November 07, 2011

David Miliband warns against complacency over rightwing extremism

Former foreign secretary praises Demos report into rise of far right in Europe

David Miliband has joined those warning about the rise of a new wave of far-right nationalist parties across Europe, saying that it is important to keep track of their ascent.

In a rare foray into international politics since his defeat for the Labour party leadership 14 months ago, the former foreign secretary praised a report by the thinktank Demos which revealed a mass of mainly young, male Facebook-based supporters of such groups, who often held vehemently antagonistic views about immigrants and, in particular, Muslims.

"This report is an important antidote to any complacency about rightwing extremism," Miliband told the Guardian. "It shows that discontent with globalisation can fuel the politics of the right as well as the left. The Occupy protests have captured media attention but away from the public eye the hard right is also organising. The only way to defend the gains of globalisation is to understand its most dangerous critics, and this report helps us to do so."

The rise of such parties, which now hold significant parliamentary blocs in well over half a dozen western European countries, from Italy to the Netherlands to Scandinavia, has a particularly personal element for Miliband, whose Jewish immigrant parents fled Nazi Europe.

The Demos report sampled the views of more than 10,000 people who support such parties and street movements on Facebook pages, which for the 24 groups had a combined total of almost 450,000 mainly young fans. The breadth of such hard-right views means they are in danger of "becoming mainstream", warned Emine Bozkurt, a Dutch MEP of Turkish descent who heads the European parliament's anti-racism forum.

She said: "In some countries, for example the Netherlands, it even becomes the majority because mainstream right or centre-right parties are adopting the rhetoric of nationalist-populist parties in an attempt to attract their voters."

Observer

5 comments:

  1. "rise of far right in Europe"

    Though not in the UK thanks to the efforts of Nicker Griffin and that wanker Tommy Robinson.

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  2. First comment is right, it'd be reassuring if other countries' FR movements had gaffe-prone idiots who say things so outrageous even their own leaders have to publicly distance themselves from them.

    Oh, hang on...

    http://www.hs.fi/english/article/True+Finns+MP+Hakkarainen+gets+final+warning+from+parliamentary+group/1135269764911

    http://www.hs.fi/english/article/MP+Hakkarainen’s+latest+gaffe+send+minorities+to+Ă…land/1135269741112

    http://www.hs.fi/english/article/Timo+Soini+to+reprimand+MP+Hakkarainen+again+for+racially+insensitive+remarks/1135266383410

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  3. Like Alan Lake's Final Solution blueprint of a Holocaust for Muslims.

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  4. Milliband and his bunch of New Labour goons can talk. They are shit scared of the Sun and Daily Hatemail and whilst in government they allowed themselves to be manipulated so much so that at the last election, the choice was simple, cuts with Labour and savage cuts with the wally who currently occupies Number Ten! That is simply the reason why fascism is on the rise, as we don't have a strong and confident Left to effectively stick the Tumbleweed in the right place so that the far right and its old-fashioned bullshit withers and dies never to sprout again.

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  5. A couple of years ago, there was some BNP activity in his constituency and a Labour councillor complained in the press about how they exploited poor housing and poverty etc.

    And I remember thinking at the time:

    "Who the hell has been in power for the last 13 years?"

    ReplyDelete