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The Emerging Worldwide Alliance of Parties on the Far Right, Led by Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump
The Emerging Worldwide Alliance of Parties on the Far Right, Led by Vladimir Putin and Donald TrumpLawrence S. Wittner
April 27, 2017
The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus
Volume 15 | Issue 9 | Number3
Political parties on the far right are today enjoying a surge of support and access to government power that they have not experienced since their heyday in the 1930s.
This phenomenon is particularly striking in Europe, where massive migration, sluggish economic growth, and terrorism have stirred up zealous nationalism and Islamophobia, but it resonates through large areas of the world including the Asia-Pacific. In France, the National Front―founded in 1972 by former Nazi collaborators and other rightists employing anti-Semitic and racist appeals―has tried to soften its image somewhat under the recent leadership of Marine Le Pen. Nevertheless, Le Pens current campaign for the French presidency, in which she is one of two leading candidates facing a runoff, includes speeches delivered against a screen filled with immigrants committing crimes, jihadists plotting savage attacks, and European Union (EU) bureaucrats destroying French jobs, while she assails multiculturalism and promises to restore order. In Germany, the Alternative for Germany party, established three years ago, won up to 25 percent of the vote in state elections in March 2016. Led by Frauke Petry, the party calls for sealing the EUs borders (by shooting migrants, if necessary), forcing the migrants who remain to adopt traditional German culture, and thoroughly rejecting Islam, including a ban on constructing mosques. According to the party platform, Islam does not belong in Germany.
Elsewhere in Europe, the story is much the same. In Britain, the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP), led until recently by Nigel Farage, arose from obscurity to become the nations third largest party. Focused on drastically reducing immigration and championing nationalism (including pulling Britain out of the EU), UKIP absorbed the constituency of neo-fascist groups and successfully led the struggle for Brexit. In the Netherlands, a hotly-contested parliamentary election in March 2017 saw the far right Party for Freedom emerge as the nations second largest political party. Calling for recording the ethnicity of all Dutch citizens and closing all Islamic schools, the party is headed by Geert Wilders, who has been tried twice in that country for inciting hatred and discrimination against Muslims. In Italy, the Northern League (so-named because it originally pledged to liberate industrious Italian workers in the north from subsidizing lazy Italians in the south), demands drastic curbs on immigration and removal of Italy from the Eurozone. Its leader, Matteo Salvini, contends that Islam is incompatible with Western society.
Other European parties of the far right include Hungarys Jobbik (the countrys third-largest party, which is vehemently hostile to immigration, the EU, and homosexuality), the Sweden Democrats (now vying for second place among Swedens parties, with roots in the white supremacist movement and a platform of heavily restricting immigration and opposing the EU), Austrias Freedom Party (which, founded decades ago by Nazis, nearly won two recent 2016 presidential elections, vigorously opposes immigration, and proclaims yes to families rather than gender madness), and the Peoples Party-Our Slovakia (which supports leaving the EU and the Eurozone and whose leader has argued that even one immigrant is one too many).
Only one of these rising parties is usually referred to as fascist: Greeces Golden Dawn. Exploiting Greeces economic crisis and, especially, hatred of refugees and other migrants, Golden Dawn has promoted virulent nationalism emphasizing the supposed racial superiority of Greeks to emerge as Greeces third-largest party. Golden Dawn spokesman, Elias Kasidiaris, is known for sporting a swastika on his shoulder and for reading passages in parliament from the anti-Semitic hoax, the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. The party also employs a swastika-like flag, as well as gangs of black-shirted thugs who beat up immigrants. Party leaders, in fact, are on trial for numerous crimes, including violent attacks upon migrants.
Other far right parties in Europe, although striving for greater respectability, also provide reminders of 1920s- and 1930s-style fascism....
Full article at http://apjjf.org/2017/09/Wittner.html
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The Emerging Worldwide Alliance of Parties on the Far Right, Led by Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump (Original Post)
kristopher
May 2017
OP
Cirque du So-What
(27,394 posts)1. Billy's joined the National Front
He always was a little runt
He's got his hand in the air with the other *****
You've got to humanize yourself
REHUMANIZE YOURSELF!
dalton99a
(83,635 posts)2. Kick.