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  • It's Not The Economy, Stupid

    IT'S NOT THE ECONOMY, STUPID
    Denis MacShane

    The Guardian, UK
    Oct 3 2006

    European politics is febrile and unhappy - and Britain is unlikely
    to be insulated from the dramatic developments taking place.

    Austria has followed Sweden in replacing a government that followed
    Bill Clinton's famous injunction "It's the economy, stupid." The
    arrival of a socialist chancellor, Alfred Gusenbauer, in the grandiose
    Hapsburg palaces from where the small Austrian state is run, follows
    hard on the heels of the replacement of Sweden's social democratic
    government by a new rightwing coalition.

    In both cases, the outgoing governments had complacently patted
    themselves on the back for enjoying the best records in Europe
    for growth, job-creation, inward investment and an overall sense
    of competence. But delivering a strong economic record, it seems,
    is no longer enough to stay in power.

    The new Austrian chancellor, Alfred Gusenbauer, is a solid, not to
    say stolid party apparatchik who has been a tortoise to the flashier
    hare of the outgoing Austrian leader, Wolfgang Schlussel. Not a single
    opinion poll put the Austrian left ahead of their rivals until the
    poll itself on Sunday.

    Those trilling over David Cameron as a new JFK, as if protecting the
    rightist historian Andrew Roberts from a jellyfish sting was on a
    par with Kennedy's heroism in saving his naval comrades after their
    boat was sunk in the second world war, should look at the steady,
    unflashy progress of the new homespun, barely photogenic leaders in
    Austria and Sweden.

    The Austrian upheaval fits into a wider picture of political turmoil
    and rapid electoral changes all over central and eastern Europe. The
    Czech ruling ODS party - chosen by William Hague as the only rightist
    party willing to join the Tories in the new nationalist grouping
    in the EU - has just lost its majority in parliament. The Polish
    government under the Kaczynski twins has seen its majority disappear
    as its extreme rightist and anti-semitic allies can no longer stay in
    government. The Slovakian government is a regional embarrassment with
    governing parties using language about Roma, Jews and the Hungarian
    minority straight out of the 1920s. Meanwhile in Hungary, the prime
    minister struggles to survive after his obscene outburst about telling
    lies to voters.

    This could all be written off as folklorist Danubian eccentricity
    save that the coalition parties in Germany have seen the biggest ever
    slump in their votes in regional and Berlin elections. The big gains
    in Austria were made by the extreme right who won 15% of the votes.

    France faces an election for a new president next April with many
    fearing that the Jew-baiting, EU-hating, xenophobic Jean Marie le Pen
    will get enough votes to derail the mainstream political parties. The
    French left remains pathetically divided. There will be a Troyskyist,
    Communist, Green, Workerist and Anti-Globalisation candidate standing
    against the official socialist party candidate, likely to be Segolène
    Royal.

    In short, European politics is febrile and unhappy. Populist,
    immigrant-blaming and protectionist appeals are finding echoes
    everywhere. The anti-Americanism of the left meets the anti-Europeanism
    of the right and a demagogy of destructive name-calling crowds out
    constructive solutions to today's problems.

    The reason for this is the failure to analyse, let alone come up with
    any political answers to the impact of globalisation. Never in such
    a short period of time - a generation at the most - have so many
    people, so much capital, so many ideas, and so many services and
    products - moved from nation to nation at such speed and with such
    transformatory impact. Almost every fixed relationship - capital and
    labour; men and women; parents and children; employers and workers;
    nature and industry; the citizen and the state - has been required
    to go through monumental change. In the old established democracies
    these centrifugal forces can just be accommodated. In central Europe
    politics, the economy and civil society is neither mature nor confident
    enough to cope with this upheaval.

    Britain is unlikely to be insulated from these dramatic developments.

    One can sense British politics turning inwards, neither thinking
    global, nor acting local. There is just a whiff of Weimar in the air.

    Europe is seen as a problem, not a solution. David Cameron calls
    Washington "simplistic" and rejects cooperation in Europe. Voltaire's
    heritage is being eroded as communitarian politics buries freedom
    of speech in exchange for freedom from being upset. The new Austrian
    chancellor was not keen on the European constitution - hooray! shout
    the Tories - but also is no friend of Turkey joining the EU - the
    one Conservative line that is positive on Europe.

    Austria for the Austrians, like English votes for English laws, has
    simplicity of appeal but is a denial of contemporary reality in which
    national purity is no longer obtainable, and not desirable in any case.

    Meanwhile, President Chirac pleases the crowds on his official visit
    to Armenia by telling the Turks they have to apologise for the 1915
    massacres of Armenians by the Ottomans if Turkey is to join the EU.

    Thus a new populist barrier to making Europe work by including the
    predominately Muslim Turkey is put in place by Mr Chirac in his last
    months in office. Who will blame the Turks if they turn to Iran,
    or Russia and stay in perpetual occupation of Cyprus if all they
    receive from Europe are such patronising instructions?

    Armenia and Austria are thousands of kilometres apart. But the new
    populist, introspective, nation-first politics of Europe coming into
    shape - actively encouraged by David Cameron and William Hague but
    not directly challenged by Labour - bodes ill for the rest of the
    century both in Britain and the rest of Europe.

    --Boundary_(ID_25IHX1XUTEv4mC7hBlYIhA)--
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