Posted By Joshua Keating Share

Austria's anti-immigrant Freedom Party put in a strong showing in Vienna's municipal elections yesterday, setting off a new round of media speculation about the apparent surge of the far right in Europe. Here's the Wall Street Journal

The Freedom Party, which achieved international notoriety in the 1990s under its then-leader, Jörg Haider, won 27.1% of the votes in Vienna, up from 14.8% in 2005, according to a preliminary tally. That put it second only to the Social Democrats, who garnered 44.2%, down from 49.1%.

The election marks a seismic shift in the Alpine country's political landscape. For decades, Vienna, Austria's capital and largest city, has been referred to as das Rote Wien, or "red Vienna," a reference to the Social Democrats' strong grip on the city. Sunday's election was the worst result for the Social Democrats since 1996.

Across Europe, radical parties have scored major gains in recent elections from the Netherlands to Norway and Sweden. Their anti-foreigner message is resonating amid economic uncertainty and fears that Muslims and other minorities cause crime, terrorism and the erosion of national identity.

Though Mr. Haider's popularity helped the Freedom Party into government at the national level in 2000, the party never enjoyed a similar breakthrough in Vienna. It won 27.9% of the vote in the city in 1996, but its support soon dissipated and the party has never been part of the government.

I'm not quite sure I understand why the fact that a party that's been a fixture of Austrian politics for decades came close to equaling a 1996 election result constitutes a "seismic shift." Perhaps Vienna hasn't actually been all that Rote for a while now. And on the national level, the Freedom Party had more success throughout the 1990s under Haider than it has in the post-9/11, post-Great Recession era. 

There certainly seem to be a number of data points to support the narrative of a far-right surge in Europe, including the recent electoral successes in Scandinavia and the Netherlands. But the question should be whether these parties will have any more staying power than the last European anti-immigrant surge -- the late 1990s early 2000s electoral successes of Haider, the Netherlands' Pim Fortuyn and France's Jean Marie Le Pen. It's also possible that the movement draws its support from a constituency that has existed in Western European democracies for decades but hasn't had much success at halting immigration or European integration in a meaningful way. 

The fact that anti-immigrant sentiment increases during times of economic distress isn't really shocking news, and it's true that charismatic populists like Wilders have become savvier about courting this resentment while eschewing the crude, overtly fascist overtones of the old European far right. Moreover, the anti-immigrant right is helped by parliamentary system that encourages single-issue parties as well as center-left and center-right parties whose economic platforms have become increasingly indistinguishable. 

But is the sentiment that drives these parties really something new? And is it strong enough and consistent enough to keep these parties going after figurehead leaders like Wilders and Austria's Heinz-Christian Strache leave the scene? I think the jury's still out. 

EXPLORE:EUROPE, POLITICS
 

BLUE13326

2:21 PM ET

October 11, 2010

New? Anti-foreigner movements

New? Anti-foreigner movements in Europe...ummm, no they're not new. Not at all...

 

SEELE02

6:42 PM ET

October 11, 2010

"The fact that anti-immigrant

"The fact that anti-immigrant sentiment increases during times of economic distress isn't really shocking news"

So how does the author explain the growing tensions and calls for a new rightwing party in Germany - a country that managed to survive the financial crisis better than any other western country, with nearly unbelievable (for a western country right now) GDP growth and a consumer mood better than for the last 2-3 years??? Additionally in Germany criticising foreigners, muslims etc. is a big no-no (for obvious historical reasons). Nevertheless the people of germany seem to have enough of the denial by the left and center parties concering the immigration issue.

Cant it be that these populist right parties are the only ones that talk about these issues? And especially the only ones that also ask questions about the responsibilites of muslims in western societies? Take a look at switzerland: the SVP was the only party (for a long time) that has actually adressed these obvious problems and is now the country's strongest party. Wether the solutions offered by these groups are usefull or not, the mere fact that they are the only ones openly talking about these things is a reason for many people to vote for them.

When writing about european politics, one should get a little more informed about the matter and the discussion in europe.

And yes, the magnitude of this right movement is indeed new. Wether it is european, national or regional elections.

Kind Regards

 

FRENCHCONNECTION

12:51 AM ET

October 12, 2010

the European far-right

is the equivalent of the US tea-baggery and large swaths of the GOP mainstream. The new thing is that GOP-like parties in Europe were so much fringe parties that they were a curiosity, which they aren't today. With a difference that people on the right here would never take people like Sharon Angle, O'Donnell seriously (they wouldn't have an electoral chance), that the Bible-thumping component would be completely counter-productive and that opinion makers like Beck, Limbaugh etc... would be considered as clowns and if they even existed would be rapidly kicked out of networks after defamation and hate speech law suits.

The problem in Europe is not the far right, it's the lefty part of social-democracy, which has failed to come with alternative solutions but still has big audiences This has for effect that the mainstream social-liberals (roughly equivalent of US Democrats) have difficulties in implementing necessary changes.

 

SOKPAARD

10:01 AM ET

October 12, 2010

Xenophobia? It probably goes deeper.

Research at the Vrije Universiteit here in the Netherlands suggests that dislike of non-Western, especially Muslim, immigrants may be merely epiphenomena. Deeper and probably stronger currents under parties like those of Geert Wilders in the Netherlands and Pia Kjaersgaard in Denmark stem from working- and lower-middle class fears that the Welfare State is slowly getting stripped to the barest bones, with no one in the political class left to defend it -- traditional social democratic parties having largely cast their lots with the neoliberals. Newcomers or non-Westerners are often portrayed as not having 'earned' their social entitlements. Helping drive Europe's current rightwing surge, therefore, is "Welfare State Chauvinism".

 

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