How the far right aims to ride farmers’ outrage
to power in Europe
The tie-up of far-right parties and furious farmers is
supercharging populist parties in the run-up to the EU election in June.
JANUARY 26,
2024 4:00 AM CET
BY NICHOLAS
VINOCUR AND BARTOSZ BRZEZIŃSKI
BRUSSELS —
If the far right ever seizes power across Europe, it may well ride in on the
back of a tractor.
From Italy
to the Netherlands, right-wing parties like France’s National Rally and the
Alternative for Germany are piggybacking on farmers’ noisy outrage — complete
with snorting tractors and livestock parades — ahead of an EU-wide election in
June.
The
explosive tie-up has led to violence, such as when angry farmers in Germany
earlier this year cornered Economy Minister Robert Habeck on a ferry, forcing
him to make a hasty exit via a separate vessel. It taps into long-standing
European fears about losing control of food supply — often symbolized by
hormone-fed beef or genetically-modified produce showing up on EU supermarket
shelves.
“Farmers’
anger has become a major issue for the far right across Europe,” said Kevin
Cunningham, a political scientist who has studied the surge in support for the
far right for the European Council on Foreign Relations. “It may not be the
number one issue, it is surprisingly effective at crystalizing resentment over
economic problems.”
As
campaigning for the European election in June kicks off, polls suggest the
farmer-populist tie-up is helping to supercharge the appeal of far-right
parties among the bloc’s nearly nine million farmers. The referendum against
governments eschewing local production for cheaper imports from Ukraine and
spikes in diesel taxes both coupled with inflation means growing
discontent among farmers is spreading across the Continent.
On
Wednesday, a survey carried out by the European Council on Foreign Relations
showed far-right parties placing first in nine EU countries and significantly
expanding their number of seats in the European Parliament. That chimes with
POLITICO’s Poll of Polls, which shows the right-wing Identity and Democracy
group gaining seats to become the third largest political group in the European
Parliament.
While
farmers’ outrage was once dominated by the political left — with mustachioed
leaders like Frenchman José Bové targeting free trade deals and multinational
firms — this time it’s co-opted by right-wingers bent on bringing down Brussels
and its Green Deal environmental reforms.
Everyone’s pushing right
Pressure
from the right is already pushing more mainstream conservative groups like the
center-right European People’s Party to go on the attack against the Green
Deal, which was a signature policy of European Commission President Ursula von
der Leyen and her erstwhile environment czar, Frans Timmermans. The EPP led a
rebellion against a so-called Nature Restoration law late last year, narrowly
falling short of killing the bill — and now calls for unwinding a 2035 ban on
the combustion engine.
As
campaigning for the European election in June kicks off, polls suggest the
farmer-populist tie-up is helping to supercharge the appeal of far-right
parties among the bloc’s nearly nine million farmers | Philippe Lopez/AFP via
Getty Images
Yet
far-right groups like Identity and Democracy are looking to go much further. At
an event hosted by the Viktor Orbán-linked MCC think tank in Brussels,
right-wing EU lawmaker Patricia Chagnon openly praised the hardline farmer
protest movement “Farmers’ Defense Force,” which she said had played a key role
in “overthrowing” the Dutch government.
“It’s a
huge sign of hope, of encouragement, I think, for other farmers,” she said. “An
example to follow.”
In an
effort to fight back, von der Leyen this week held talks with representatives
from farming, industry, consumer organizations and NGOs as a way to achieve
“more dialogue and less polarization” in agricultural policy making.
‘Overthrowing governments’
At a
gathering of angry farmers in Brussels this week, right-wing EU lawmaker
Nicolas Bay told POLITICO that the outrage against free trade deals and green
rules created in Brussels was indeed pan-European — and a major driver for
anti-EU parties ahead of the June election.
“I think
there’s a continental dimension to this phenomenon,” he told POLITICO. “It’s
European agriculture in its entirety that is suffering … and European farmers
can no longer stand the free trade policies and types of farming that Brussels
is trying to impose on them.”
In the
Netherlands, rolling protests against a ruling that cut nitrogen emissions
foreshadowed and very likely played into the shock victory of right-wing
populist Geert Wilders during national elections last November.
In Germany,
the far-right AfD party has ridden a wave of at times violent farmers’ protests
to go on the attack against Social Democrat Chancellor Olaf Scholz, helping the
anti-immigration party to second place in national polls.
And in
France, National Rally party president Jordan Bardella is using the same
playbook to accuse centrist President Emmanuel Macron of wanting to “kill our
agriculture” as the anti-immigrant, anti-EU party eyes a first-place finish in
the EU-wide election.
In Italy
and Ireland, the same dynamic is playing out — far-right populist movements
latching onto farmers’ movements and drowning out the voices of traditional
advocates like trade unions and farmers’ parties.
“They’ve
taken markets away from us. And they’re not producing with the same rules as we
are!” said Benoît Laqueue, a French cattle-and-cereal farmer who’d gotten up at
5 a.m. to join the protest in front of the European Parliament.
Such
criticism can seem ironic given that European farmers benefit from one of the
most generous subsidy policies in the world, the Common Agricultural Policy,
which funnels tens of billions of euros into farmers’ pockets each year. At the
rally on Wednesday, farmers questioned by POLITICO said they were happy to keep
pocketing CAP money.
But several
voiced anger at “technocrats” in Brussels whom they accused of drowning them in
rules that were too burdensome for small farmers while subjecting them to
unfair competition from rivals in other parts of the world.
Marion
Maréchal, a French right-wing politician who’s the niece of former presidential
contender Marine Le Pen, said it was the European Green Deal and its “tsunami”
of rules that was fueling farmers’ outrage at the protest in Brussels. “This is
also Europe’s fault,” she said.
Nicolas
Camut contributed reporting.
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