A hard-right tidal wave is coming, and outrunning it will be difficult - Gordon Brown
The Guardian Weekly|May 03, 2024
By the time of the European parliament elections in June, this year's rightward ebb in European politics will have turned into a tidal wave. Ultra-nationalist demagogues and populist-nationalists are now leading the polls in Italy, the Netherlands, France, Austria, Hungary and Slovakia, and running second in Germany and Sweden.
Gordon Brown
A hard-right tidal wave is coming, and outrunning it will be difficult - Gordon Brown

There are two hard-right groupings in the European parliament - Identity and Democracy and European Conservatives and Reformists. Between them, they could secure as much as 25% of the June vote. But even more ominously, in almost every part of Europe including Britain, these factions are forcing the hand of the traditional centre-right parties - which, one by one, are capitulating to ever more extreme anti-immigration, anti-trade and anti-environment positions.

The rightward shift is, of course, a western and not just European phenomenon, with Trump 2.0 advocating a far more aggressive protectionist and nationalist agenda than Trump 1.0. But while the US economy roars forward - even if the average American voter does not feel the full benefits - Europe, and especially its industrial engine room, Germany, continues to suffer from near-zero growth and stagnation in terms of living standards. And having lived through a decade of consistently low growth, the continent is now divided between an optimistic but declining minority, who still hold to the expectation that a rising tide lifts all boats, and the growing and more pessimistic majority who now see life as a zero-sum game.

The latter is a mindset that, recognising the economic pie is not growing, leads people to an erroneous conclusion: "I will only do well if someone else does badly." Once embraced, this view is hard to shake.

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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Why Didn't Netflix Do More To Avoid The Baby Reindeer Furore?
The Guardian Weekly

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Picture this
The Guardian Weekly

Picture this

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Hit and miss Goths, glory and plenty of gimmicks
The Guardian Weekly

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It was the most politically charged Eurovision song contest in memory-but it was won by a famously neutral nation. As the glittery dust settles from Saturday night in Malmö, Sweden, here's what we learned

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4 minutos  |
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Rose Boyt, daughter of the artist Lucian Freud, sat for her father three times.Now 65, she has written a remarkable memoir based on diaries she kept while being painted
The Guardian Weekly

Rose Boyt, daughter of the artist Lucian Freud, sat for her father three times.Now 65, she has written a remarkable memoir based on diaries she kept while being painted

ROSE BOYT'S MEMOIR, Naked Portrait, is, in the narrowest sense, her account of sitting for three paintings for her father, Lucian Freud.

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A failure to reckon fully with the Troubles fuels distrust and discord
The Guardian Weekly

A failure to reckon fully with the Troubles fuels distrust and discord

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Believe it or not
The Guardian Weekly

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Raffaella Spone was accused of faking an incriminating video of teenage cheerleaders. She was arrested, outcast and subjected to death threats. The problem? The video wasn't fake after all. She talks for the first time about being the centre of a story that created headlines around the world, yet nothing was as it seemed...

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'HOPELESS AND BROKEN', 'I WORRY ABOUT THE FUTURE MY CHILDREN ARE INHERITING', 'I AM SCARED I DON'T SEE HOW WE CAN GET OUT OF THIS MESS'
The Guardian Weekly

'HOPELESS AND BROKEN', 'I WORRY ABOUT THE FUTURE MY CHILDREN ARE INHERITING', 'I AM SCARED I DON'T SEE HOW WE CAN GET OUT OF THIS MESS'

We asked 380 climate scientists what they felt about the future.

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May 17, 2024