Analysis
Far-right EU election gains could boost
nationalist parties on home turf
Jon Henley
Polls indicate a surge for the right across the
continent in next month’s ballots but the centrists are still likely to hold
sway in parliament
Sat 11 May
2024 13.00 BST
Far-right
gains in next month’s European elections will be hard, if not impossible, to
parlay into more power in parliament, experts say, but they could boost
nationalist parties in EU capitals – with potentially greater consequences.
Polling
suggests far-right and hardline conservative parties could finish first in nine
EU states, including Austria, France and the Netherlands, in the polls between
6 and 9 June, and second or third in another nine, including Germany, Spain,
Portugal and Sweden.
The
predicted rise of the far- right Identity and Democracy (ID) group and the
conservative-nationalist European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) has
sparked speculation about a “sharp right turn” in the European parliament,
potentially jeopardising key EU projects such as the green deal.
ID, which
includes Marine Le Pen’s National Rally (RN) in France, Matteo Salvini’s League
in Italy, Germany’s Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), Austria’s Freedom party
(FPÖ) and Vlaams Belang in Belgium, are on track to be the big winners – from
59 MEPs to perhaps 85.
The
national-conservative ECR, which includes Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy,
Poland’s Law and Justice (PiS) party, Spain’s Vox, the Finns party and the
Sweden Democrats, is on course to return about 75 MEPs, a more modest advance.
Analysts
say, however, that such far and hard-right gains, while sizeable, may make
little immediate difference to the workings of the parliament - one of the EU’s
three core institutions along with the council, which represents governments,
and the commission, the bloc’s executive.
First, said
Luigi Scazzieri of the Centre for European Reform (CER)thinktank, the parties
that make up the current “grand coalition” of conservatives, socialists and
liberals “are likely to lose a substantial number of seats, but maintain their
overall majority”.
The
mainstream centre-right European People’s party (EPP) group, which includes the
German Christian Democrats (CDU) of the European Commission president, Ursula
von der Leyen, is set to stay the largest in the 720-seat parliament, with
about 175 MEPs, while the centre-left Progressive Alliance of Socialists and
Democrats – parties such as Spain’s Socialist Workers’ party (PSOE) – is
heading for second with up to 145 MEPs.
And though
the liberal Renew group, including French president Emmanuel Macron’s centrist
Renaissance, may lose a dozen seats, possibly retaining as few as 80, that
should still ensure that “on the big decisions, the centre holds”, said Nicolai
von Ondarza of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs.
Moreover,
analysts say, ID and the ECR disagree on so much, and so bitterly, that it is
difficult to see them working together. “I’m pretty sure we won’t see a
broad-church far-right group in the European parliament,” von Ondarza said.
“They’re too divided.”
The two
groups may agree broadly on some issues such as migration (where their hardline
stance has in any case become pretty much European mainstream) and postponing
or even rolling back green legislation, but they are deeply split on others,
including, critically, their line on Russia and backing for Kyiv.
The parties
that make up the ECR are mostly populist, nationalist and conservative, and
many are, or have been, in government. They are EU-critical (sometimes
strongly), but are ultimately part of what Von Ondarza described as “the great
EU compromise machine”, and have frequently helped draft EU legislation.
ID members,
by contrast, are mostly far right, anti-EU – and often seen as extreme in their
national contexts. On the European stage, they are more disruptive than
constructive: AfD talks favourably of a “Dexit” referendum, while RN’s
proposals for a French-first “national preference” in jobs and benefits are not
compatible with staying in the single market.
Nowhere is
the divide between the groups clearer than over Russia. Since Moscow’s
full-scale invasion of Ukraine, ECR members such as Meloni’s Brothers of Italy
and Poland’s PiS have proved staunchly pro-Nato and pro-Kyiv.
By
contrast, many ID members – particularly AfD – remain more or less overtly
pro-Russian.
There are
also internal tensions, analysts note. Within ID, Le Pen in particular has
voiced criticisms of AfD after members attended a secret meeting to discuss a
plan for the mass removal of foreigners from Germany, including those with
German passports.
The arrest
last month of the parliamentary assistant to Maximilian Krah, the party’s top
candidate in the elections, on suspicion of spying for China, has fanned some
partners’ doubts about AfD, elements of which are classified by Germany’s
domestic intelligence service as “proven rightwing extremists”.
Hungarian
leader Viktor Orbán’s pro-Russia stance over Ukraine is causing divisions among
Europe’s far-right parties. Photograph: Koszticsák Szilárd/Reuters
Some kind
of reorganisation of the two hard-right groups is most likely after the
election – with the decision of Hungary’s authoritarian prime minister, Viktor
Orbán, whose Fidesz party left the EPP in 2021 and whose MEPs do not currently
belong to any European parliamentary group, set to be key.
Many
observers see his projected 14 MEPs eventually joining the ECR – but that, as
von Ondarza noted, “would almost certainly mean the Finns party and the Sweden
Democrats would leave” over, among other things, the Hungarian government’s
Kremlin-friendly stance on Ukraine.
Whatever
constellation emerges, predicted Mujtaba Rahman of the political risk
consultancy Eurasia Group, the populist right will be “too disorganised to work
together. They simply won’t be able to cohere. Will they be able to hold joint
meetings, vote strategically? I don’t believe they will.”
Nonetheless,
even if the parliament’s grand coalition of centre-right, centre-left and
liberals holds, its reduced majority could have consequences, particularly in
policy areas where the conservative EPP may be tempted to slow progress.
“The
far-right discourse has already won in the EU on immigration,” von Ondarza
said, “and things are starting to move that way on climate policy: the EPP is
already opposed to some parts of the green deal. It could be tempted to side
with the ECR to block those, and also maybe on some family policy and security
issues.”
Von der
Leyen has already said that, depending on the parliament’s composition and who
is in each group, the EPP did not rule out working with the ECR (although an
ECR that included Orbán could complicate matters, with many EPP member parties
reluctant to be associated with the illiberal Hungarian leader).
The role of
Italian prime minister Meloni, who has shown herself to be a surprisingly
constructive EU player, could prove critical. “She’s trying to convince Orbán
to move in her direction on Ukraine, on the EU,” said Rahman. “She has
understood that her success is to do with her being constructive.”
Von Ondarza
said Meloni faced “a big choice. She can team up with Orbán and move the ECR
definitively away from the centre, or she can align herself with von der Leyen.
If she opts for the former, she loses all she’s gained so far.”
It is,
however, outside Brussels and Strasbourg that these European parliament
elections may have their biggest impact, analysts say. Far-right parties are
already in coalition governments in Italy and Finland and lending another
parliamentary support in Sweden.
A far-right
party is most likely to be a big part of the next Dutch government after Geert
Wilders’s Party for Freedom finished first in November’s elections; Vlaams
Belang is on track to finish first in Flemish-speaking Belgium in national
elections there in June; the FPÖ is set to win Austria’s elections later this
year; and AfD may win three state elections in Germany.
“A strong
electoral result for the far right is likely to lend them more momentum,” said
Scazzieri of the CER. “A strong showing by the FPÖ could set it up for victory
in the national vote. If its leader, Herbert Kickl, becomes chancellor, Orbán
and Slovakia’s Robert Fico would be joined by a third Ukraine-sceptic populist
leader.”
In France,
said Rahman, Le Pen looks set to humiliate Macron, with the RN’s list scoring
perhaps double the president’s. In Germany, the AfD may have shed three or four
points in the polls after a succession of scandals but is still on course to
finish second, behind the opposition CDU, but ahead of chancellor Olaf Scholz’s
centre-left Social Democratic party.
“What
concerns me most is the impact of these elections on already weak leaders,” he
said. “Macron and Scholz are already struggling. At the EU level, the biggest
impact of these elections will be to weaken already weakened leaders yet
further.”
For
Scazzieri, the full influence of the European parliamentary elections of 2024
“will be felt over time”, with mainstream political forces coming under
pressure to move right on issues such as climate policy – and, potentially, the
balance of power among national capitals shifting.
On Tuesday 28 May at 7pm BST, join Jon Henley
and a panel of experts for a livestreamed discussion on the rise of the far
right in Europe. Tickets available here.
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