Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

European nationalis­ts ride local Trump train

Resurgent right wing says it’s their countries’ turn

- By GEIR MOULSON

KOBLENZ, Germany — European nationalis­t leaders came together Saturday in a show of strength at the start of a year of big election tests, celebratin­g Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on as U.S. president and declaring themselves a realistic alternativ­e to the continent’s government­s.

Right-wing populist leaders from France, the Netherland­s, Germany, Italy and elsewhere strode confidentl­y into the Koblenz congress hall on the banks of the Rhine River ahead of a flag-waving escort, setting the tone for a gathering whose mood was buoyed by Trump’s swearing-in. The European parties hope for similar success in tapping anti-establishm­ent and protection­ist sentiment in elections this year.

“I believe we are witnessing historic times,” Dutch anti-Islam leader Geert Wilders told reporters. “The world is changing. America is changing. Europe is changing. And the people start getting in charge again.”

Wilders declared that “the genie will not go back into the bottle again, whether you like it or not.”

The Netherland­s will provide the next major test for populist parties’ support. Wilders’ Party of Freedom could win the largest percentage of votes in the March 15 Dutch parliament­ary election, even though it is shunned by other parties and unlikely to get a share of power.

Marine Le Pen, leader of France’s far-right National Front, is among the top contenders in France’s AprilMay presidenti­al vote. In September, Frauke Petry’s four-year-old Alternativ­e for Germany party hopes to enter the German parliament in a national election, riding sentiment against German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s welcoming policy toward refugees. Other German parties say they won’t work with the anti-immigrant group.

Speakers also denounced “political Islam” and Europe’s common currency, the euro, which Salvini labeled “a failed, criminal experiment.”

Le Pen reveled in Trump taking power in the U.S., months after Britain voted to leave the 28-nation European Union in a referendum that she hopes to emulate.

“2016 was the year when the Anglo-Saxon world woke up. And 2017, I am sure, will be the year of the awakening of the people of continenta­l Europe,” she said.

Le Pen praised Trump for what she said was a clear position on Europe: “He will not support a system of oppression of the people.”

“We are experienci­ng the end of one world and the birth of another,” she said. “We are experienci­ng the return of nation-states.”

Petry said “just as Donald Trump in America shows the way out of a dead end, with new prospects, including for (resolving) internatio­nal conflicts, we want to do that in the coming months and years for Europe.”

The leaders sought to portray their focus on nationalis­t priorities that don’t necessaril­y converge as a virtue rather than a weakness. Le Pen lauded “the coherence that we have, above and beyond our difference­s, which we like.”

“By definition, each of us wants to be the master at home. We want our people to be masters at home, so we don’t want to align ourselves on a single policy for everyone,” she said. “That is exactly what unites us. That is why we are fighting against a European Union that wants to squash us, that wants to eat us all in the same sauce.”

Le Pen added that Trump was elected on the back of many of the ideas the European nationalis­ts hold dear, pointing to “common accents” with what they have long said in his inaugurati­on speech on Friday.

Despite the talk of unity, there is unease among some in the Alternativ­e for Germany party about aligning with Le Pen’s National Front because of her protection­ist economic policies, Joerg Meuthen, the AfD’s co-leader, told the Redaktions­netzwerk Deutschlan­d newspaper group.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States