REPORT
Europe’s Far-Right Seeks to Unite
Can European far-right parties overcome their
differences and boost their clout in Brussels?
By Michele
Barbero
APRIL 23,
2021, 2:09 PM
https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/04/23/europe-far-right-division-european-parliament-poland-hungary/
In much of
Europe, the far-right is thriving. Hard-line anti-immigrant parties rule Poland
and Hungary. In Italy, Matteo Salvini’s League tops the polls and wields
significant power after entering a national unity government. In France,
National Rally leader Marine Le Pen is President Emmanuel Macron’s most
fearsome rival, while Spain’s Vox has steadily bled support from the mainstream
conservatives since its creation in 2013. But Europe’s far-right is finding it
a lot harder to translate the power it has at home into influence across
Europe, even though hard-line nationalists occupy more seats in the European
Parliament than ever before.
Now, some
of the continent’s most prominent right-wing parties—Italy’s League, Poland’s
Law and Justice, and Hungary’s Fidesz—are seeking to build a new alliance to
boost their clout at the European Union level. This month, League leader
Salvini, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, and Hungarian Prime Minister
Viktor Orban held a high-level meeting in Budapest, Hungary, with more talks
expected as early as May.
The three
parties, said Marco Zanni, a League member of the European Parliament, are
hammering out a political platform that includes protecting Europe’s roots
against “soulless multiculturalism,” stemming immigration, and defending the
traditional family. He says they are working to improve coordination when votes
on these issues are held in Brussels.
Creating a
common front would translate into more funding and resources, and boost the
hard right’s prominence and ability to influence policy on the European stage.
The immediate catalyst for the new grouping might have been Fidesz’s exit, in
March, from the biggest bloc in the European Parliament, the center-right
European People’s Party (EPP), which brings together mainstream conservative
parties such as Germany’s Christian Democratic Union and Spain’s People’s
Party.
In the
current European Parliament, the far-right is divided into two relatively small
groups. Identity and Democracy includes the League, as well as France’s
National Rally and a smaller delegation from Alternative for Germany (AfD). The
other hard-right bloc is European Conservatives and Reformists, dominated by
Poland’s Law and Justice Party. While traditionally more mainstream—it used to
host Britain’s Conservative MEPs—this group is also to the right of the EPP and
includes such immigration hard-liners as Brothers of Italy and Spain’s Vox.
If the
far-right parties were combined, including Fidesz, they’d be the second-biggest
group in the European Parliament.
If they
were combined, including Fidesz, they’d be the second-biggest group in the
European Parliament—just behind the EPP but ahead of the social democrats.
The purpose
of the new axis is “to reunite and refresh the European Christian Democratic
right,” said Katalin Novak, vice president of Fidesz and a minister in Orban’s
government. “We need a renaissance in order to best represent the national
interests and to serve a competitive Europe while preserving our core values.
In recent years the EPP has moved significantly toward the left. On some
crucial issues, it is now difficult to distinguish between the EPP’s positions
and those held by European socialist parties. This leaves millions of European
citizens without a real representation at European level.”
For parties
that cut their teeth with nationalist platforms and slogans—often including
frontal attacks on Brussels and the EU—international cooperation might seem
strange. But ever since the 2014 European elections and the subsequent creation
of the Europe of Nations and Freedom group—a Le Pen-led assembly of far-right
European parties in the European Parliament that later became Identity and
Democracy—the continent’s far-right parties have shown a growing appetite for
international alliances, said Duncan McDonnell, a professor of politics at
Griffith University and co-author of a book on the radical right in the
European Parliament.
Indeed, the
Budapest talks were hardly the first initiative of this kind. The AfD in 2017
hosted a convention attended by, among others, Le Pen, Salvini, and Dutch
right-wing firebrand Geert Wilders. In the months leading up to the 2019
European vote, Salvini met with Orban, traveled to Poland, and organized a
rally in front of Milan’s Duomo alongside 11 other nationalist leaders.
And it’s
not just a European phenomenon. Salvini has touted his warm relations with
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro. In 2019, India’s nationalist Prime Minister
Narendra Modi invited a group of largely far-right MEPs to visit Kashmir, after
he’d revoked the region’s autonomy. Former U.S. President Donald Trump hosted
pro-Brexit U.K. politician Nigel Farage at his rallies—and famously bonded with
Polish leaders in his visit to the country—while his ex-aide Steve Bannon has
had frequent contacts with Europe’s sovereignists, supporting their efforts to
unite.
Reasons for
Europe’s far-right to band together are easy to find. Orban and Morawiecki are
clashing with Brussels over their democratic backsliding at home—that’s what
put an end to Fidesz’s membership of the EPP. For Salvini, who is playing a
delicate game in a large coalition with mainstream parties back in Italy,
teaming up with Central Europe’s hard-right rulers offers the opportunity to
further strengthen his credentials as prime ministerial material, while also
remaining faithful to his ideological roots.
Uniting the
far-right camp, however, is easier said than done. The deepest rift concerns
the relationship with Russia.
Poland’s
Law and Justice is staunchly anti-Russian and has reaffirmed its ties to the
West and the United States especially. In contrast, the League, National Rally,
and AfD have all opposed EU sanctions on Moscow, with representatives of the
three parties visiting Russian-annexed Crimea on multiple occasions. AfD
delegations have repeatedly met with top Russian officials in recent months,
and Le Pen even held face-to-face talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin
in early 2017, in what many viewed as a ringing endorsement by the Kremlin in
the thick of the French presidential campaign.
The deepest
rift concerns the relationship with Russia.
Relations
with Moscow are the main sticking point in the otherwise natural axis between
Hungarian and Polish right-wingers. In a poll carried out in late 2020, 22
percent of Fidesz supporters viewed Russia as the “most important country to
have a good relationship with,” against just 4 percent of Law and Justice
sympathizers, a whopping 69 percent of whom cited the United States instead.
“Relations
with Russia differ depending on the historical, cultural backgrounds, and economic
and security interests. We respect our allies’ interests and represent ours,
just like any other country. I do not see this issue being a major obstacle to
a new alliance,” said Novak, the Fidesz minister.
Another
potential obstacle is between parties that have governed and those that have
only shouted from the cheap seats.
To Law and
Justice or Fidesz, which, despite a populist bent, have run their countries for
years, leaders like Le Pen, who never has, can still appear toxic. It’s true
that Le Pen has sought to rebrand her party by shedding overtly racist and
anti-Semitic language of the old days. But “she is still seen as an eternal
outcast, somebody who never played a government role,” said Pawel Zerka, of the
European Council on Foreign Relations.
And that
means a different approach to Brussels. The National Rally, for example,
“really lacks some strategy and EU policy expertise, whereas with Orban,
Salvini, or Poland it’s different—they seem to have a much stronger idea of
what they want at European level,” said Sophie Pornschlegel, a senior analyst
at the European Policy Centre in Brussels. Some maverick parties also remain
attached to a kind of hard-line Euroskepticism that others, including the
National Rally and the League, have sought to tone down in recent years: The
AfD’s manifesto for the upcoming federal elections in Germany includes a call
to leave the EU.
But that
gap may be narrowing. The League, when it was under the leadership of founder
Umberto Bossi, wanted nothing to do with the National Front (as the National
Rally used to be called); cooperation only improved over the last decade, after
Salvini took over the reins of the party.
“A few
years ago it was difficult to even talk” with the French far-right, said Polish
Law and Justice MEP Witold Waszczykowski. “Now we are still in a wait-and-see
mode, but of course we are open for discussion.”
The caution
is mutual, though. Gilbert Collard, a National Rally MEP, believes it’s too
early to express any views on the Budapest initiative, whose details remain
blurry. “If a solution can be found to unite everyone, we will definitely be on
board, but we are not there yet,” he said.
And then
there are personal ambitions. Jean-Marie Le Pen, the founder of what became the
National Rally, was one of the first proponents of a pan-European nationalist
front. Now, his daughter might be reluctant to join a project spearheaded by
Salvini, who in the last couple of years has boosted the League’s European
representation from almost nothing to potential kingmakers.
“Salvini
started as Marine Le Pen’s delfino at the European level, but now he may be the
master,” McDonnell said.
Given all
their differences, the chances of the far-right forming a coherent bloc anytime
soon are slim, Pornschlegel said.
But that
doesn’t mean they’re going to stop trying. The recent summit, the upcoming
meetings, and the spate of cross-border contacts speak to the far-right’s
attempts to build its own popular front in Europe.
“They may
be nationalist,” McDonnell said, “but they are also internationalist in the
alliances that they form.”
Michele Barbero
is an Italian journalist based in Paris, where he covers French and
international news for various news organizations in Italy and abroad.

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