Connect with us

World

‘Significant win’ for Brussels as France, Slovenia back pro-EU leaders

Published

on

‘Significant win’ for Brussels as France, Slovenia back pro-EU leaders

Brussels breathed a sigh of aid on Sunday night as voters in France and Slovenia shunned nationalists to again pro-EU leaders.

Congratulatory messages from throughout the 27 nation bloc abounded for Macron, who beat far-right chief Marine Le Pen within the second spherical with 58.54% of the vote to 41.46%.

Brussels chief Ursula von der Leyen declared herself wanting to proceed to “transfer France and Europe ahead” along with the French chief, whereas Olaf Scholz, Chancellor of Germany — whose nation’s shut cooperation with France is usually described because the EU’s “motor” — said French voters had “despatched a powerful dedication to Europe”.

EU Council President Charles Michel provided Macron a “bravo” on Twitter, including that “in these troubled instances, we want a powerful Europe and a France absolutely dedicated to a extra sovereign and strategic European Union”, whereas Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi said his re-election is “nice information for all of Europe”.

France: ‘Formidable challenge for Europe’

The 44-year-old French chief is an unabashed EU fanatic and celebrated his first-ever electoral victory in 2017 to the tune of Ode to Pleasure, the EU’s official anthem.

Advertisement

However his pursuit of additional integration and unity in a number of domains together with in defence and industrial sovereignty in addition to geopolitical positions on Russia and in the direction of enlargement had at instances ruffled feathers throughout European capitals. However the COVID-19 pandemic and the conflict in Ukraine have quietened a few of his detractors.

In his quick victory speech on Sunday, the re-elected president talked about Europe solely twice to thank voters who “positioned their belief in me to result in our challenge for a extra impartial France and a stronger Europe”.

He added that they’d “chosen a humanist challenge, bold for the independence of our nation, for our Europe”.

For Tara Varma, Head of the Paris workplace of the European Council on International Relations (ECFR) suppose tank, “Macron’s victory means the pursuit of an bold challenge for Europe”.

“He will likely be advocating to double down on the European sovereignty agenda: on tech, on defence, on preventing financial coercion,” she added.

Advertisement

She pressured nonetheless that “Macron now wants to regulate his technique relating to defending its European agenda. He ought to try for a extra inclusive, participatory Europe.”

Eric Maurice, the pinnacle of the Brussels workplace of the Robert Schuman Basis, expects that the precedence for Macron will now be the conflict in Ukraine and its penalties for the bloc.

“The questions for Europe: Defence and learn how to curb inflation? The right way to get out of oil and Russian gasoline? The query of sanctions additionally on Russia. After which, extra particularly, France presides over the Council of the European Union. There are specific initiatives to be carried out, notably the query of the carbon mechanism on the borders for the local weather transition,” he defined to Euroonews.

Slovenia: ‘Vital win for democracy’

In the meantime, a small political earthquake occurred in Slovenia the place the citizens ousted the right-wing populist Janez Jansa in favour of Robert Golob, a relative political novice on the helm of a newly-rebranded inexperienced formation.

His Freedom Motion, which polls had put neck and neck with the ruling social gathering within the run-up to the election, ended up capturing 34.5% of ballots vs 23.6% for Jansa’s Social Democratic Celebration (SDS).

Advertisement

“I consider that the Freedom Motion social gathering’s victory is a big win for democracy within the conflict of liberal and intolerant forces that Europe is at the moment experiencing,” Gosia Piaskowska, programme assistant within the European Energy Programme on the European Centre for International Relations (ECFR), a suppose tank, informed Euronews.

“It additionally exhibits an vital counter mobilisation to the undemocratic, far-right ideologies which have been rising to prominence in European politics,” she added.

John O’Brennan, Jean Monnet Chair of European Integration, concurred, labelling Golob’s victory as “simply as fascinating and vital, doubtlessly because the French consequence, as a result of right here we had a Viktor Orban like determine in Prime Minister Janez Jansa, defeated very comprehensively and considerably unexpectedly.”

“It’s no less than the third large defeat for populist right-wing leaders in Europe over the past six months, together with that of Boyko Borisov in Bulgaria and Mr Babish in Czechia. So, you recognize, you place these issues collectively, I feel you’ll be able to see that the centre in Europe is probably way more sturdy than individuals had anticipated it to be,” he informed Euronews.

Jansa had been accused of weakening the rule of legislation in his nation with repeated assaults on impartial media, civil society and the judiciary, together with by introducing legal guidelines that will in apply have sheltered fraudsters of EU funds from felony prosecution.

Advertisement

In his victory speech, Golob, a former state secretary for power and photo voltaic power skilled, mentioned that “our objective of bringing freedom to the nation has been achieved” whereas his social gathering’s vice-president Marta Kos enthused that small japanese nation “won’t disappoint” the EU anymore.

“Slovenia will likely be an excellent stronger pillar of those partnerships. You’ll by no means hear the phrase intolerant democracy from our mouths, there is just one democracy and we are going to re-establish it,” she mentioned.

For Piaskowska, “Rober Golob’s pro-European and environmentalist agenda might doubtlessly shift Slovenia’s function within the European Union from a troublemaker to a outstanding advocate for local weather motion and rule of legislation.”

But, maybe on account of France’s financial and geopolitical would possibly which captured consideration, few congratulatory messages have surfaced on social media.

Slovenia’s consultant on the Fee, Janez Lenarcic, in control of Disaster Administration, and the European Civil Safety and Humanitarian Help, was among the many few who provided his “congratulations to Robert Golob”.

Advertisement

“I sit up for working with the longer term authorities – for a profitable and revered Slovenia, which will likely be a powerful advocate of the elemental European values,” he wrote on Twitter.

The Freedom Motion is more likely to strike a coalition cope with smaller centre-left teams.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

World

Rule of law protests greet new Dutch government at swearing-in

Published

on

Rule of law protests greet new Dutch government at swearing-in

A group of protesters watched from behind the fences at Huis ten Bosch Palace as a new Dutch cabinet was sworn in.

ADVERTISEMENT

Around 20 Amnesty International activists participated in a demonstration in The Hague out of concern for the rule of law. 

Dutch democracy is in danger, those gathered Tuesday morning said as the new Dutch government was being sworn in.

“Parties will soon enter the government, one of which does not even have members [PVV],” said one demonstrator, “Parties that sow hatred and exclude large groups of people in society.” 

“We shouldn’t normalise that. It is not normal. We are speaking out, and we will continue to speak out.” 

The group had awaited new Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof, along with incoming ministers and state secretaries, at the back entrance of the palace. However, the politicians arrived at the front entrance instead, so the group missed them. 

Advertisement

The protestors failed to interrupt the government’s family photo, which started ten minutes earlier than planned, meaning they arrived just too late.  

Schoof, the former head of the Dutch intelligence agency and counterterrorism office, signed an official royal decree on Tuesday to uphold his duties as the country’s prime minister. 

The 67-year-old was installed alongside 15 other ministers who make up the country’s right-leaning coalition. 

The four parties in the coalition are Geert Wilders’ Party for Freedom (PVV), outgoing Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s centre-right People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy, the populist Farmer Citizen Movement and the centrist New Social Contract party. 

Wilders’ far-right anti-immigration PVV party had won the largest share of seats in the Netherlands’ elections last November. However, it took Wilders 223 days to find enough allies to form a government. 

Advertisement
Continue Reading

World

UK's Sunak hunts for votes among the robots, at 4:50 a.m.

Published

on

UK's Sunak hunts for votes among the robots, at 4:50 a.m.
Badly lagging in the race to win Britain’s election, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak went hunting for votes among whirling robots in a retail distribution centre on Tuesday, kicking off his first campaign stop of the day before 5 a.m. (0400 GMT).
Continue Reading

World

France's right-wing National Rally looks to seize on recent electoral gains

Published

on

France's right-wing National Rally looks to seize on recent electoral gains

With the ultimate outcome still up in the air, France’s fiercely anti-immigration National Rally and opponents of the long-taboo far-right party scrambled Monday to capitalize on an indecisive first round of voting in surprise legislative elections.

Round one on Sunday propelled the National Rally closer than ever to government but also left open the possibility that voters could yet block its path to power in the decisive round two. France now faces two likely scenarios in what promises to be a torrid last week of high-stakes campaigning.

Strengthened by a surge of support that made it the round-one winner but not yet the overall victor, the National Rally and its allies could secure a working majority in parliament in the final round next Sunday. Or they could fall short, stymied at the last hurdle by opponents who still hope to prevent the formation of France’s first far-right government since World War II.

RIVALS MOVE TO BLOCK FRANCE’S RIGHT-WING NATIONAL PARTY’S ELECTION MOMENTUM

Both scenarios are fraught with uncertainty for France and its influence in Europe and beyond.

Advertisement

“Just imagine the image of France — the country of human rights, the country of enlightenment — which suddenly would become a far-right country, among others. This is inconceivable,” said Olivier Faure, a Socialist who comfortably held onto his legislative seat.

The far right tapped into voter frustration with inflation and low incomes and a sense that many French families are being left behind by globalization. National Rally leader Marine Le Pen’s party campaigned on a platform that promised to raise consumer spending power, slash immigration and take a tougher line on European Union rules. Its anti-immigration agenda has contributed to many French citizens with immigrant backgrounds feeling unwelcome in their own country.

Getting 289 or more lawmakers in the 577-seat National Assembly would give Le Pen an absolute majority and the tools to force President Emmanuel Macron to accept her 28-year-old protege, Jordan Bardella, as France’s new prime minister.

Such a power-sharing arrangement between Bardella and the centrist president would be awkward and invite conflict. Macron has said he will not step down before his second term expires in 2027.

Getting close to 289 seats might also work for Le Pen. By promising posts in the government, she may win over enough new lawmakers to her side.

Advertisement

A National Rally government in France would be an additional triumph for far-right and populist parties elsewhere in Europe that have steadily carved out places in the political mainstream and taken power in some countries, including Hungary. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán will hold the European Union’s rotating presidency for the next six months.

Supporters of French far right leader Marine Le Pen react after the release of projections based on the actual vote count in select constituencies , Sunday, June 30, 2024 in Henin-Beaumont, northern France. French voters propelled the far-right National Rally to a strong lead in first-round legislative elections Sunday and plunged the country into political uncertainty, according to polling projections. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)

But the first round of the French vote was also sufficiently undecided to offer up the alternative possibility that France’s complex, two-round system could also leave no single bloc with a clear and workable majority.

That would plunge France into unknown territory.

However, Le Pen’s opponents still view that scenario as more appealing than victory for her party, which has a history of racism, xenophobia, antisemitism and hostility toward France’s Muslims — as well as historical ties to Russia and a more adversarial attitude toward the EU.

Advertisement

“We are faced with a ‘Trumpization’ of the French democracy,” warned lawmaker Sandrine Rousseau, an ecologist also reelected in round one. “The second round will be absolutely crucial.”

The election, made intense by the high stakes and compressed time frame, has overshadowed preparations for Paris to host the Olympic Games, which open in less than a month.

Candidates who did not win outright in round one but qualified for round two have until 6 p.m. Tuesday to decide whether to stay in the race or withdraw. By pulling out, opponents of the National Rally might divert votes to other candidates better positioned to beat the far right next Sunday.

Some candidates announced of their own accord that they were stepping aside, making a defeat of the National Rally their top priority. In other cases, party leaders set the direction, saying they would withdraw candidates in some districts in hopes of blocking Le Pen’s path to power. She inherited her party, then called the National Front, from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, who has multiple convictions for racist and antisemitic hate speech.

Overall, the National Rally and its allies won a third of the nationwide vote Sunday, official results showed. The New Popular Front, a left-wing coalition of parties that joined together in the quick, three-week campaign to beat the far right, got 28% and was followed in third place by Macron’s centrist camp with 20%. But the 577 seats are elected by districts. So while nationwide results provide an overall picture of how each camp fared, they do not indicate exactly how many seats the groups will get in the end.

Advertisement

Bardella urged voters to give him a majority, saying they face a choice between left-wing “incendiaries” who pose “an existential threat” to France and his party’s offer of a “responsible break” with Macron’s era.

Support for the National Rally and the New Popular Front was so strong that they both won more than 30 seats outright on Sunday by taking more than 50% of the vote in some districts. That means there will be no second round in those districts.

Turnout — at nearly 67% — was the highest since 1997, arresting nearly three decades of deepening voter apathy for legislative elections and, for a growing number of French people, politics in general.

Macron dissolved the National Assembly and called the snap election on June 9, after a stinging defeat at the hands of the National Rally in French voting for the European Parliament. The deeply unpopular and weakened president gambled that the far right would not repeat that success when the country’s own fate was in the balance.

But Macron’s plan backfired. He is now accused, even by members of his own camp, of having opened a door for the National Rally by calling voters back to the ballot box, especially when so many are angry over inflation, the cost of living, immigration and at Macron himself.

Advertisement

If the National Rally can form a government, it has promised to dismantle many of Macron’s key domestic and foreign policies, including his pension reform that raised the retirement age. It also says it would stop French deliveries of long-range missiles to Ukraine in the war against Russia.

National Rally opponents fear for civil liberties if the party takes power. It plans to boost police powers and curtail the rights of French citizens with dual nationality to work in some defense, security and nuclear-industry jobs. Macron himself warned that the far right could set France on a path to civil war.

Continue Reading

Trending