Imperial Valley Press

Tech could unite Europe’s populists ahead of EU vote in May

- B8

PARIS (AP) — The web platform was named for a revered French populist philosophe­r and created by an Italian internet entreprene­ur to transform common grievances into proposals and activists into political candidates.

When Italy’s deputy prime minister offered the populist 5-Star Movement’s Rousseau platform to France’s yellow vest protesters, he took a step too far for French President Emmanuel Macron. The French leader recalled France’s ambassador to Italy for a week in the sharpest diplomatic dispute between the two allies since World War II.

The sharing of the Rousseau technology marks the most brazen attempt to date to internatio­nalize Europe’s populist movements. It is a harbinger of the upcoming European Parliament elections in May, in which populist euroskepti­cs could win an unpreceden­ted one-third of the seats, under current projection­s . This could well cause a collapse of the mainstream group, which up to now has held the largest voting bloc in Parliament.

However, the EU elections will also be a test of how far populist parties, which tend to be virulently nationalis­tic, can unite over borders and across the political spectrum. In Italy alone, the government’s two populist ruling parties, the 5-Star Movement and the League, compete at least as much as they cooperate.

“These parties are against Europe, but they are using Europe and the pan-European space to create a political debate,” said Alberto Alemanno, an Italian analyst.

At their most basic level, populists on both the right and the left pit the common people against the elite, the entrenched political class.

Technology has helped them advance . The 5-Star Movement used the Rousseau portal to let activists click their way to choosing candidates and policies, much as Spain’s upstart Podemos party used Reddit to energize online debate beginning five years ago and still uses online referendum­s. France’s populist yellow vest protesters have yet to come up with a common online space, with proliferat­ing Facebook groups and YouTube channels that have a varied outpouring of demands.

If ideology and organizati­on can trump geography, populist parties in Europe could form a bloc capable of weakening or even paralyzing the EU legislatur­e, if projection­s released this week by the parliament hold.

“We must reject the financiers who see themselves as demigods. Reject the Brussels bureaucrat­s representi­ng their interests and reject the fake civil society activists,” Hungarian President Viktor Orban said in his state of the nation address earlier this month.

On Friday, 5-Star leader Luigi Di Maio announced a new grouping of populist movements from across Europe, bringing together a far-right Polish party led by a former rock musician and a free-market Finnish party founded by a businessma­n-turned-reality TV star. Notably absent were nationalis­ts, leaving open the question of how much sway the new alliance could have without expanding further.

Getting the far-left France Unbowed to vote in tandem with populist Orban’s Fidesz party seems a big hurdle. Italy’s government, split between the two populist groups, is largely an unhappy marriage of convenienc­e, with the 5-Star Movement and the League diverging at least as much as they agree.

But among the yellow vests, known in French as the “gilets jaunes,” ultra-right and ultra-left have marched together in hopes of bringing down the government.

“Here is the beauty of it: They are both the left and the right. It is a populist thing,” political strategist Steve Bannon told France’s l’Express magazine in an interview published just after Macron recalled the ambassador.

Bannon has created a foundation in Brussels to strike at the heart of the European Union. Europe’s populists on the right — France’s Marine Le Pen, Hungary’s Orban, Italy’s Matteo Salvini — haven’t exactly embraced him, but nor have they pushed away the American who many credit with propelling Donald Trump into the White House. Bannon been largely ignored by the populist farleft.

The European Parliament elections are actually a four-day series of national elections held May 23-26 across Europe that decide the makeup of the legislatur­e. Members make Europe-wide law, decide internatio­nal agreements, and — crucially — can censure EU countries for violating core values such as an independen­t judiciary and upholding the rights of minorities and migrants.

But even if they can unite on the issues that brought them to power, the anti-EU populists may run into trouble with voters.

 ??  ?? In this 2018 file photo, a demonstrat­or throws debris at a burning barricade while protesting with others against the rising of the fuel taxes on the famed Champs Elysees avenue, in Paris. AP Photo/KAmIl ZIhnIoglu
In this 2018 file photo, a demonstrat­or throws debris at a burning barricade while protesting with others against the rising of the fuel taxes on the famed Champs Elysees avenue, in Paris. AP Photo/KAmIl ZIhnIoglu

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