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Europe In A Tail Spin - Analysis

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  • Europe In A Tail Spin - Analysis

    EUROPE IN A TAIL SPIN - ANALYSIS
    Rajeev Sharma

    Eurasia Review
    http://www.eurasiareview.com/17052012-europe-in-a-tail-spin-analysis/
    May 17 2012

    The debt-ridden European continent is in a tail spin. Winds of change
    are sweeping the world's smallest but richest continent. Much of this
    has to do with political changes through elections where economic
    issues, rather than politics, terrorism, defence or foreign policy,
    were the main deciding factors.

    As governments from Ireland to Italy fell in the recent past in a
    wave of anger over austerity, six European countries - France, Greece,
    Germany, Serbia, Italy and Armenia - held elections on May 6, 2012.

    The nature of elections ranged from presidential to parliamentary to
    state-level to merely municipal. Here is a quick look at what happened
    at these places.

    Eurozone In France, Socialist challenger Francois Hollande defeated
    incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy for the presidency by capitalizing on anger
    over austerity measures. Sarkozy is expected to transfer power to
    Hollande on May 14. In a nut shell, the ascendance of Hollande as the
    new French president implies that the Socialist-ruled France will now
    push for a more stimulus-minded approach to the financial crisis in
    France and the rest of Europe.

    In Greece, the electorate punished the two main parties in
    parliamentary elections and Alexis Tsipras's anti-austerity Syriza
    group finished a shock second place. Tsipras said the mammoth rescue
    plan should be renegotiated from scratch. The leader of the Left-wing
    coalition pledged to form a government committed to tearing up the
    terms of his country's "barbaric" 130 billion euro bailout deal,
    as political paralysis threatened to grip the country.

    In Germany, Europe's number one economic power, the Pirate Party,
    which calls for copyright law to be radically reformed or abolished,
    won a third victory in state elections when the party took 6 seats
    with 8.2 per cent of the popular vote in the small Northern state of
    Schleswig-Holstein. The result marks the third straight election win
    for the Pirates, which have moved from fringe party to mainstream
    movement in less than a year. The Pirates won four seats in state
    elections in the Saarland in March and took 15 parliamentary seats
    in Berlin's state elections last year. The Pirates are expected to
    do well in a fourth state parliament on May 13 when elections are
    held in Germany's most populous state, North-Rhein Westphalia.

    In Serbia, opposition Progressive Party won a narrow victory in
    elections as leaders battled over whether the Balkan country's future
    lies with the European Union or further east. The Progressive Party
    of Tomislav Nikolic, who favors economic and political support from
    Russia, took 24 percent of the vote and the Democrats of President
    Boris Tadic, who won Serbia's candidacy for European Union entry, had
    22.09 percent. The decision on who will build a new Cabinet will be
    made once Tadic and Nikolic face off in a May 20 presidential runoff.

    The final poll result may affect Serbia's relations with the European
    Union (EU) as well as Kosovo.

    In Italy, the grassroots Five Star movement of maverick Italian
    comedian Beppe Grillo and Italy's left made the biggest gains in local
    polls when austerity-weary voters punished conservative ex-premier
    Silvio Berlusconi's party and its ally. The elections were held in
    942 towns and cities and the biggest gainer was Grillo, who mocks
    politicians and has called for Italy to leave the euro. This was
    Italy's first election since Premier Mario Monti was elected by the
    Italians that he would save Italy from its debt crisis.

    In Armenia, a political party loyal to President Serzh Sargsyan won
    the most votes in a 131-seat parliamentary election, a result that
    tracked closely with a pattern in other post-Soviet elections: the
    parties in power tend to stay in power. The election was the first
    since rioting broke out in Armenia four years ago to protest the
    election of Sargsyan, Armenia's third president since independence.

    The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe criticized
    that election as flawed.

    Of all European states that went to polls on May 6, the French
    presidential election is undoubtedly the most important and needs to
    be discussed at length. The French have elected a Socialist for the
    first time in 24 years. It also means that Sarkozy enters the history
    books as only the second president, after Valery Giscard d'Estaing,
    in 1981, to fail to win a re-election bid under the Fifth Republic.

    The victory of Francois Hollande will have far-reaching and all-round
    implications for the world in such diverse areas as Europe's debt
    crisis, the Afghanistan war, the Iran standoff and global diplomacy.

    Probably what sealed Hollande's victory and defeat of the present
    incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy was his zany idea of levying a 75 percent
    income tax for the "very rich" and his pledge to hike taxes on
    companies that distribute profits to shareholders instead of investing
    in their business.

    In contrast, Sarkozy had pledged to reduce France's overall tax burden,
    already among the highest in the world, though he proposed higher
    sales tax. Hollande's unusual proposal triggered angry remarks by
    netizens who said it would ensure that all the super-rich people of
    France shift base to the United States along with their companies,
    thus solving the US economic crisis in one go and pushing France
    deeper into the economic morass. Hollande is expected to push for
    a more stimulus-minded approach to the financial crisis in France
    and the rest of Europe and reshape the debate in the 17-nation
    Eurozone by resorting to more cost-cutting to bring down debts and
    government-sponsored stimulus to revive growth.

    Sarkozy's defeat may have both immediate and long term political
    implications for (i) France as it may trigger a succession battle
    between the socialists and the far right; and (ii) the world as he
    would undoubtedly be far less US-friendly than Sarkozy, the most
    America-friendly French leader in a half-century. Sarkozy's stout
    support to Washington on Iran and Syria will be diluted by Hollande.

    The new President may also reverse many other foreign policy decisions
    taken by Sarkozy. He is likely to reduce France's military presence
    in Afghanistan (which was upped by Sarkozy) and bring back French
    troops from Afghanistan. Hollande would also be inevitably pursuing
    a hands-off approach by decreasing France's military or diplomatic
    muscle flexing abroad. Sarkozy routinely did this, the last example
    being taking up a major role in NATO's air campaign over Libya that
    helped oust dictator Muammar Gaddafi.

    The immediate task before Hollande would be to name a prime minister,
    something that he consistently refused to do all through the election
    campaign. He may name Jean-Marc Ayrault for the post not only because
    he is an important leader of the Socialist parliamentary group but
    also because he has good links to Germany. High on Hollande's priority
    would be to work closely with German Chancellor Angela Merkel who
    supported his candidature.

    So what do European election results denote? The results show that
    extremist parties on both the far-Left and the far-Right are on
    the rise, apparently exploiting the economic turmoil that has swept
    across the entire Europe. The co-opting of extreme solutions to the
    Muslim immigration issues also seems to be playing a part. The latest
    political trend in Europe seems to be the far-Left and far-Right
    empowerment which, as was the case in the wake of World War I,
    seems less about extremist parties' identification with their goals
    and values and more to do with punishing mainstream candidates for
    perceived mistakes.

    (The writer is a New Delhi-based journalist-author and strategic
    analyst.)

    SAAG is the South Asia Analysis Group, a non-profit, non-commercial
    think tank. The objective of SAAG is to advance strategic analysis and
    contribute to the expansion of knowledge of Indian and International
    security and promote public understanding.

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