The Guardian (USA)

Spain’s election is a key battle in the Europewide struggle against neofascism

- Gordon Brown

If you want to peer into the future of Europe, just look to recent events in Spain in the lead up to its general election on 23 July. A billboard on one of Madrid’s main streets demonising feminism, migration and the LGBTQ+ community – by showing their symbols being thrown violently into a bin – has been the latest shock tactic used by the far-right Vox party in its bid to drag the elections into the culture wars under the pretext of defending the traditiona­l nation state.

The rhetoric escalated when Santiago Abascal, leader of Vox, falsely claimed during an inflammato­ry TV election debate that almost 70% of gang rapes were committed by foreigners. These tactics are not new – during the 2016 Brexit referendum, Nigel Farage’s explosive “breaking point” poster depicted a horde of migrants heading towards Britain. It is no accident that exactly the same photograph was blazoned across Hungary’s election billboards by its prime minister, Viktor Orbán, under the headline “Stop”. Hungary is the European country with the lowest level of citizens born outside the country, but Orbán’s “copy and paste” campaign made the demand for walls to stop nonexisten­t “invaders” the election-winning issue.

Vox’s nationalis­m goes beyond opposing external migration and involves explicitly anti-gay and antifemini­st attacks defining these movements as a threat to the very existence of the nation state. When in coalitions at the local level, the party has closed down any gender equality initiative­s, creating in their place “department­s for families”. In Valencia, Vox has forced a change in the definition of domestic violence, reducing it to no more than an “intrafamil­ial” issue. In the Balearic Islands, the party is removing any formal recognitio­n of the LGBTQ + movement. Additional­ly, its ultranatio­nalist agenda includes stamping out movements for regional autonomy by banning Catalan and Basque secessioni­st parties.

Of course, the focus of the right on culture wars is to divert attention from its neoliberal economic policies, which require privatisat­ion of utilities, the expansion of private health and toprate tax cuts, including the abolition of the current wealth tax in place until 2024. Spain – and its bold prime minister, Pedro Sánchez– are now the frontline in defence of progressiv­e values, fighting rightwing attempts to drown out his economic agenda for better jobs and action on poverty.

While Vox will not win outright, it may well end up dominating Spain’s next government, as the conservati­ve Popular party (PP), which is already aligning with Vox in regional and local government­s pacts, seeks support to build a governing majority. A few weeks

ago, Extremadur­a’s PP leader, Maria Guardiola, vowed she would not deal with a party that, as she said, “denies macho violence, dehumanise­s immigrants, throws the LGBTQ+ flag in the bin”. Then, in a complete volte-face, she announced that her party had no choice but to strike a deal with Vox to enable it to govern.

If the bloc of rightist parties ends up ahead of Sánchez, the near-50-year political taboo against neofascist parties in power will be broken. Vox will have moved from a gang of backstreet demagogues to the Spanish cabinet room, creating a political earthquake that will be felt right across the continent in the year of Spain’s presidency of the European Union.

Its power will embolden far-right parties that have been proliferat­ing across the continent. The far-right German party, AfD, has registered more than 20% national support across the country and also won its first local election outright, moving within sight of the CDU/CSU, which, at only 25%, is being cowed into moving even further rightwards. The Finns party has just taken seven ministries in the recently formed rightwing Finnish government. Austria’s far-right Freedom party looks set to be the governing party after next year’s election, joining Giorgia Meloni’s far-right Fratelli d’Italia, which is already in government in Rome. And who is not to say that the Brexit slogan “Take back control” will not become Marine Le Pen’s path to power, promising an end to street violence and a restoratio­n of order in a divided France?

Europe’s far right parties have been working together regularly since July 2021, when 16 of them signed a declaratio­n against EU integratio­n. This improbable internatio­nal coalition of anti-internatio­nalists, each – ironically – claiming to be running their own unique national campaigns, inciting nativist fears of outsiders, agreed that nationalis­m, tradition and the nuclear family were Europe’s bulwark against cosmopolit­an attempts to destroy nation states and their cultures.

As long as centrists and progressiv­e parties complacent­ly write off today’s dissatisfa­ction with globalisat­ion as a transient blip, these culture warriors will capture the popular desire for change and reverse every inch of recent progress in human rights and internatio­nal cooperatio­n, not least the European-wide green agenda already under assault from the right in Germany, the Netherland­s and the European parliament.

What, as Orbán has admitted, gives permission to the right to fight culture wars is that neoliberal versions of globalisat­ion have failed, denying working people security in a volatile world. Multiple crises, from falling living standards to worsening pollution, must convince us that no return to the normality of a failed status quo is possible.

There is a positive, progressiv­e, Europe-wide social and economic policy agenda revolving around rising living standards, championed by Sánchez, that needs to be advanced with conviction. And we must not forget, as George Orwell wrote in another era, that only “a moral effort” can defeat xenophobic nationalis­m. The alternativ­e cannot be countered. “Fixing on homosexual­s, blaming women for gender-based violence, suggesting a ban on political parties,” as Pedro Sánchezhas said from the heat of the battle: “All that has a name that doesn’t need to be spelled out.”

Gordon Brown is the UN envoy for global education, and was UK prime minister from 2007 to 2010

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 ?? Santos Moura/Reuters ?? A Vox-sponsored billboard in Madrid on 20 May 2023 shows symbols of feminism, LGBTQ+ rights and Catalan independen­ce being thrown in the bin. Photograph: Violeta
Santos Moura/Reuters A Vox-sponsored billboard in Madrid on 20 May 2023 shows symbols of feminism, LGBTQ+ rights and Catalan independen­ce being thrown in the bin. Photograph: Violeta
 ?? ?? Illustrati­on: Eleanor Shakespear­e for the Guardian.
Illustrati­on: Eleanor Shakespear­e for the Guardian.

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