OPINION
Dancing with the far right doesn’t pay off
It takes two to tango, and the Spanish election offers
a sharp lesson for conservatives across Europe on how partnering with the
radical right can go badly wrong.
BY KRISTINA
KAUSCH AND VASSILIS NTOUSAS
JULY 26,
2023 4:02 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/spain-election-results-2023-far-right-pay-off/
Kristina
Kausch is a senior fellow and resident representative, Spain, at the German
Marshall Fund of the United States. Vassilis Ntousas is the head of European
operations at the Alliance for Securing Democracy at the German Marshall Fund
of the United States.
Sunday’s
general election in Spain was a turning point in Spanish politics — but in much
a different way than anticipated.
The
European Union’s fourth largest economy went to the polls expecting a landslide
for a conservative coalition, which would have allowed a far-right party to
claim some governing power at the national level for the first time in modern
Spain’s 45-year democratic history. But in defiance of the polls, and much to
everyone’s surprise, the vote became a plebiscite in favor of the political
center.
While the
conservative People’s Party (PP), led by Alberto Núñez Feijóo, made great gains
and emerged as a narrow winner with 33 percent of the vote, it failed to muster
the necessary parliamentary majority to govern with the far-right formation VOX
(12.4 percent), which lost over a third of its seats. In turn, Prime Minister
Pedro Sánchez’ Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party was able to secure its position
as the second largest force with 31.7 percent of the vote, and will now attempt
to rally the leftist Sumar and an array of smaller parties to form a
government.
Sánchez has
rightfully been called a political gambler, calling this snap election just two
months ago, following heavy losses for his leftist coalition in the latest
local and regional elections. The negotiations ahead will thus be tough, as
Catalan and Basque independence parties will be the likely kingmakers and an
electoral re-run in December remains a possibility. However, the vote has
clarified that the far right’s recent wins weren’t a litmus test for the
national elections after all, and Spaniards sent an unambiguous message that
they don’t want VOX to co-govern.
Conservatives
across Europe will have watched Sunday’s vote closely, as the rise of Spain’s
far-right party seemed to eerily resemble patterns and developments observed
elsewhere. And the PP-VOX electoral alliance’s failure bears some important
lessons for the role and strategy of the Continent’s center-right
conservatives.
Founded in
2003 as a spin-off by defecting PP members, VOX’s astonishing journey — going
from political pariah to potential government partner within just a decade —
has been closely linked to its ability to fuel political polarization and tilt
the political balance on several social issues to its benefit, channeling a
strongly nationalist and nativist rhetoric into public discourse. It is this
very ability to exploit and thrive in a climate of deepening social fissures
that’s gained traction in France, Finland, Italy and other European countries
as well. And so, Spain — which, from abroad, has often mistakenly been
considered immune to far-right tendencies — was set, or so it seemed, to join
the growing ranks of EU countries where such voices and parties gain
popularity, broader societal acceptance and, ultimately, national power.
The PP’s
shifting attitude toward VOX — ranging from ridicule and envy all the way to
outbidding and the offer of partnership as the far-right formation gained
popularity — helped weaken the redline that kept such fringe voices out of
national politics for so long. As a party with a traditional voting block
encompassing a broad conservative spectrum, the PP’s been trying to tiptoe
between positioning itself as the moderate alternative to VOX, and staying
close enough to the unequivocal ultra-conservative values VOX voters have been
missing in the PP since its Mariano Rajoy era.
As the
extreme right quickly flourished, PP figureheads thus began co-opting its
extreme-right discourse. And, eventually, conservative leaders began testing
the political temperature of embracing the once-taboo option of forming
alliances with VOX to gain power in various municipalities and regions, at
times even assertively encouraging reluctant subnational chapters to enter
political pacts with the controversial party.
This
profoundly ambiguous stance peaked during this election campaign, when Feijóo
sought to portray himself as a bridge-building centrist but didn’t rule out
governing with VOX, or making the party’s leader Santiago Abascal his deputy
prime minister.
At the same
time, displays of emerging local and regional PP-VOX collaborations gave voters
an uneasy glimpse of how this kind of cohabitation might tangibly impact their
daily lives. And though the conservatives’ inconsistent stance sought to
contain VOX while simultaneously attracting the party’s voters, it ultimately
ended up doing neither sufficiently well. Instead, the PP’s own ambivalent
actions helped enable and mainstream what VOX really stands for — a radical
political rhetoric and an extremist policy agenda.
As Sunday’s
result proved, this mattered: The PP won, but its win was both below
expectations and inadequate. Voters swept away its prospective joint project
with VOX, leaving the party with no (other) option to govern.
This
trajectory of Spain’s conservatives mirrors that of other European center-right
mainstream parties, which have acted as enablers for the discourse and agenda
of a creeping far right and now face the same dilemma of how to deal with an
emboldened radical right. It reflects centrist parties’ very real predicament
of whether to not cede any ground to the extremes — as most recently seen in
Greece — or whether to seize power, even if it means working with and/or being
supported by such forces, as has been the case in Sweden.
And other
countries’ experience offers a cautionary tale of how, sooner or later, even a
timid approximation of these radical right-wing forces means ending up adopting
a great deal of their politics and policies.
Although
the coming weeks will provide more of an idea as to precisely what shape the
Spanish chapter of this European story will take, it’s already clear that the
country has shown how far-right alliances can turn out costly — if not toxic —
for moderate conservatives.
The
symbolic impact of this election will be felt across Europe, offering welcome
respite from the emerging narrative that conservative-far-right alliances are
inevitable as the Continent’s overall center of gravity continues to swing to
the right. It takes two to tango, and Spain offers a sharp lesson for Europe’s
conservatives on how dancing with the far right can go badly wrong.



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