Amidst a profound economic and financial crisis, Europe’s leaders must
not ignore the rising popularity of extreme right-wing parties and
radical anti-immigrant movements, and the threat they pose to
multi-culturalism.
“Extremists and populist movements are exploiting people’s fear of
those who are not like us. We can see the consequences in the form of
terrorism and racially motivated violence” – Kjell Magne Bondevik
The EU is slowly approaching the end of the integration process which
started in the aftermath of World War Two. A significant number of
member states are facing a damaging financial crisis, which is
destabilizing and fragmenting the EU as a whole. With Italy, Spain and
even Portugal all facing a fate similar to that of Greece, the future of
the European idea is at stake. As the German Chancellor, Angela Merkel,
pointed out, Europe is threatened with its gravest modern crisis and
the EU’s future is uncertain. There is, however, a greater challenge to
the idea of a democratic, open and multicultural Europe; namely, the
emergence of extremist political parties and movements across the
continent.
When Europe’s leaders decided to establish the European
Community in the fifties, a prime aim was not only to prevent further
war, but to marginalize extremist political forces through mutual
dialogue and institutional integration. Many Western scholars and
policy-makers shared the belief that democratization and integration
would eventually render nationalism obsolete. With a number of
international organizations upholding and protecting human rights and
freedoms, European governments have declared zero tolerance towards
extremist parties and movements. However, the European Council
president, Herman Van Rompuy, recently issued a stark warning
against growing nationalism, populism and anti-democratic forces,
suggesting that the threat to peace in Europe remains a key issue.
Several EU member states have seen growing support for right-wing populist groups. Analysing the European elections in 2009, Waterfield claims
that “as well as picking up two seats in Britain, anti-immigrant,
extremist and previously fringe parties stepped into the political
vacuum with significant gains in the Netherlands, Austria, Hungary,
Finland, Greece and Romania”. Trends show that, amidst the current
economic crisis, far-right extremist parties are exploiting the
anti-immigrant, islamophobic and xenophobic card, and are playing an
increasingly important role in government decision-making. As Goodwin
notes in the ‘New British Fascism: The Rise of the British National Party (BNP) (Extremism and Democracy)’:
“contrary
to assumptions in the 1980s and 1990s that the emergence of PEPs
[populist extremist parties] in Europe could be nothing more than a
flash in the pan, these parties continue to rally large and durable
levels of support. They have joined national coalition governments. They
have surfaced in countries with a tradition of extremist politics, as
well as those that were previously thought immune. They emerged before
the terrorist attacks on 11 September 2001 and the recent financial
crisis.”
Even in Sweden, one of the world’s leading
democracies, a far-right party won parliamentary seats for the first
time in the 2010 elections. The Sweden Democrats (SD) – renowned for
their anti-immigrant and anti-Islam views – received 6% of the vote, or
20 of the 349 seats. In the Netherlands, the two biggest winners in the
2009 European Parliament elections were the two most outspoken parties –
Geert Wilders’ nationalist anti-EU party, and the firmly pro-EU
social-liberal party, D66 (Kievit, 2009). Furthermore, in the June 2010 Dutch elections, Wilders’ party more than doubled its share, becoming the third largest party in the Dutch parliament. Ian Traynor argues that:
“Similar
shifts have already occurred in Austria with the late Joerg Haider,
with the Danish People’s party in Copenhagen, with the Northern League
in Italy or the National Front in France, where the political mainstream
has moved to the right to accommodate the extreme right and co-opt some
of their supporters”.
The European Commissioner for Home
Affairs, Cecilia Malmström, claims that the growing popularity of
xenophobic parties creates a negative environment, but that too few
leaders are prepared to stand-up for diversity and tolerance. Indeed,
several of Europe’s most influential leaders have made statements that
multiculturalism in Europe is an unworthy and impossible project.
Addressing a meeting of young members of her Christian Democratic Union
in October 2010, Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, concluded that, “this [multicultural] approach has failed, utterly failed”. British prime minister, David Cameron, meanwhile, at a security conference in Munich in February 2011, stated that the “doctrine of multiculturalism” has failed
in a Britain that encourages “different cultures to live separate
lives, apart from each other and apart from the mainstream”. Nicolas
Sarkozy, the French president, went as far as to declare that
multiculturalism was dead.
One problem is that many of Europe’s
leaders have failed to identify deficiencies in the integration model
they adopt. Referring to France, Chrisafis points out that:
“Under
the republican model, multiculturalism is seen as taboo. In France,
once a French citizen you leave cultural and ethnic differences at the
border and are theoretically seamlessly assimilated into the republic.
Everyone is equal before a state that is blind to colour, race and
religion. Ethnic minorities do not officially exist as it is illegal to
classify and count people by ethnicity. But the glaring gap between the
theory and the reality of discrimination is becoming a problem in
France.”
Claude Dilain, the Socialist mayor of Clichy, said
the problems of marginalisation in diverse French suburbs had not been
addressed and that more urban rioting could occur at any time. Following
the terrorist attacks in Norway in July 2011, the leader of Germany’s
center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD), Sigmar Gabriel, stated that,
“in a society where anti-Islam and the discrimination of others has
become acceptable again, and in which the middle class applauds the
likes of (controversial author) Thilo Sarrazin, there will naturally be
lunatics on the fringes of society who feel legitimized in taking
stronger action”.
As Lagendijk points out, a large majority of European citizens still do not vote for extremist parties. Mile Lasic, meanwhile, insist that,
“we should ask ourselves whether possible answers are hidden perhaps in
the complex EU’s political, cultural, and economic workshop in the form
of a new political culture regarding the questions about prematurely
proclaimed death of multiculturalism?”. Can indeed the EU provide a
model for coexistence of different cultures, nations and religions?
Should
the EU eventually disintegrates, it will be because of the dynamism and
popularity of extreme rightist political parties and radical
anti-immigrant movements, rather then because of the Eurozone’s
problems. It is, therefore, more important for Europe to manage its
cultural, national and religious pluralism than to focus all its energy
on financial affairs. Whilst the economic crisis will bring negative
material repercussions, the rise of extremist movements across Europe
would only confirm Samuel Huntington’s thesis, outlined in the ‘The Clash of Civilizations’,
that people’s cultural and religious identities will be the primary
source of conflict in the post- Cold War era. Europe’s leaders and
citizens must, therefore, explore new models of integration; otherwise
the idea of multiculturalism as a universal ideal will be seriously
challenged.
No comments:
Post a Comment