Today’s edition is powered by Medicines for EuropeĮuropean Pharmaceutical Strategy at a crossroads: Independence versus market consolidation? In the meantime, while many will feel queasy about the prospect of a steady diet of divisive identity politics, the right is at least producing ideas, while Europe’s left and liberals appear to offer little beyond minor tweaks to the status quo. The centre-right European People’s Party has tacked to the right on migration in recent months, as have many on the left, for that matter. However, we see signs of a general swing to the right on social policy. Nor are they operating in the same conditions.įor example, the Orbán government’s restrictions on press freedom and civil society, which starve opposition parties of the oxygen of publicity, would be extremely hard to replicate in Western Europe. It seems like a massive stretch to imagine that opposition to transgender rights, abortion, and so-called ‘critical race theory’ is really enough to sustain a viable political movement. Still, there are several major question marks over whether this can become a genuine programme to unite the right.Īside from waging war on migration and what they see as leftist liberalism, not much unites these parties. Orbán may have few friends outside Hungary, but after more than a decade in power, there is no sign that he will be ousted any time soon. The experience of Orbán’s Fidesz government, Trump, and the strains of English, Polish, and Italian nationalism that propelled Boris Johnson, Law and Justice, and Giorgia Meloni to power show that it can be remarkably effective at the ballot box. The calculation is that such parties can build a coalition based on blue-collar social conservatives who feel alienated by the social liberalism adopted by socialist parties and wealthier fiscal conservatives who will never switch their alliance to a leftist party.īut what really unites them is the politics of culture war. The sexual escapades of Trump and Boris Johnson, for one, do not exactly smack of conservative family values. These parties are also happy to embrace protectionism, government handouts and subsidies – concepts unthinkable only two decades ago. This is a different kind of politics from the traditional conservative tenets – the minimised role of the state, low taxes and, in most cases, free markets. Indeed, there is a strong argument that there’s nothing particularly conservative about any of these movements. In ten days, London will host a two-day gathering on National Conservatism, bringing together right-wing politicians and academics from the UK Conservative and US Republican parties with nationalists from Spain, Hungary, Italy and elsewhere. It does not take a genius to figure out that it was Donald Trump he was referring to. “Come back, Mr President” was Viktor Orbán’s rallying cry at the second annual meeting of the US Conservative Political Action Coalition (CPAC) on Thursday (4 May).
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