How migration is pushing Europe to the right
Growing public concern over asylum applicant numbers
is bolstering once-fringe parties across the bloc
Laura
Dubois in Brussels and Ben Hall in London DECEMBER 20 2023
https://www.ft.com/content/aad0afd4-57cf-4d34-ae42-7397354600de
It was the
death of a baby at an overcrowded reception centre for asylum seekers in the
Netherlands last year that convinced Prime Minister Mark Rutte that Europe was
once again grappling with a migrant crisis.
The
three-month-old died in a sports hall in a village on the German border. The
images of an overwhelmed facility, with families sleeping outdoors, brought
home to Dutch voters the extent to which their politicians had lost control of
immigration.
Rutte
understood that this would be a gift to the anti-immigrant far-right, according
to people familiar with his thinking, just as it had been in 2015-16 when a
surge of people seeking asylum in Europe fuelled the rise of a new generation
of populist politicians across the continent.
Rutte’s
response was to promise a crackdown. The shift in stance brought down his
fragile coalition government. His VVD party (the People’s Party for Freedom and
Democracy) under new leadership then fought a snap election campaign centred on
immigration, and even opened the door to working with the far-right led by
anti-Islam firebrand Geert Wilders. The strategy was a spectacular failure. In
November, it was Wilders who triumphed at the polls, his Freedom party (PVV)
more than doubling its seats. The VVD crashed into third place.
The victory
of an extremist like Wilders, who promised to ban mosques and the Koran, sent
shockwaves around Europe. It cheered fellow nativists, while highlighting the
dilemmas for mainstream parties as they grapple with growing public concern
about migrant numbers.
There were
874,000 asylum applications in the EU last year, and almost 650,000 in the
first eight months of 2023, on top of 4.2mn Ukrainians awarded temporary
protection since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022. Reception
centres across northern Europe are reaching capacity, though the number of
people actually travelling to Europe without permission is much lower than in
2015 and 2016.
Migration politics
This is part one of an FT series looking at how
migration is shaping politics on both sides of the Atlantic
Part one: Growing public concern over asylum applicant
numbers is bolstering once-fringe parties across the EU
Part two: At the heart of the matter in America are
two fundamentally opposing views on immigration and asylum
Nonetheless,
the recent surge in asylum numbers is pushing voters into the hands of now
established populist and far-right parties, propelling them to the cusp of, or
into, office. They are on course to make significant gains in European
parliament elections in June and to exert more sway over EU policymaking.
Fearing an
electoral backlash, governments are reaching for ever more drastic solutions,
especially the offshoring of asylum processing, to reduce the number of
arrivals at their borders. They are testing the limits of EU and international
law and tying themselves in knots in the process.
In France,
President Emmanuel Macron’s difficulties in enacting immigration reforms have
underscored his diminished authority. A bill, endorsed by Macron, aims to
reduce appeals by asylum-seekers and speed-up removals while regularising the
status of immigrants in critical sectors — thereby appealing to both right and
left, the president’s trademark political method.
A toughened
up version of the bill was approved by the National Assembly on Tuesday, with
the support of far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who claimed an “ideological
victory”. But several of Macron’s more left-leaning ministers threatened to
resign over the legislation, and almost a quarter of his centrist alliance
declined to vote for it.
Speaking at
an event in Rome organised by Italian leader Giorgia Meloni on Saturday,
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said European societies would be
“overwhelmed” unless they curbed irregular migration to the continent.
But his
government’s attempt to salvage its legally contentious plan to send asylum
seekers arriving across the Channel to Rwanda has ignited a civil war within
the ruling Conservative party between moderates and hardliners.
“The
immigration issue has become very emotional and it is across the board,” says
one European diplomat.
Some
politicians worry that the focus on immigration pushed by far-right groups
comes at the detriment of effective policy.
“It doesn’t
matter if in those countries the problem is really big or not, or if there are
even refugees, these [far-right] parties put it at the top of the agenda,” says
Katarina Barley, a former German justice minister and now a centre-left member
of the European parliament. “And this creates a dynamic in the political
discussion, which then is not aimed at solving problems.”
‘A willingness to help’
Immigration,
whether by people fleeing persecution or seeking work, has long been a
contentious issue in Europe, pitting main countries of entry against others
that become destinations.
Some 2.3mn
people claimed asylum in the EU in 2015-16, many of them fleeing from Syria’s
civil war. Germany, then enjoying a booming economy, took in an unprecedented
number with Chancellor Angela Merkel famously declaring: “We can do this.”
“At that
moment, there was a giant wave of willingness to help,” says Barley. The issue
was “coping with it afterwards . . . At that time we were not prepared for that situation, a lot came in one
go. We have to admit that.”
Merkel’s
welcome infuriated some of Germany’s neighbours, who worried they would have to
accommodate thousands. It fuelled the rise of the far-right Alternative for
Germany, which entered Germany’s parliament for the first time in 2017.
Now the
AfD, parts of which are deemed extremist by the German security services, is
Germany’s second most popular party. It is poised to win three regional
elections in the east next year.
“Migration
becomes particularly toxic when the economy goes down,” says Nathalie Tocci,
director of the Institute of International Affairs in Rome. “And this is the
first time that Germany has had that kind of cocktail in a way in which it had
already happened in France, Spain or Italy. That’s what is so dangerous about
the situation there.”
In Austria,
the far-right Freedom party, which was mired in a bribery scandal four years
ago and ejected from government, is polling at 30 per cent and is on course to
win parliamentary elections in autumn next year.
Sweden has
been rocked by a spate of shootings and bombings by rival criminal gangs which
Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson has blamed on “irresponsible immigration policy
and failed integration”.
With her
strident anti-immigration positioning, France’s Le Pen has never been higher in
opinion polls and looks increasingly unstoppable as time ticks away on Macron’s
presidency.
With polls
predicting big gains for far-right and populist parties in European parliament
elections in June, lawmakers and member-state officials are racing to adopt
reforms to the EU’s migration and asylum rules before the elections.
“Migration
has to be solved otherwise it will dominate the political landscape in 2024,”
says Manfred Weber, who heads the centre-right European People’s party.
Negotiators
from the European parliament and member states struck a deal on the
long-awaited package on Wednesday, though details still need to be finalised.
The parliament’s president, Roberta Metsola, says the EU will be able to
“showcase this unprecedented reform before next year’s elections”.
“We are
coming up with a European scale of response, which is exactly the opposite of
the ultimate agenda of the far right,” says Juan Fernando López Aguilar, a
Spanish centre-left MEP who led parts of the negotiations.
The
so-called asylum and migration pact was first proposed in 2016 but had been
stuck for years. Its proponents are keen to present it as a solution to the
EU’s migration woes.
Human
rights activists have criticised the pact for being too harsh. The reforms will
overhaul asylum procedures, with a certain number of applicants processed
directly at the border on a fast track and held in special facilities nearby
while awaiting a decision about their futures.
It would
lead to “effectively detention”, says liberal MEP Sophie in ’t Veld from the
Netherlands. German Green MEP Damian Boeselager, who took part in the
negotiations, says the deal is “an attack on the whole [European] Convention of
Human Rights”.
But while
the agreement on the reforms is seen as an expression of European unity, it’s
already clear they will not be enough. They would not come into force before
2025 and therefore would not bring down numbers ahead of the European elections
next summer.
In the
meantime, governments are trying to tighten their own rules and seal
contentious agreements with third countries to prevent people from ever
reaching European soil, akin to the €6bn EU deal with Turkey in 2016 to take
back Syrian refugees.
The EU
signed a deal with Tunis in July promising, among other things, €105mn to help
police its borders, even though the Tunisian authorities have faced allegations
of human rights abuses and illegal pushbacks of migrants into the desert over
the border with Libya. The deal has since stalled.
Still,
European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen sees it as a “blueprint” for
agreements with other African countries. The commission is negotiating a
similar arrangement with Egypt and has launched exploratory talks with Morocco.
Cyprus has called for a deal with Lebanon.
One of the
main aims of deals with third countries is to persuade them to take back
citizens whose asylum applications have been rejected. Only about one-fifth of
the 400,000 or so annual return decisions across the EU is actually carried
out, a poor record that corrodes public trust in the asylum system. Germany,
France and other EU countries are trying to speed up returns, but they need the
countries of origin to co-operate.
Inhumane solutions
Despite the
legal obstacles to Britain’s Rwanda deal, several European governments have
come out in favour of outsourcing the asylum process, or at least parts of it,
to third countries. Denmark briefly pursued its own Rwanda deal before shelving
it. Even Germany’s centre left-green-liberal coalition is open to the idea of
outsourcing the initial processing of claims.
But such
schemes risk falling foul of the Geneva convention on refugees and the European
Convention on Human Rights. Activists and lawyers have questioned their
efficacy. “It’s a trend, but it’s not the solution,” says Jean-Louis De
Brouwer, European affairs director at the Egmont Institute in Brussels, adding
it would leave the EU dependent on autocratic and unstable regimes for its
migration policy.
Italy’s
rightwing leader Giorgia Meloni was the driving force behind the stalled
Tunisia deal.
But Meloni
also offers a cautionary tale. The leader of the Brothers of Italy, a party
with post-fascist roots, was elected last year after promising tough measures
to curb the flow of migrants from across the Mediterranean, even pledging a
“naval blockade” to stop them.
Instead,
more than 153,600 irregular migrants have landed on Italian shores so far this
year, an almost 55 per cent increase over the 99,100 that arrived in the same
period last year.
Meloni’s
government has severely restricted the activities of humanitarian groups that
rescue migrants at risk of drowning in the Mediterranean, and vowed tougher
treatment and quicker deportations of rejected asylum seekers. But she has had
little room to stop the boats.
“There were
a lot of expectations,” says Cecilia Sottilotta, a political scientist at
Italy’s University for Foreigners, Perugia. “Fast forward to today, though, and
she has realised that 99 per cent of the things she thought she could do, she
can’t do.”
Last month,
Meloni struck an agreement with Albania to build two holding facilities for
migrants rescued from the Mediterranean who would otherwise be brought to
Italy. But that arrangement is also in doubt after opposition MPs in Albania
referred it to a judicial review. Critics in any case say it would likely
violate EU and international law.
EU
legislation “makes it very clear that asylum seekers under the responsibility
of member states have the right to remain on that territory” while awaiting a
decision, says Dutch Green MEP Tineke Strik.
Even as she
tries to crack down on irregular migration, Meloni has had to wrestle with
employers’ huge demand for migrant workers as the labour force shrinks due to
Italy’s ageing population. This summer, she announced plans to dramatically
increase the number of work permits for non-EU foreign workers.
“Even those
more conservative, more to the right, member states do recognise that they have
a demographic challenge,” says Jennifer Tangney of the International Centre for
Migration Policy Development.
The EU as a
whole is in dire need of workers and migrant labour could plug the gap. A
report by the European Commission in July identified “high and persistent
labour shortages”. Unemployment reached a record low of 6.2 per cent in 2022,
while the rate of vacant jobs was at an all-time high of 2.9 per cent, with
healthcare, construction and tech among the sectors most affected.
‘A crisis of perception’
Despite
Europe’s pressing needed for labour, including unskilled workers, reducing
immigration is touted by conservatives like Weber as the only way to stem
extremist parties.
“If we
cannot limit the number of arrivals by June next year then the European
elections will probably be a historic vote for the future of Europe, with
extremists on left and the right [benefiting],” says Weber.
In Greece,
centre-right Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has taken a strict stance on
migration and was rewarded by voters this summer with a second term by a
landslide. His centre-right government has been repeatedly accused by aid
groups and the UN of forcibly repelling migrants at its sea and land borders —
which is illegal under international law — and for their harsh treatment in
detention camps. The Greek government says its migration policy is legal and
tough but fair.
But Greece
may be the exception. Political scientists point to academic studies showing
mainstream conservatives that veer to the right to fend off anti-immigration
populists risk legitimising their opponents’ more hardline arguments.
“It never
reduces support for the radical right and in some contexts it rather
strengthens the radical right,” says Tarik Abou-Chadi, associate professor in
comparative European politics at the University of Oxford. In the past two
years, far-right or populist anti-immigration parties have displaced mainstream
conservatives as the largest force on the right of the political spectrum in
France, Italy, Sweden, the Netherlands and Switzerland.
“The
mainstream right are increasingly making themselves obsolete,” Abou-Chadi says.
Progressive
politicians as well as officials and experts say that there is a disconnect
between the public outcry over migration and the actual number of arrivals. “If
you look at the long-term trends in terms of migration, there is not a huge
crisis. There is a crisis of perception,” one EU official says.
Asylum
claims are still well below the 2015 peak, although authorities are struggling
to cope with large backlogs and reception facilities are full. Furthermore,
irregular arrivals are only a fraction of overall migration to the EU. The vast
majority of people reach the EU legally. Last year, EU countries issued some
3.4mn first-time residence permits.
Some
experts believe rising public concern about immigration numbers or irregular
arrivals is less significant than the high salience given to the issue by
politicians and sections of the media. The radical right has proved adept at
blaming other grievances — housing shortages, difficulties in accessing public
services and rising prices — on immigration.
In the
Netherlands, Wilders profited from a widespread discontent with the political
class, says De Brouwer of the Egmont Institute.
“When you
have a political elite which has been in power for quite some time, which is
out of steam, you open the boulevard to those coming with simple questions and
simple answers.”
Additional
reporting by Amy Kazmin in Rome, Andy Bounds in Brussels, Guy Chazan in Berlin
and Eleni Varvitsioti in Athens
Data
visualisation by Keith Fray and Oliver Hawkins

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