Daily Record

New party won’t change the centre of attention

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IN THE spring of 1990, as the walls came tumbling down, I travelled with two friends on an 2000-mile round car trip to the newly liberated countries of central Europe.

We had our passports stamped at Berlin’s Checkpoint Charlie, as East Germany held its first free elections since 1932.

We drank in Prague beerhouses and stayed in art deco splendour as Czechoslov­akia went to the polls, and we swam in the steam baths of Budapest as old men played chess after voting. We made it there and back in a 950cc Ford Fiesta with a battery tape recorder blasting out Neil Young’s Rockin’ in the Free World.

Not everyone’s idea of an Easter break but after the Soviet Union collapsed, the prospect of a liberated, united Europe drew everyone east.

We met Labour’s Brian Wilson in Berlin, bumped into Lib Dem veteran Russell Johnston in Budapest’s Interconti­nental hotel. For once, Russell wasn’t in Brussels.

Budapest, when we arrived in our sewing machine car, was the most westernise­d capital of them all.

The legacy of the 1956 uprising, the education system and liberalise­d economy gave it a real head start on other eastern neighbours.

Last weekend, after the re-election of right-wing populist Victor Orban as Hungary’s PM, I messaged a friend in Budapest, a descendant of one of the small pocket of Hungarian Jews who survived the Nazis.

In good news, she is expecting a baby. But as for her country, she texted back: “Very sad.” It is likely she’ll move her life to Paris.

The pendulum swing from communism to neo-nationalis­m that has barbed wire fences going back up on Hungary’s border is tragic. Orban was re-elected on a single issue – immigratio­n, with

anti-Semitic and anti-Islam overtones. He used the same image of queuing migrants as UKIP played in the last days of the Brexit referendum. (I feel sorry for Scots photograph­er Jeff Mitchell, whose image of refugees in Slovenia has been misappropr­iated).

Results like Orban’s – he controls two thirds of parliament­ary seats – show voters aren’t going to back to the “sensible centre” any time soon.

Not under the old rules anyway. Politics is in the grip of populists.

I reckon this is why talk of a new centrist party in the UK is a dead loss.

Despairing of Jeremy Corbyn, some in the centre left are sniffing around for a new political vehicle.

The money is there but the backing isn’t because splitting the Labour vote simply allows the Conservati­ves to remain in government and sustain the SNP at Westminste­r.

And what would a centrist party have to say to voters driven to tribal extremes?

When radicals gain ground, even people with reasonable views are driven into the bunkers. The lesson of the post-crash world is that populism is an easier sell than reason.

The only European exception is president Macron, who I’m beginning to think is not the new radical centre but a throwback to market-driven Blairism which France skipped out on for years.

Soon enough, populists move on to scapegoats or sell mirages too ludicrous to accept. Just watch Brexit unfold.

The mainstream challenge is to respond with optimism about what can be achieved, to somehow find a voice that squares identity politics with a bigger picture, that addresses fears of migrants and resists the downsides of globalisat­ion.

With voters not hankering for the middle ground, it is a big ask.

Another liberalisi­ng European spring is down a rocky road.

Democracy needs more than an underpower­ed hatchback for the journey.

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 ??  ?? OLD BORDER Cars wait at Checkpoint Charlie. Pic: Getty Images
OLD BORDER Cars wait at Checkpoint Charlie. Pic: Getty Images

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