Publications /
Opinion

Back
Europe's Political Landscape: The Steady Rise of the Right and Its Implications - Conversation with Hubert Vedrine
Authors
April 25, 2024

A Sharp Right Turn

Hubert Vedrine is a foreign affairs veteran, named conseiller diplomatique to French President Francois Mitterrand at the age of 34, and subsequently appointed Secretary General of the Elysee’s Presidential Office, by the Socialist, managing his policies from the Elysée Palace in Paris. For five years, Vedrine served France as foreign minister, under the ‘cohabitation’ government (1997 to 2002), led by the conservative head of state, Jacques Chirac, and the Socialist prime minister Lionel Jospin.

In December 2023, at the 12th Atlantic Dialogues, organized by the Policy Center for the New South, Vedrine, for years President of the Institute Francois Mitterrand, joined me in AD talk. Our conversation did not touch on African challenges directly, but the continent was the subject when we analyzed the undeniable movement in Europe towards the political, even radical, right, which advocates for mass deportations of illegal migrants—thus numerous Africans.

Vedrine seemed not to be alarmed about menacing headlines predicting Europe’s invasion by populists. The politician and author of numerous political books, now 77, was not excessively concerned about inroads being made in Germany by the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, which, according to some opinion polls, was surpassing the governing coalition parties, the SPD, FDP and the Greens. If tomorrow Germany would vote, I reminded Vedrine, more than 20% of the electorate would vote radical right, which tolerates openly fascist followers and does not hesitate to recruit members with racist slogans and radical solutions. Extremist right-wing militants, I suggested in our conversation, were reminding the world of the dark German history, Hitler, Holocaust and a dramatic war, reviving fear of a repeat global tragedy. Vedrine argued that many Europeans supporting the right are not necessarily extremists but are somehow “lost in globalization and bewildered by mass migration, much of it illegal”. He was though certain that “the right has not really any solutions either”.

Marching Steadily Into the Mainstream

Thus, a dark past is reappearing, believed to have been buried forever: authoritarianism and populism. A far-right takeover of Europe seems to be underway. “The far right is winning Europe’s immigration debate”, wrote Foreign Policy (November 1, 2023). “Mainstream parties across Europe are shifting their positions on immigration in hopes of impeding the rise of the far right,” observed Foreign Policy’s Anchal Vohra. European Union elections are approaching (in June 2024) and Europe correspondent Jon Henley explained in The Guardian (June 30, 2023) how “Europe’s far right is marching steadily into the mainstream, whether in Italy, Spain, France or Finland, parties that were once outcast are fast gaining respectability—and power”. Eddy Wax of Politico (February 6, 2024) dared to predict: “The next European Parliament looks more Pro-Russian and less green than the current one. Could a far right EU really happen?”

The European Council on Foreign Relations (January 23, 2024) predicted in its forecast for the 2024 European Parliament elections, titled “A sharp right turn”, that there will be “a major shift to the right in many countries”. Anti-European populists are likely to top the polls in nine member states (Austria, Belgium, Czechia, France, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, and Slovakia) and come second or third in another nine countries (Bulgaria, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Portugal, Romania, Spain, and Sweden). The European Council on Foreign Relations predicted: “Inside the European Parliament, a popular right coalition of Christian Democrats, conservatives, and radical right MEPs could emerge with a majority for the first time. This sharp right turn is likely to have significant consequences for European level policies, which will affect the foreign policy choices that the EU can make, particularly on environmental issues, where the new majority is likely to oppose ambitious EU action to tackle climate change”. Hubert Vedrine suggested: “we need courage and time. We can deplore the movement to the right, but we can’t stop immigration overnight. It’s difficult to stop”.

“Rising migration across Europe, including the biggest surge of asylum seekers since the 2015/2016 migrant crisis”, observed the Wall Street Journal (November 25, 2023), “is fueling support for far right and anti-migration parties”, potentially reshaping European politics. Almost 25 years ago, when Joerg Haider’s far right populist Freedom Party won just under 27% of the vote and entered government in Austria, noted Jon Henley, “the shock waves reverberated around Europe. Diplomats visits were cancelled and punitive measures imposed. Not long after, when Jean Marie Le Pen of France’s National Front (now National Rally or RN), reached the national run off, the eventual winner, Jacques Chirac, refused even to debate with the far-right leader, so abhorrent—and abnormal—were his views”. Now, Henley pointed out, “across western Europe far-right parties are advancing, climbing steadily up the polls, shaping the policies of the mainstream right to reflect nativist and popular platforms, and occupying select ministerial roles in coalition governments”. In March, Portugal’s center-right leader Luis Montenegro’s Democratic Alliance won 80 of 230 seats in parliamentary elections. To assume the leadership as prime minister and head of a majority coalition government, the conservative pledged not to include the radical right Chega party in his government, which was founded only five years ago and won 50 seats (The Guardian, March 21, 2024).

“Every five years, like clockwork,” wrote Eddy Wax, “mainstream politicians freak out about the rise of radicals and populists ahead of the European election. But then, the danger suddenly seems to dissipate as the traditional center-left and center-right forces that built the European Union forge coalitions that hold more radical parties at bay”. But, Wax warned, “don’t bank on it this time. In 2024, the right-wing surge in the polls seems bigger and bolder, with one predicting the national right and far right could pick up nearly a quarter of seats in the European Parliament in June”. Even if the center right—currently tipped to come first in the elections—refuses to work with “ever more powerful firebrand fringe parties”, as Wax sees them, “there’s still a significant chance, the far right will, for the first time, be able to influence Europe’s policy agenda. That will enable it to threaten the EU’s sacred values on rule of law and human rights, and block or even overturn major green and climate laws”. Viktor Orban, right-wing prime minister of Hungary, already promised a crowd of cheering supporters in Budapest (BBC, March 15, 2024, Nick Thorpe) that Donald Trump would win the US Presidency in November, and right-wing parties would win the European Parliament elections: “We started this year alone, by the end of it we will be the majority of the world”.

A Sharp Right Turn

Hubert Vedrine is a foreign affairs veteran, named conseiller diplomatique to French President Francois Mitterrand at the age of 34, and subsequently appointed Secretary General of the Elysee’s Presidential Office, by the Socialist, managing his policies from the Elysée Palace in Paris. For five years, Vedrine served France as foreign minister, under the ‘cohabitation’ government (1997 to 2002), led by the conservative head of state, Jacques Chirac, and the Socialist prime minister Lionel Jospin.

In December 2023, at the 12th Atlantic Dialogues, organized by the Policy Center for the New South, Vedrine, for years President of the Institute Francois Mitterrand, joined me after his splendid public debate with André Azoulay, advisor to King Mohammed VI, in AD talk. Our conversation did not touch on African challenges directly, but the continent was the subject when we analyzed the undeniable movement in Europe towards the political, even radical, right, which advocates for mass deportations of illegal migrants—thus numerous Africans.

Vedrine seemed not to be alarmed about menacing headlines predicting Europe’s invasion by populists. The politician and author of numerous political books, now 77, was not excessively concerned about inroads being made in Germany by the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, which, according to some opinion polls, was surpassing the governing coalition parties, the SPD, FDP and the Greens. If tomorrow Germany would vote, I reminded Vedrine, more than 20% of the electorate would vote radical right, which tolerates openly fascist followers and does not hesitate to recruit members with racist slogans and radical solutions. Extremist right-wing militants, I suggested in our conversation, were reminding the world of the dark German history, Hitler, Holocaust and a dramatic war, reviving fear of a repeat global tragedy. Vedrine argued that many Europeans supporting the right are not necessarily extremists but are somehow “lost in globalization and bewildered by mass migration, much of it illegal”. He was though certain that “the right has not really any solutions either”.

Marching Steadily Into the Mainstream

Thus, a dark past is reappearing, believed to have been buried forever: authoritarianism and populism. A far-right takeover of Europe seems to be underway. “The far right is winning Europe’s immigration debate”, wrote Foreign Policy (November 1, 2023). “Mainstream parties across Europe are shifting their positions on immigration in hopes of impeding the rise of the far right,” observed Foreign Policy’s Anchal Vohra. European Union elections are approaching (in June 2024) and Europe correspondent Jon Henley explained in The Guardian (June 30, 2023) how “Europe’s far right is marching steadily into the mainstream, whether in Italy, Spain, France or Finland, parties that were once outcast are fast gaining respectability—and power”. Eddy Wax of Politico (February 6, 2024) dared to predict: “The next European Parliament looks more Pro-Russian and less green than the current one. Could a far right EU really happen?”

The European Council on Foreign Relations (January 23, 2024) predicted in its forecast for the 2024 European Parliament elections, titled “A sharp right turn”, that there will be “a major shift to the right in many countries”. Anti-European populists are likely to top the polls in nine member states (Austria, Belgium, Czechia, France, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, and Slovakia) and come second or third in another nine countries (Bulgaria, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Portugal, Romania, Spain, and Sweden). The European Council on Foreign Relations predicted: “Inside the European Parliament, a popular right coalition of Christian Democrats, conservatives, and radical right MEPs could emerge with a majority for the first time. This sharp right turn is likely to have significant consequences for European level policies, which will affect the foreign policy choices that the EU can make, particularly on environmental issues, where the new majority is likely to oppose ambitious EU action to tackle climate change”. Hubert Vedrine suggested: “we need courage and time. We can deplore the movement to the right, but we can’t stop immigration overnight. It’s difficult to stop”.

“Rising migration across Europe, including the biggest surge of asylum seekers since the 2015/2016 migrant crisis”, observed the Wall Street Journal (November 25, 2023), “is fueling support for far right and anti-migration parties”, potentially reshaping European politics. Almost 25 years ago, when Joerg Haider’s far right populist Freedom Party won just under 27% of the vote and entered government in Austria, noted Jon Henley, “the shock waves reverberated around Europe. Diplomats visits were cancelled and punitive measures imposed. Not long after, when Jean Marie Le Pen of France’s National Front (now National Rally or RN), reached the national run off, the eventual winner, Jacques Chirac, refused even to debate with the far-right leader, so abhorrent—and abnormal—were his views”. Now, Henley pointed out, “across western Europe far-right parties are advancing, climbing steadily up the polls, shaping the policies of the mainstream right to reflect nativist and popular platforms, and occupying select ministerial roles in coalition governments”. In March, Portugal’s center-right leader Luis Montenegro’s Democratic Alliance won 80 of 230 seats in parliamentary elections. To assume the leadership as prime minister and head of a majority coalition government, the conservative pledged not to include the radical right Chega party in his government, which was founded only five years ago and won 50 seats (The Guardian, March 21, 2024).

“Every five years, like clockwork,” wrote Eddy Wax, “mainstream politicians freak out about the rise of radicals and populists ahead of the European election. But then, the danger suddenly seems to dissipate as the traditional center-left and center-right forces that built the European Union forge coalitions that hold more radical parties at bay”. But, Wax warned, “don’t bank on it this time. In 2024, the right-wing surge in the polls seems bigger and bolder, with one predicting the national right and far right could pick up nearly a quarter of seats in the European Parliament in June”. Even if the center right—currently tipped to come first in the elections—refuses to work with “ever more powerful firebrand fringe parties”, as Wax sees them, “there’s still a significant chance, the far right will, for the first time, be able to influence Europe’s policy agenda. That will enable it to threaten the EU’s sacred values on rule of law and human rights, and block or even overturn major green and climate laws”. Viktor Orban, right-wing prime minister of Hungary, already promised a crowd of cheering supporters in Budapest (BBC, March 15, 2024, Nick Thorpe) that Donald Trump would win the US Presidency in November, and right-wing parties would win the European Parliament elections: “We started this year alone, by the end of it we will be the majority of the world”.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    May 31, 2018
    بعد التنظيم الجديد للعالقات بين اإلتحاد األوروبي و دول إفريقيا، الكاريبي، و المحيط الهادئ المتوقع في شهر فبراير 2020 ،يصبح من الضروري إعادة النظر إلى إطار الشراكة بين الدول األوروبية و اإلفريقية مع طرح اقتراحات تضم عناصر جديدة من أجل تحقيق تعايش جماعي. من بين اإلجراءات الممكنة لتحقيق هذا التعايش: إعطاء األولوية للتعليم، خلق فرص الشغل للشباب عبر .التنمية اإلقليمية ، و تعزيز الشراكة بين القطاع العام و الخاص بمجال البنية التحتية. من جهة أخرى، في بلدان إفريقيا السائرة في طور النمو و الط ...
  • Authors
    May 16, 2018
    He has reserved his page in history. Half a century ago Ernest “Che” Guevara was an icon of a global youth rebellion, a revolutionary pop star for the dreaming romantic generation of  1968- kids of the bourgeois conformist society who never had the courage to risk their lives or time for the oppressed. Instead, the angry restless sympathizers of Cuban and Vietnamese fighters threw stones and molotov cocktails, some smoked pot and shouted their support to Ho Chi Minh, the frail leade ...
  • Authors
    March 15, 2018
    « Revise, Reboot, Rebuild : Strategies for a time of Distrust »: that was this year’s theme for the Brussels Forum, a yearly high-level conference held from March 8th to 10th by the US think tank German Marshall Fund (GMF), partner of the OCP Policy Center who attended the event through its delegation. This meeting of some 400 policymakers, academics and private sector operators is reviewing the relationship between Europe and the United States. Brexit, the Trump administration, the ...
  • Authors
    Youssef Amrani
    December 22, 2015
    La situation géopolitique prévalant actuellement dans le pourtour méditerranéen est difficile et complexe, en raison notamment, de l’apparition d’une nouvelle équation stratégique qui laisse craindre une nouvelle flambée de violence. Dans ce contexte perturbé, le Maroc, sous le leadership de SM le Roi Mohammed VI, s’est engagé dans un processus démocratique, fondé sur une approche inclusive qu’il mène avec foi et détermination. La Méditerranée conserve, certes, une triple vocation ...
  • Authors
    December 21, 2015
    Lors de la douzième rencontre du groupe de la stratégie méditerranéenne tenue à Turin en Décembre, l’échange entre les cultures a été évoqué comme levier de développement de la dimension humaine dans les questions méditerranéennes. Plusieurs intervenants ont présenté cet échange comme une formule permettant de mieux connaitre l’autre et par conséquent de vaincre cette peur de celui que nous ne connaissons pas ou que nous connaissons peu. Il y a certes un problème de perception entr ...
  • December 7, 2015
    The Euro-Mediterranean Partnership was initiated with the aim to build a space of shared prosperity and security among all the countries in the region. The achievement of this objective, however, continues to be challenged by several geopolitical, economic and social factors. In such a context, there is now a greater urgency to adapt the approach and the instruments, thus allowing Euro-Mediterranean partners to seize opportunities towards an effective area of shared stability and pr ...
  • From

    17
    5:30 pm May 2022
    يخصص مركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد حلقة برنامجه الأسبوعي "حديث الثلاثاء" لقراءة في نتائج الانتخابات الرئاسية الفرنسية مع عبد السلام جلدي، باحث في العلاقات الدولية والسياسات العامة بمركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد. أدت الانتخابات الرئاسية الفرنسية لعام 2022 إلى إعادة انتخاب الرئيس المنتهية ولايته إيمانويل ماكرون، على حساب مرشحة التجمع الوطني مارين لوبان، مؤكدة إعادة التشكيل السياسي الذي يميز المشهد السياسي الفرنسي منذ انتخابات 2017، في بلد منقسم أكثر من أي وقت مضى، والذي يواجه، علاوة على ذلك، تحديات اقتصادية وجيوسياسية كبيرة. نعود خلال هاته الحلقة إلى فحص نتائج الانتخابات الرئاسية، تداعياتها المحتملة، فضلاً عن مستقبل ولاية ماكرون الثاني خلال الخمس سنوات المقبلة، وكدى مستقبل العلاقات الفرنسية المغربية، أسئلة وغيرها نناقشها مع عبد السلام جلدي، باحث في العلاقات الدولية ...
  • From

    05
    3:00 pm April 2022
    يخصص مركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد حلقة برنامجه الأسبوعي "حديث الثلاثاء" لمستقبل العلاقات المغربية الاسبانية مع العربي الجعايدي، باحث بارز بمركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد عرفت العلاقة الثنائية المغربية الإسبانية تطوّرًا ملحوظًا مع إعلان الحكومة الإسبانية مساندتها لمبادرة الحكم الذاتي التي يطرحها المغرب لحلحلة النزاع على صحرائه وإثبات سيادة الرباط على أقاليمه الجنوبية. وأتت هذه الخطوة الاسبانية لتحسين العلاقات الثنائية مع جارها الجنوبي ولإعادة بناء العلاقة على أسس سليمة تمكّن البلدين من الانخراط المشترك في مشروع يهدف الى تحقيق علاقة استراتيجية ومتوازنة وإيجابية تتسم بالشفافية ومقاربة متوازنة. فما هي أهم الإشكاليات والتحديات التي تقف أمام تحقيق هذا الهدف؟ نعود خلال هاته الحلقة إلى أهم التحديات التي تقف أمام تحقيق هذا الهدف المنشود والذي يتمثل في تحسين العلاقات الثنا ...
  • From

    10
    5:30 pm March 2022
    Africafé est une émission du Policy Center for the New South qui décrypte l’actualité des organisations africaines et de l’Afrique. A travers de courtes interviews, l’émission tente de proposer d’aborder de manière pédagogique les enjeux des organisations africaines et l’actualité du continent. Dans cet épisode Abdessalam Jaldi international Relations Specialist au Policy Center for the New South, présente les enjeux du dernier sommet UE-Afrique, les principales conclusions et les propositions de refonte de la relation entre les deux continents. ...