Sunak urged to stop Braverman speaking alongside
far right at Brussels convention
Former home secretary will rub shoulders with populist
right from across the globe, including Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán
Michael
Savage and Lisa O'Carroll in Brussels
Sat 13 Apr
2024 10.08 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2024/apr/13/suella-braverman-brussels-convention-viktor-orban
Rishi Sunak
is being urged to stop his former home secretary from attending a rightwing
convention featuring figures who have been under investigation for extremism,
in the latest sign of his waning control of his party.
Suella
Braverman, who has been a central plotter against the prime minister since she
left the cabinet, is set to be one of the keynote speakers at the National
Conservatism (NatCon) conference in Brussels this week.
Also
appearing at the gathering will be controversial figures from the populist
right from across the globe. They include Viktor Orbán, the Hungarian prime
minister and a key ally of Russian president Vladamir Putin. In 2020, Tory MP
Daniel Kawczynski was reprimanded during Boris Johnson’s Conservative
leadership for attending the NatCon event in Rome, where Orbán was also a
speaker.
Others
expected to take the stage this year include Hans-Georg Maaßen , the former
German spy chief who last year revealed he was under investigation by the
Office for the Protection of the Constitution for suspected rightwing
extremism. Maaßen was forced from office in 2018 after he appeared to question
the authenticity of a video showing far-right violence at a festival. He has
since written an article comparing migrants with cancer.
Also on the
speakers’ list are Rod Dreher, an American writer who argued that the
Christchurch mosque gunman who killed 51 people in 2019 did have “legitimate,
realistic concerns” about “declining numbers of ethnic Europeans”; Ryszard
Legutko, a Polish politician who has said he does not “understand why anyone
should want to be proud of being a homosexual”; and Uzay Bulut, a Turkish
political analyst who said that London “appears to be a striking case of the
Islamisation of a major western capital through mass migration”.
No action
is yet being taken against Braverman over her attendance. She left the
government in November after clashes with No 10, following her suggestion that
being homeless was a “lifestyle choice” and writing an article that was
critical of the police, without first having it cleared by Downing Street.
When
Kawczynski attended a similar event, the party did not remove the whip but did
give him a formal warning that his attendance “was not acceptable, particularly
in light of the views of some of those in attendance, which we utterly condemn,
and that he is expected to hold himself to higher standards”.
In a letter
to Sunak, Labour’s shadow paymaster general, Jonathan Ashworth, called on the
PM to take action before a UK politician took the stage alongside figures with
“damaging, divisive and offensive views”.
But
yesterday the conference appeared to be at risk of cancellation after the host
venue pulled out, citing security threats following protests by a Belgian
anti-fascist group. A spokesperson for the event said it would go ahead with a
new venue, yet to be confirmed. Frank Furedi, executive director of one of the
organisers, the MCC Brussels think-tank which is backed by the Hungarian
government, said: “What has happened in these last few days represents nothing
less than a crisis for free speech and political expression for all of Europe.”
It is an
absolute tragedy that cancel culture has been welcomed into Brussels in the
very heart of the European Union. Everyone, regardless of political
affiliation, should be concerned about what is happening here.”
“Britain’s
former home secretary, someone you appointed, plans to stand side by side with
the global far-right in Brussels,” he wrote. “The prospect of a senior Tory
politician demeaning the great office she held, and the country she represents,
shows just how far the once-great party of Churchill has fallen on your watch.
“Last
month, you recognised that extremist groups were ‘trying to tear us [the UK]
apart’ in an unprecedented address outside Downing Street, accusing both
Islamist and far right groups of ‘spreading a poison, that poison is
extremism’.
“Now, by
giving oxygen to these divisive and dangerous individuals, Suella Braverman is
legitimising fringe far-right elements that threaten our cohesion and
democracy. You must have the courage of your convictions and block her from
attending.”
“We deeply
regret that Edificio – which operates the Concert Noble where the conference is
supposed to take place – tolerates such an event on their premises,” Camille,
an activist at the Belgian Antifascist Coordination (CAB) who did not give
their surname, said in an interview with the Brussels Times.
“They claim
to abide by the values of ‘respect and sustainability’ and ‘making this
precious cultural heritage accessible to the public’, while also receiving more
than €100,000 in public money. Then they allow a dictator like Viktor Orbán to
gain influence.”
Frank
Furedi, executive director of the thinktank MCC Brussels, an arm of the
Orbán-backed Mathias Corvinus Collegium college in Budapest and partner of the
event, warned Brussels authorities not to succumb to pressure from “intolerant
and prejudiced … leftwing extremists”.
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