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By

Matthew Goodwin And Anthony Painter

Opinion

Extremist threat is not just about the economy, stupid

September 7, 2012 09:14
3 min read

To what extent is the rise of right-wing extremism in Europe, including Golden Dawn in Greece, the Austrian Freedom Party (FPO) and the Party for Freedom in the Netherlands (PVV), due to the financial crisis? Many believe it to be so. Nick Clegg suggested that the mix of economic insecurity and political paralysis that has followed the Eurozone crisis provides "an ideal recipe for an increase in extremism".

Underlying this is an older argument, often wheeled out to explain why Germany turned to the Nazis, and why white Americans reacted violently to the presence of African Americans in southern states. It goes something like this: when resources such as jobs and social housing become scarce, some citizens - particularly those further down the social and economic ladder - feel their position in society is under threat, and so shift to extremist parties that pledge to halt or curb these threats.

True, the modern far-right has been most successful among those who occupy a precarious position - blue-collar workers and the lower middle classes. Yet its rise began long before the collapse of Lehman Brothers. In fact, it was during periods of relative economic stability and growth - in the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s -- that parties like the FPO or Front National in France achieved some of their most impressive results. Furthermore, while their voters tended to be financially insecure, they were generally not unemployed or on benefits.

Much of the coverage of the French elections directly linked support for Marine Le Pen to the Eurozone crisis. Yet her father had been winning impressive levels of support since the mid-1980s, and his strongest performance was in 2002, in an altogether different economic climate.