The Columbus Dispatch

Le Pen: Right takes step to build ‘big European force’

- Vanessa Gera

WARSAW, Poland – European rightwing populist leaders declared Saturday they will cooperate more closely at the European Union’s parliament in order to defend the sovereignt­y of their bloc’s 27 member nations.

A statement at the end of the meeting fell short of a declaratio­n to create a new alliance at the European Parliament, an idea that some of the party leaders have sought but that has so far not materializ­ed.

Still, French far-right party leader Marine Le Pen said the meeting was “a key step” toward closer cooperatio­n. It brought together party leaders from more than a dozen nations united in conservati­ve values, nationalis­m and a sense that the EU is taking powers for itself never given to it in the union’s treaties.

“It’s a step forward that is very welcome and allows me to be very optimistic about the future,” Le Pen said.

The party leaders agreed to meet at least every two months at the European Parliament, while another meeting is planned in Spain in two months “to continue to move forward on strengthen­ing and creating that big European force,” Le Pen said.

Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the leader of Poland’s nationalis­t ruling party, hosted the meeting, which was also attended by Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and the leader of Spain’s far-right Vox party, Santiago Abascal.

The event Saturday follows a joint declaratio­n by 16 right-wing parties in July and a visit by Le Pen to Budapest, Hungary, in October.

The meeting was also a show of solidarity for the Polish and Hungarian government­s from like-minded politician­s.

The government­s of the two central European nations remain locked in a bitter standoff with the European Commission, the EU’S executive arm, which is withholdin­g funds to both countries over democratic backslidin­g. Warsaw and Budapest argue that

the commission is taking a step that never was laid out in any EU treaties.

The statement Saturday said the populists need a model of cooperatio­n to “put a stop to the disturbing idea of creating a Europe governed by a self-appointed elite.”

“We reject the arbitrary applicatio­n of union law, bending or even violating the treaties. Only the sovereign institutio­ns of the states have full democratic legitimacy,” it added.

Wojciech Przybylski, editor in chief of Visegrad Insight, a policy journal focused on Central Europe, said there is a paradox in a “transnatio­nal meeting of nationalis­t parties.” He thinks the event was organized so the party leaders can show their voters “they are not alone.”

Both the Hungarian and Polish ruling parties, he noted, are “in deep trouble,” with Orban’s Fidesz party forced to leave the main group of conservati­ves at the European Parliament and Poland’s governing populists seeing a drop in popularity at home.

“This is essentiall­y a PR stunt,” Przybylski said.

The Poles’ welcome of Le Pen marks a recent change of heart for Poland’s governing conservati­ves, who had long refused to cooperate with the French presidenti­al candidate due to her warm relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

 ?? AP ?? The French far-right party leader Marine Le Pen attends a news conference with reporters in Warsaw, Poland, on Saturday.
AP The French far-right party leader Marine Le Pen attends a news conference with reporters in Warsaw, Poland, on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States