Europe’s nationalist leaders launch year of election hopes

epa05738196 (L-R) Matteo Salvini, Leader of Italian party Lega Nord (Northern League), Harald Vilimsky of Austria's Freedom Party (FPOe), Geert Wilders, Leader of Dutch Party for Freedom (PVV), Marcus Pretzell, Member of the European Parliament for the German party Alternative for Germany (AfD), Marine Le Pen, Leader of French party Front National (FN) and Frauke Petry, Federal Chairwoman of the German party Alternative for Germany (AfD) pose on stage after their speeches at a conference of European right-wing party ENF, Europe Nations and Freedom, in Koblenz, Germany, 21 January 2017. Several European leaders of national right-wing parties will deliver speeches at the conference organized by the German party Alternative for Germany (AfD).  EPA/SASCHA DITSCHER

 

KOBLENZ / AP

French presidential hopeful Marine Le Pen declared on Saturday that 2017 will be the “year of the awakening of the people of continental Europe” as she joined fellow nationalist leaders in Germany at the beginning of a year of high-stakes national elections.
Le Pen was joined by the Netherlands’ Geert Wilders, Matteo Salvini of Italy’s Northern League and Frauke Petry of the four-year-old Alternative for Germany at the gathering of the Europe of Nations and Freedom group in the European Parliament. The mood among delegates was celebratory a day after Donald Trump was sworn in as US president, following a campaign buoyed by anti-establishment and protectionist themes.
Wilders’ anti-Islam Party of Freedom could win the largest percentage of votes in the March 15 Dutch parliamentary election. Le Pen is among top contenders in France’s April-May presidential vote. And in September, Petry’s party hopes to enter the German parliament.
“We are experiencing the end of one world and the birth of another,” Le Pen said. “We are experiencing the return of nation-states.”
The first “real blow to the old order” was last June’s British vote to leave the European Union, she said — followed closely by Trump’s election. The new US president, she said, “will not support a system of oppression” in Europe. Last year saw the awakening of Anglo-Saxon countries, she said, and “2017, I am sure, will be the year of the awakening of the people of continental Europe.” She denounced the EU as “a force of sterilization,” and assailed German Chancellor Angela Merkel — whose name was booed loudly — for allowing in large numbers of migrants. “Everyone sees that this migration policy is a daily disaster,” Le Pen said. Organizers billed Saturday’s meeting, held in a conference hall on the banks of the Rhine river under heavy security, as bringing together “the top politicians of the new Europe.”
Left-wing protesters staged a sit-in outside the hall shouting slogans like “no border, no nation, stop deportation.” Not far away, demonstrators from the global AVAAZ activist group placed statues of Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini and Josef Stalin, among others, in front of the city’s landmark statue of German Kaiser Wilhelm.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend