‘Anti-European’ populists on track for big gains
in EU elections, says report
France, Poland and Austria among nine countries where
radical rightwing parties predicted to finish first
Jon Henley Europe
correspondent
@jonhenley
Wed 24 Jan 2024 05.00 GMT
Populist
“anti-European” parties are heading for big gains in June’s European elections
that could shift the parliament’s balance sharply to the right and jeopardise
key pillars of the EU’s agenda including climate action, polling suggests.
Polling in
all 27 EU member states, combined with modelling of how national parties
performed in past European parliament elections, shows radical right parties
are on course to finish first in nine countries including Austria, France and
Poland.
Projected
second- or third-place finishes in another nine countries, including Germany,
Spain, Portugal and Sweden, could for the first time produce a majority
rightwing coalition in the parliament of Christian Democrats, conservatives and
radical right MEPs.
The
analysis should “serve as a wake-up call for European policymakers about what
is at stake” in the election, said the political scientists Simon Hix and Kevin
Cunningham, who co-authored the report for the European Council on Foreign
Relations (ECFR).
The
researchers said the implications of the vote were far-reaching, arguing the
next European parliament could block laws on Europe’s green deal and take a
harder line on other areas of EU sovereignty including migration, enlargement
and support for Ukraine.
Domestic
debates could also be affected, they said, bolstering the “growing axis of
governments trying to limit the EU’s influence from within”: Hungary, Italy,
Slovakia, Sweden and, if Geert Wilders’ PVV heads its new government, the
Netherlands.
The
possible return of Donald Trump in the US and a right-leaning, inward-focused
coalition in the European parliament could result in a rejection of “strategic
interdependence and … international partnerships in defence of European
interests and values”, they warned.
The
projections showed the mainstream political groups in the parliament – the
centre-right European People’s party (EPP), centre-left Socialists and
Democrats (S&D), the centrist Renew Europe (RE) and Greens (G/EFA) all
losing MEPs.
The left
and populist right, including the European Conservatives and Reformists Group
(ECR) and far-right Identity and Democracy (ID), are set to emerge as the main
victors, with a real possibility of entering a majority coalition for the first
time.
Although
the EPP looks likely to remain the largest group, retain its agenda-setting
power and determine the choice of the next Commission president, the report
argues that populists, particularly from the radical right, will have a greater
say than ever before.
Their
voices willcarry most weight in several founding-member states, the polling
suggests, with Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy forecast to boost its MEP
tally to 27 and Marine Le Pen’s National Rally on track to win a record 25
seats.
In Austria,
the radical right Freedom party (FPÖ) iswas projected to double its total of
MEPs to six, while in Germany the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD)
llooks likely to nearly double its representation in the 705-seat parliament to
19.
Populist
eurosceptic parties are likely to come first in Austria, Belgium, the Czech
Republic, France, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland and Slovakia, and
second or third in Bulgaria, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Portugal,
Romania, Spain and Sweden.
As a
result, the far-right ID group is projected to gain up to 40 more seats, for a
total of 98, potentially making it the third political force and opening up the
possibility of a “populist right” coalition (EPP, ECR, and ID) with 49% of MEPs
in the new parliament, the report says.
The polling
and modelling suggestsed the current “centre-left” coalition (S&D, G/EFA
and Left) will see its MEP tally fall to 33% from 36% of the total, with the
main “centre-right” coalition (EPP, RE and ECR) slipping to 48% from 49%.
The
report’s authors noted that the role of Hungary’s Fidesz party may be critical:
currently non-attached, the party of the prime minister, Viktor Orbán, is
tipped to win 14 seats and could – by joining the national-conservative ECR –
make it the third largest group.
If it does
so, ECR and ID combined would have almost 25% of MEPs in the chamber, more than
EPP and S&D. The existing “super coalition” of mainstream parties (EPP,
S&D and RE), meanwhile, are projected to fall from 60% of MEPs to 54%.
The
report’s authors said the biggest implications of parliament’s altered geometry
would be in environmental policy, where S&D, RE and the Left have ensured
progress. That could soon be thwarted by an “anti-climate policy action”
coalition, they said.
Similarly,
the centrist and centre-left alliance (RE, S&D, G/EFA, Left, parts of EPP)
that pushed through rule of law measures, including withholding budget
payments, against Hungary and Poland, may find itself no longer, the report
suggested.
The authors
called on policymakers to examine the trends that are driving current voting
patterns in Europe and to develop clear narratives that address the necessity
of a global Europe in an increasingly fraught and dangerous geopolitical
climate.
“June’s
elections, for those who want to see a more global Europe, should be about
safeguarding and enhancing the position of the EU,” said Hix, a comparative
politics specialist at the European University Institute in Florence.
“Campaigns
should give citizens reason for optimism. They should speak to the benefits of
multilateralism. And they should make clear, on key issues relating to
democracy and the rule of law, that it is they, and not those on the political
fringes, who are best placed to protect fundamental European rights.”
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