European far-right cheers over Qatar corruption
scandal
For leaders like Marine Le Pen and Viktor Orbán, the
European Parliament’s troubles are proof of EU double standards on the rule of
law.
BY NICHOLAS
VINOCUR
DECEMBER
14, 2022 4:03 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/qatar-corruption-scandal-far-right-european-parliament/
For years,
they’ve locked horns with EU leaders who accuse them of flouting the rule of
law, oppressing minorities, and maintaining unsavory ties with foreign regimes
such as Vladimir Putin’s in Russia.
But now, as
a corruption scandal engulfs Brussels, ensnaring a senior figure of the
center-left, Europe’s far-right leaders feel that the shoe is on the other foot
— and they are going on the attack against a pro-EU establishment that they say
has presided over massive corruption while lecturing them about how to run
their countries.
The upshot
is that right-wingers ranging from France’s Marine Le Pen to Hungarian Prime
Minister Viktor Orbán and Polish President Andrzej Duda may seek to turn the
scandal into a political weapon — as leverage in rule-of-law disputes with
Brussels and to whip up anti-EU sentiment ahead of European Parliament
elections in 2024.
“They
dragged us through the mud over a totally transparent and legal loan from a Czech
Russian bank,” National Rally chief Le Pen tweeted, referring to a €9 million
loan her party secured in 2014. “At the same time, Qatar was delivering
suitcases full of cash to all these corrupt people who are supposedly in the
‘camp of the good.'”
In Hungary,
Orbán, who’s locked in an epic struggle with Brussels over rule-of-law failings
in his country, mocked the EU in a tweet of his own, writing that the
Parliament was “seriously concerned about corruption in Hungary” over a
photograph of world leaders doubled over with laughter.
Polish
lawmakers from the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, which is also at odds
with Brussels over rule-of-law infringements, struck a similar note, pointing
out that MEP Eva Kaili, the most prominent suspect in the Qatar corruption
case, had been a vocal critic of their country.
“The
question arises: Where is the problem with the rule of law? In Poland or in the
European Union?” said Dominik Tarczyński, an MEP with the ruling Polish party.
“The
European Parliament is not a transparent institution, and support for
Socialists like Eva Kaili exposes the values of the European Parliament and
ridicules this EU institution,” said Bogdan Rzońca, another PiS lawmaker.
Political impact
The cries
of hypocrisy from the European far-right came as Belgian police carried out
further raids on Tuesday, sealing off more offices in the European Parliament.
Four
people, including Kaili and her Italian partner, Francesco Giorgi, remain in
police custody on charges of corruption, money laundering and participation in
a criminal organization. Kaili is set to appear before a Belgian judge on
Wednesday.
The EU’s
top officials, including European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and
Parliament President Roberta Metsola, have lined up to condemn the finding in
stark terms, vowing to crack down on corruption across all of the EU’s
institutions, which employ more than 60,000 people across the bloc.
But for the
far-right, which in many countries casts itself as the enemy of “lesson-giving”
EU bureaucrats, those words rang hollow as they said the allegations uncovered
since last Friday only underscore the double standards of EU elites who are
quick to condemn Poland and Hungary but fail to clean up on their own doorstep.
“The
European Union loves to give lessons to the entire world. It gives lessons to
Hungary. It gives lessons to Poland. It even gives lessons to [European border
agency] Frontex. It would do much better to start cleaning its own house,” said
Philippe Olivier, a National Rally MEP and close aide to Le Pen.
The probe
was likely to draw in further people, including from other political groups in
Parliament, and would increase scrutiny on von der Leyen, who’s under pressure
over the terms of a deal she negotiated with Pfizer to buy COVID-19 vaccines,
he added.
Less than
two years before EU voters head to the polls to elect a new Parliament, Olivier
predicted that the corruption scandal would have a political impact in France,
where Le Pen has twice reached the final round of a presidential election, only
to be defeated both times by the centrist Emmanuel Macron.
“People
already have the feeling that the EU is a giant rule-making machine with no
oversight,” he said. “This only adds to the picture, so I’m optimistic.”
Even on the
left, some politicians acknowledged that the allegations, which so far concern
members of the Socialists and Democrats group in Parliament, would be damaging
because they create an equivalency between socialists accused of taking money
from Qatar and right-wingers who have taken money from Russia.
Jan Cienski contributed reporting.

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