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pampango

(24,692 posts)
Sat Dec 22, 2012, 10:47 PM Dec 2012

Does Culture or Economics Motivate the European Far-Right? Neither. It's distrust in the political

establishment.

The most obvious thing in research I've seen - and consistent in every country - is that supporters of far-right parties have no trust in the political establishment. The justice system doesn't work. The mainstream parties are comprised of liars, and mainstream media can't be trusted. Out of touch liberal elites take too much of the pie for themselves, and offer spin and politically correct bluster in response. It's neither economics nor culture, but a wider collapse of trust in the system. All the evidence suggests trust in the system is falling. It is that, not austerity, that should cause concern.

First, the supposed rise of the far-right started well before the 2008 economic crises and subsequent austerity measures: it has been going on for at least twenty years.

Second, it is not a given that far-right parties have benefitted for the current malaise. Marine Le Pen polled in the French elections about the same as her father in 2003. Geert Wilders' PVV in the Netherlands lost ground this year, as did the Danish People's Party. Golden Dawn has seen a surge in support, while the English Defence League appears to be getting smaller (although angrier). It's a mixed picture.

Third, it is in the more prosperous parts of Europe that far-right parties appear to being doing well, perhaps trying to protect what they have: Norway - if you count the Norwegian Progress Party; Finland, Denmark, Switzerland, and Austria. And most research, including mine here shows that supporters of radical or far-right parties are not the losers of globalization: average levels of education and employment. When asked, they cite immigration, a lack of integration by minorities, and national identity being under threat as their motivating force.

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/jamie-bartlett/does-culture-or-economics-motivate-the-far-right-_b_2328041.html

Interesting that the author concludes that it is not economics or culture that are the primary motivations for the far-right in Europe but immigration and national identity. Of course that is not too far removed from the "We want our country back" sentiment expressed at tea party rallies.
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