Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The far right keeps rising. We should no longer be shocked.

- The Washington Post

Every time a right-wing politician wins an election somewhere in the world, observers in the United States often draw comparison­s with Donald Trump. This is lazy; Mr. Trump is a unique threat to reason and order. But it also speaks to deep fears and deeper confusion: If democracy is good, why does democracy lead, increasing­ly, to the election of extremist parties? And can a party still be considered “extreme” when its views are accepted by such a broad swath of voters?

In the Netherland­s, the Party for Freedom (PVV) claimed victory in last month’s elections with 23.6% of the vote. This comes after a string of farright gains across Western Europe. To speak of the rise of the far right is by now a misnomer. It has been rising for a long time. In Italian elections last year, Giorgia Meloni became the country’s first far-right prime minister in the postwar era. In Sweden, the Swedish Democrats became the largest bloc in the governing coalition there. Both have had to moderate and make compromise­s to govern.

That the PVV is on the further reaches of the far right suggests such an outcome is less likely in the Netherland­s. For most of its history, it has been primarily a single-issue party with opposition to Islam and immigratio­n as its message, its leader Geert Wilders having declared that “Islam is the biggest problem in the Netherland­s.”

If it can happen in the Netherland­s, it can happen anywhere. And it likely will. It is time to stop being shocked. Every couple years, most recently during the COVID pandemic, some commentato­rs insist that the far right’s moment has passed. In times of crisis, the argument goes, voters flock back to the boredom of reliabilit­y and competence. But the far right’s victories — and its reliable showing toward the top of the polls in countries as varied as France, Austria, Finland and Germany — suggest that the “far right” label is no longer accurate. Increasing­ly mainstream and even popular, these parties now find themselves closer to the center. Or, to put it differentl­y, the “center” — on charged topics such as immigratio­n — has veered to the right.

Reviving moribund centrist parties is a long-term challenge. In the short run, the best answer would be to give the PVV a chance to enter a coalition with other parties and get a taste of power for the first time. If this is what voters want, they deserve to have it. They can judge the results accordingl­y. In Europe’s fragmented parliament­ary systems, cobbling together a governing coalition is challengin­g at best. Compromise is required. Purity is impossible. Once formed, coalitions are fragile. Voters should be careful what they wish for, but so too should the far-right parties that find themselves closer to power than ever. They could soon have to choose between staying true to their upstart extremism and governing in the real world.

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