Similarity of language extends to Outs too. Sometimes the similarity is shameless and laughable, as with Pauline Hanson’s transformation of Donald Trump’s “drain the swamp” into a more Aussie-friendly “drain the billabong”.10 Other similarities betray a deeper, more substantive identity.
Leaders of these parties denounce corruption and out-of-touch elites, frequently using the phrase “{country name} first” as a shorthand way to communicate that idea. Out parties whose leaders have a background in the Left such as Spain’s Podemos, Ireland’s Sinn Fein, and France’s France Insouisme all oppose or want renegotiation of the trade deal TTIP and the EU, just as much as right-wing populists like Nigel Farage, Geert Wilders, and Alternative for Germany’s Frauke Petry. Even the leader of Italy’s broad-tent populist 5 Star Movement, Beppe Grillo, says the EU “is a total failure”.
Ins have often underestimated the Outs to their dismay. One could have counted on the head of a pin the number of serious pundits or analysts who thought that Leave, Trump or Lega would win their elections
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More disturbingly, leaders of Out parties tend to overlook the authoritarian tendencies of many world leaders. Pablo Iglesias, leader of Podemos, has praised Venezuela’s former strongman leader Hugo Chavez and consulted for the Venezuelan government and its autocratic ally, Bolivia. Labour’s Jeremy Corbyn – an Out who, like Donald Trump, has come to lead a major political party – continues to avoid openly condemning Venezuela’s government even after its president, Nicolas Maduro, masterminded the unconstitutional unseating of the country’s freely elected, opposition-dominated, National Assembly. The recent controversy over Corbyn’s laying a wreath at the grave of the Palestinian terrorists who murdered Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympic Games is merely par for his course.
Other Outs make friendly with Russia’s Vladimir Putin. Marine Le Pen visited Putin prior to her presidential campaign, UKIP’s Nigel Farage stoutly defends the Kremlin’s Syrian policy and leaders of other Out parties like Austria’s Hans Christian Stracke and Italy’s Mattias Salvini have signed cooperation pacts with Putin’s United Russia party. Salvini went so far as to say that he hoped Italy would hold “real parliamentary elections, just as open as in your country [Russia]” – a statement that is either laughable or frightening, considering that international observers continue to criticise Russian elections as unfairly tilted toward Putin and his party. Now in power, the Salvini-supported government has called for the return of Russia to the G-7 and a re-evaluation of sanctions imposed after Russia’s annexation of Crimea.
Ins have often underestimated the Outs to their dismay. One could have counted on the head of a pin the number of serious pundits or analysts who thought that Leave, Trump or Lega would win their countries’ most recent elections. The upcoming Swedish election could be the next shock in Europe, as some polls put the populist and anti-immigrant Sweden Democrats – a party unrepresented in parliament just a decade ago – in first place. Should that happen, it would be the first time the Social Democrats did not finish first since 1917.
These continued political failures arise in part because In party leaders initially try to avoid discussing the issues that animate the Outs. The 2010 British general election was notable for the lack of attention paid to immigration, Europe, and the distributional consequences of the post-crash era. The result was a significant rise in support for the working-class-based UKIP and the racist British National Party. This rise became a groundswell as David Cameron’s Conservative-led government ducked serious discussion of these issues once in power – partly because it was in coalition with the Liberal Democrat party led by Nick Clegg, but partly, most suspect, because it also suited the Tory PM who saw himself as the ‘heir to Blair’.
The 2012 American elections were also notable for their lack of serious discussion of trade, immigration, and the intense hardship America’s Great Recession caused. Republican Mitt Romney tried instead to campaign on a standard Right versus Left basis only to discover to his shock that blue-collar voters who disliked incumbent Democrat Barack Obama would nevertheless vote to re-elect him when the alternative conspicuously avoided their concerns.
Ins that recognise the political threat posed by Outs then try to ignore them by working together. When Left and Right work together, as they did in grand coalitions in recent years in Austria, Germany, and the Netherlands, and in an informal pact in Sweden, they generally form common cause without adopting any new policies that give Out parties something of what they want – perhaps hoping their complaints would pass. In no case did those coalitions’ policies stem the political tide flowing to the Outs.
The triumph of the Out parties in the Italian election echoed the surprising rise of Germany’s AfD in the 2017 Bundestag elections, a rise that has continued in this year’s polls following the re-forming of the CDU-SPD grand coalition. Ignoring the Outs’ demands have seemed to merely increase the number of people issuing those demands.
Some nations have begun a third phase of engagement with Outs: adapt. In some countries, In parties have invited Out parties into government – Austria, Norway, Switzerland, and Finland are recent examples, while the right Danish Venstre Party relies on the parliamentary support of the larger Out party, the Danish People’s Party, to govern. The Nordic governments that have done this have offered some concessions, usually on migration, to their Out partners, and this has tended to see support for the Out parties stagnate or fall. It may even moderate the Out parties themselves: Finland’s Finns Party and the DPP have both joined the European Conservative and Reformists.
But doing this does not necessarily reduce the popular demand for Out ideas. The Finns Party split last year, with a new splinter party, Blue Reform, staying in government while the Finns Party itself joined the opposition while calling for more limits of migration. Sometimes the demand for Out ideas causes Out voters to embrace another opposition party that pledges support for Out ideas. This has happened in Norway. Norway’s Center Party nearly doubled its share of the vote in last year’s election by emphasising anti-migrant, anti-free trade, and anti-European integration policies.11
Other political leaders on the Right adapt by adopting some of the Out demands as their own. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte published a full-page ad in late January 2017 in preparation for that country’s March election in which he told migrants to “be normal or be gone”. Rutte’s right VVD party was trailing Out populist Geert Wilders’ PVV when that advert was published, but Rutte’s party went on to win the election by a comfortable margin.12
The right Austrian People’s Party soon followed suit, dumping its leader that May in favour of a young politician, Sebastian Kurz, who came to prominence by campaigning against radical Islam and for greater control of borders. Kurz is now Austria’s Chancellor, governing in coalition with Austria’s Out-ish anti-immigrant Freedom Party.
Many Ins will look askance at these moves. They value immigration and want to take in asylum seekers, often as an expression of their liberal values. They want to continue to ignore or avoid. Swedish Prime Minister Frederik Reinfeldt went so far as to refuse to back down on Sweden’s liberal migration and asylum policies, telling Swedes they should “open their hearts” to mass migration during his 2014 re-election campaign. Swedish voters rejected that plea, giving the Out party Sweden Democrats their highest share of the vote up to that point, nearly 13%,13 and forcing Reinfeldt out of office and out of politics.
Newly elected French President Macron seems to be gambling that Reinfeldt’s key failure was not to generate fast enough growth. Like Reinfeldt, Macron has maintained his support for relatively free movement of peoples, although he has made nods to the Outs by criticising Africa and maintained a policy that stops migrants from the global south at the Italian border. He nevertheless continues to back the current EU structure and was the only candidate to back new free trade agreements. He aims to stimulate the moribund French economy with tax cuts and labour law deregulation, passed by decree if necessary. He and the parliament, controlled by his Republique En Marche party, have five-year terms. If his party can hold together and he can also overcome France’s strong unions he has time to see if his plan can work.
The alternative if it does not may be chilling. Support for Out parties surged in the countries most seriously impacted by the Great Financial Crash14. French voters gave only 50.4% of their votes in the first round to Macron and the other candidates of the traditional In parties. Even that overstates support for Ins: Francois Fillon, the surprise nominee of the main Right party’s primary, was himself close to Putin, argued for EU reform, and supported Thatcherite economics. Le Pen, Melenchon, and a third anti-EU candidate, Daniel Dupont-Aignon, received 45.6% and carried six of metropolitan France’s twelve regions, mostly those with high unemployment and below average incomes. Indeed, France nearly saw two Out candidates – LePen and Melenchon – survive to contest the second round against one another. Macron’s resounding second round victory masks the degree to which France sits on a knife’s edge. A deep recession or second financial crisis could very well put a less threatening Out leader than Le Pen into the Palace Elysees in 2022.
Pray that today, we choose wisely, and work to bring in the Outs before it is too late
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The course for this new political order has yet to be plotted. Time remains for Western leaders to see what is happening and take stock. What leaders ought not to do is assume that these trends are transient and will dissipate any time soon.
Rising global economic integration will continue to put downward pressure on income and opportunities for people in competition with the new workers whose skills are being rewarded with investment by Western multinational companies and with access to Western markets. Falling costs of transport along with the rising populations and continued conflicts in countries like Syria, that do not as of yet benefit from membership in global economic arrangements, will continue to drive their populations West in search of better lives. Economically depressed people tend to become generally depressed people, dropping out of society and losing the sense of citizenship that ties them to others. We are not near the beginning of the end; we are not even at the end of the beginning.
Leaders who close their eyes to these trends will be like the conservatives at the turn of the 19th Century who failed to see that rising education, industrialisation and urbanisation were producing a much greater demand for welfare and for democratic regulation of factory owners. Those leaders ended up being swept aside, often violently, while wiser heads adapted to the times and forged the liberal, capitalistic democracies that we live in today. Adaptation of some sort is our only course forward. Pray that today, we choose wisely, and work to bring in the Outs before it is too late.
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