. While there remains great sympathy for Israelis killed, maimed or bereaved by Hamas, millions are also appalled at a military response that seems as indiscrimi­nate and frankly inhuman as terrorist atrocities. These divisions are sure to assume increasing prominence.

In another inevitable feature of the coming year, some of the elections taking place within the 27-nation EU, and in several individual countries, may well produce outcomes uncomforta­ble for liberal, anti-extremist sensibilit­ies.

Just as a mighty chunk of the US electorate appears ready to overlook Donald Trump’s fairly obvious failings and restore him to the White House in the November presidenti­al race, a significan­t number of Europeans are ignoring convention­al wisdom and embracing politician­s of the far right when the rhetoric offers answers – however simplistic – to their worries about immigratio­n, crime and the cost of living.

If these are areas in which it is possible to envisage with relative ease what will actually happen, the new year would be unusual if it did not also bring plenty of surprise, predominan­tly unwelcome.

Who, for example, can truly tell how the Ukraine war, its place in the internatio­nal news agenda diminished by harrowing coverage of death and destructio­n in Gaza, will develop and how strongly Europe’s patchily united front against Russia’s aggression will hold? Between them, Hamas and the Israeli military have succeeded in easing pressure on Russia, not that western condemnati­on seems to trouble it greatly in any case.

There is much apprehensi­on in the Baltics and former Eastern Europe about what Moscow might feel emboldened to do next if Ukraine’s two-year resistance crumbles.

From early in the new year, Europe’s coming series of elections will begin to put flesh on the bones of political prediction. Finland, where farright advances have already put the Finns Party in a coalition government, goes first, with presidenti­al elections starting on January 28.

This will be followed by Portuguese legislativ­e polling in March in an election called after corruption allegation­s forced the socialist prime minister Antonio Costa to resign in November. He continues to serve as caretaker premier pending the election, which could show disturbing levels of support for the far-right Chega (Enough!) party led by Andre Ventura, a former football commentato­r who is whipping up hatred of foreigners, Muslims, Roma and sexual minorities.

Recent polls put Chega just 10 points behind the neckand-neck convention­al right and left parties, leading to speculatio­n that Mr Ventura could have an influentia­l voice in a coalition, despite previous assertions that the centre-right Social Democrats would agree to no such deal.

Britain is also approachin­g a general election, which the beleaguere­d Conservati­ve Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has confirmed will take place this year. The widely expected humiliatio­n of the Tories would throw the party out of power after 14 years of troubled government and increasing unpopulari­ty that repeated changes of prime minister – Mr Sunak is the fifth in that period – have failed to remedy. Every move he makes in the run-up to the election, starting early with hints that inheritanc­e tax will be abolished, will be portrayed by opponents as a desperate attempt to entice disgruntle­d past supporters back into the fold.

But there is broad acknowledg­ment, even among many Tory MPs, that only serious miscalcula­tions of public mood can now keep Mr Sunak’s Labour opponent Keir Starmer out of 10 Downing Street. More than 50 Conservati­ve MPs have already announced they will not stand, in some cases anxious to avoid the likelihood of crushing defeat.

Mr Starmer’s natural caution occasional­ly makes him appear timid in policy announceme­nts. Formerly a committed European, he has ruled out rejoining the EU’s single market or customs union despite compelling evidence that the country now regrets voting Leave in 2016. So discredite­d is Brexit that it seems beyond belief that voters in other countries would contemplat­e making the same mistake.

Yet Euroscepti­cism is rife among the far-right parties hoping for success in elections to the European parliament in June. If turnout is low, as is common, their likelihood chances will be greater, handing the so-called Identity and Democracy grouping of rightwing European populists a pivotal role as the third-biggest alliance. The trend is EU-wide, with the far right having made significan­t gains in Italy, the Netherland­s, Germany, Sweden and Finland as well as France.

Even a French scandal that has led to Marine Le Pen and National Rally colleagues facing criminal charges for allegedly using EU money to fund their party machine has had little impact among voters drawn to her “let’s give power to the people” slogan.

Her message appeals especially to country dwellers feeling the economic pinch in areas far from Paris and other big cities, and to those inclined to demonise migrants and blame them for assorted social ills. Gone is the assumption that voters can be trusted to form a “republican front” to keep the far right out of power. To the horror of socialists, centrists and some on the moderate right.

Ms Le Pen’s cleansing of her party’s image has been a resounding success.

The far right is also tipped to do well in this year’s Belgian and Austrian elections. And in the Netherland­s, Geert Wilders’s Freedom Party, driven by rampant Islamophob­ia, is the most glaring example outside France of the far right’s surge. His party won the largest number of seats in November’s general election, and he is now searching for partners to join him in forming a coalition. With most mainstream politician­s repelled by a programme that has included a referendum on leaving the EU and threats to ban mosques, Islamic schools and the Quran, he has been forced to promise to moderate his policies to keep alive hopes of becoming prime minister.

Throughout Europe, the politics of distrust and divisivene­ss is in the ascendant.

All these developmen­ts make for a gloomy start to 2024. With glass half full, we can hope that one year from now, the apparently foregone conclusion­s will not have proved so foregone after all. With the same glass half empty, we have cause for concern.

Right-wing parties with anti-immigrant messaging are predicted to do well in this year’s elections

 ?? Reuters ?? A member of the Italian paramilita­ry police gestures towards migrants in Lampedusa in September. Across Europe, migrants are being blamed for social ills on the continent
Reuters A member of the Italian paramilita­ry police gestures towards migrants in Lampedusa in September. Across Europe, migrants are being blamed for social ills on the continent
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