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Despite EU Nobel Prize - radicalism and nationalism on the rise


by Bruno Lété
10 December 2012
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To stop the rise of radicalism and nationalism, elites will have to step up to the plate and give Europe the confident leadership that it so badly needs - says think-tank

When announcing the award for the European Union, the Nobel Peace Prize committee acclaimed the EU above all for its past record. It referred to its role in forging a lasting peace between France and Germany. In coaxing Portugal, Spain and Greece out of dictatorships. In democratising and modernising Central Europe and Turkey, and for bringing stability to the Balkans. However, peace is never an irreversible fact and the prize should serve to inspire elites to continue moving the European project forward. Given the continent's economic woes and the potential for social unrest, peace and stability cannot be taken for granted. In fact, there are many factions in Europe that would like little more than to reverse the integration that the founders of the EU envisioned.

Nationalists, regionalists, radicals, separatists and extremists - of sometimes indeterminate left- and right-wing alliances - rely on populism to appeal to wider audiences. Having exerted considerable efforts in countering an openly racist or hard-edged image, such groups now promote a defiant agenda based on historical symbolism, cultural pride and national interests while blaming their countries' social declines and eroding identities on globalisation, immigration and mainstream politics. They easily tap into existing fears and frustrations, and so within the last decade Europe has seen its radical factions evolve from extremist outcasts to fixtures of town hall politics and national assemblies.

In Hungary, conservative nationalists and right-wing extremists now control nearly 70 per cent of seats in the national assembly. In Greece, Golden Dawn, a neo-fascist group, is represented by 6 per cent of parliamentary representatives. In France, Marine Le Pen of the ultra-nationalist Front National won nearly one-fifth of all votes in the first round of the presidential election. And recent local polls in Belgium saw a radical separatist faction seize a landslide victory with more than one-third of all votes. In Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, the United Kingdom, Finland, Germany, Austria, Denmark, and Sweden - radicalism and populism are also on the rise, putting the future of European cooperation at risk. Speaking recently in Brussels, Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti said that "the backlash against integration" is today Europe's biggest problem. He might just be right.

So far, the traditional mainstream parties have found no answer to the criticism from the fringes. To win back the hearts of their electorates, many leaders have incautiously adopted the rhetoric of radicalism, which further fuels the rise of populist sentiment. Despite Europe's citizens being affected by the worst financial crisis in decades and seeing their social welfare benefits fall victim to austerity measures, mainstream politicians have by and large avoided serious and open debate on these issues. Few politicians are standing up to inspire confidence by articulating a clear vision of Europe's destiny.

The resistance of radical nationalists to integration and European solidarity will further erode the ability of Europe to persevere as a prosperous and peaceful power. Without closer social, fiscal, and financial cooperation, individual European countries will not be able to prosper in a global marketplace. Dutch far-right politician Geert Wilders denounces more financial integration while the disconnect between European markets has pushed his country into economic downturn. Individual member states also need closer economic and foreign policy cooperation, or they will not be able to compete with established and rising titans such as the United States, Russia, China, Brazil, or India. The Front National rejects EU cooperation to advance French foreign policy objectives, but in reality, it has become very difficult — even for a large country such as France — to influence international developments by itself. Radical nationalist efforts to reverse integration — at the state or European level — imply that, in the long run, Europe could be reduced to a smattering of mid-sized or small powers on the international stage. The radicalisation of national interest has the real potential to put regional stability at risk.

Europe can still avoid a doomsday scenario. Although radical politicians have significantly increased their bases of support, in most cases they are yet to attain decision-making authority on matters of national policy. And although radical parties will continue to contest elections, the outcomes of their campaigns will still be influenced by both domestic and global developments. There is only a little time left for this current generation of leaders to prove that more integration will generate more stability and prosperity. European citizens — and the world — are primarily waiting for them to put their house back in order. But no tangible results can be achieved if each EU member state is marching to its own drummer. People turn to radical and populist rhetoric because mainstream political leaders appear paralyzed. To stop the further rise of radicalism, elites will have to step up to the plate and give Europe the confident leadership that it needs.

Bruno Lété is a programme officer at the German Marshall Fund of the United States think-tank, which originally published this paper as part of its Transatlantic Take series: Combating Radicalism in the European Union
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The elites will have to step up to the plate - that's quite a statement. We can only wait in hope that our platonic masters can save us.
An incomprehensible call. I'd be ashamed to write such an article but then I am not paid to be a passionate European.
fran

What a biased article. Your days are numbered. Real progress will begin.
Sun

Nationalism will win. The EU gave itself the Nobel Prize, it hasn't solved anything, Europe needs a council where people can discuss - but they must stick their noses out of other countries' business. Multiculturalism has failed so it's best that immigrants just leave or else more violence will occur. I'd rather see a peaceful resolution.
Chris

I do not know why nationalism is viewed in a bad way, after all, is about our national rights fundamental. It is about our history, our past, our origins and because of nationalism modern states today exist.
michael - Bucharest

@Michael: nationalism is viewed in a bad light because it leads to crazy thinking, group-think, xenophobic and racist tendencies. You have to look no further than back home at the 'New Right' we have got in Romania to see why they are a problem. It is a nationalist movement.
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