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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Archie Bland

Wednesday briefing: From Berlin to Helsinki – and even in London - barriers excluding the far right are disintegrating

Friedrich Merz, left, of the mainstream Christian Democratic Union and Alice Weidel of the far right Alternative for Germany (AfD) shake hands ahead of a TV debate in Germany on Sunday.
Friedrich Merz, left, of the mainstream Christian Democratic Union and Alice Weidel of the far right Alternative for Germany (AfD) shake hands ahead of a TV debate in Germany on Sunday. Photograph: Kay Nietfeld/AP

Good morning. Kemi Badenoch has dismissed the idea of any kind of pact between the Conservatives and Reform UK – but, as the last couple of days have made abundantly clear, they are drinking from the same well.

On Monday, Badenoch spoke at a conference organised by the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC), a group co-founded by the Canadian culture warrior Jordan Peterson and funded by GB News owner Paul Marshall, and said that an obsession with “pronouns, diversity policies and climate activism” would ultimately mean that “our country and all of western civilisation will be lost”. Yesterday, Nigel Farage appeared at the same event, and told Peterson that western civilisation was underpinned by “Judeo-Christian culture”. Obsessed with western civilisation, this lot.

The relationship between the traditional and upstart populist branches of the right has a particular flavour in Britain, where our voting system has always meant that political “firewalls” seem a little exotic. Still, the muddying of our domestic waters is also an illustration of a point that is particularly urgent in the light of JD Vance’s intervention in European politics last week: from London to Berlin and all over the continent, the old dividing lines were breaking down before the American vice-president had anything to say about it.

For today’s newsletter, I spoke to John Kampfner, a Guardian contributor and author of In Search of Berlin: The Story of a Reinvented City, about why firewalls are failing – and whether the mainstream can do anything about it. Here are the headlines.

Five big stories

  1. Ukraine war | President Donald Trump has criticised Volodymyr Zelenskyy, saying he was “disappointed” that the Ukrainian leader complained about being left out of talks between the US and Russia over ending the Ukraine war. Speaking after preliminary talks between Moscow and Washington, he also appeared to blame Ukraine for Vladimir Putin’s invasion.

  2. Inflation | UK inflation accelerated to 3% in January, up from 2.5% in December, a larger increase than city economists had expected.

  3. Health | Life expectancy improvement is stalling across Europe with England experiencing the biggest slowdown. Experts are blaming the development on an alarming mix of poor diet, mass inactivity and soaring obesity.

  4. Energy | Millions of households face a greater than expected increase to their energy bills of about 5% from April after a slump in Europe’s gas storage levels caused market prices to climb, according to analysts. The average gas and electricity bill for a typical household in Great Britain is expected to rise by £85 from April to £1,823 a year under the energy regulator’s price cap.

  5. Water industry | Thames Water has won court approval for an emergency debt package worth up to £3bn that should stave off the collapse of Britain’s biggest water company for at least another few months. Thames, which has 16 million customers and 8,000 employees, is on the verge of collapse, with debts of about £19bn.

In depth: “The firewall has become an article of faith in many places”

“We do not have to agree with everything or anything people say,” JD Vance told the Munich security conference last week. “But when political leaders represent an important constituency it is incumbent on us to listen.”

With that, he stuck an American oar firmly into European political waters – and provided a huge boost to those parties on the far right that have long been shut out of power across Europe by “firewalls”, or “cordons sanitaires” – a rule against any political cooperation among mainstream parties even if it might be in their short-term interests. And while his observations will have seemed self-evidently true to his own domestic audience, they had a very different reception in capitals on this side of the Atlantic.

The reason that Vance’s remarks cause such alarm is not that they introduced a novel idea to European politics – but because they gave momentum to a shift that is already well under way. “The door has been ajar, but he’s blown it open,” John Kampfner said. “That reality is dawning on everyone.”

***

UK | Reform’s ideas now thoroughly mainstream

In the UK, the first-past-the-post electoral system has historically left smaller parties on the sidelines without any need for a mainstream strategy against them. But here, too, the recent rise of Reform UK and the Conservatives’ attempt to fend it off have meant that even the limited firewall on ideas that originate on the far right has been crumbling. At the ARC conference, Badenoch and Michael Gove appeared on the same bill as Peterson, Farage, and terminally online pundits like Konstantin Kisin, who this week told former Spectator editor Fraser Nelson that Rishi Sunak isn’t English because he’s “a brown Hindu”.

Conferences like this are one mechanism for the blurring of previously ironclad distinctions between the rival branches of the right; so are media outlets that treat them as equals, and the bald electoral arithmetic that leaves the Tories panicking about a Reform wipeout at the next election.

“There is a danger that the UK is complacent about the idea that their system doesn’t allow for extremes,” John said. As he also notes, it is much too simple to say that the impact of Reform is confined to the Conservative party – as the Labour government’s recent media blitz to demonstrate toughness on immigration makes clear.

***

Germany | Could Vance’s intervention backfire?

In the most recent polling ahead of Sunday’s election, the conservative bloc led by the Christian Democrats is on 27%, with the far-right AfD in second place on 20% and the incumbent centre-left Social Democrats in third on 17%. The mainstream candidates were outraged by Vance’s decision to meet with the AfD leader, Alice Weidel, in Munich but not with the chancellor, Olaf Scholz. The Christian Democrat leader and likely next chancellor, Freidrich Merz, accused the US of “interfering quite openly” in German politics.

“There is a sense that the dangers now facing Germany are so great that the differences between the mainstream parties look much smaller,” John said. “If Merz and the others besides the AfD have a chance to form a coalition, it will be incumbent on them to negotiate something quickly and to do some serious things on the economy and security to demonstrate their credibility.”

Merz has also campaigned on a platform that appears heavily influenced by the AfD’s success on immigration – and, as John points out in his contribution to this piece, recently leaned on AfD support in an attempt to push through a tough migration bill. “Not even the Greens in Germany, who are the most pro-migration party, are putting up much of a defence,” John said. “That’s partly because the principled issues around migration have become mingled with questions of competence. People feel that there has been a failure to enforce the law as it stands.” That may mean that a managerial failure opens the door for a much deeper ideological shift.

At the same time, it is not clear that interventions from Vance – and Elon Musk, who has endorsed the AfD and interviewed Alice Weidel on X – have necessarily helped their cause. (We might think of Barack Obama’s warning that the UK would have to go to “the back of the queue” for a US trade deal in the event of Brexit.) “The sale of Teslas has plummeted,” John pointed out. “It may be that the ostentatious American endorsement cuts both ways. But we haven’t got the answer to that question yet.”

***

Firewalls across Europe | A ‘vicious cycle’ across the continent

Austria’s Freedom party has been in negotiations to form the country’s first far-right-led government after it won national elections in September, although a recent breakdown in talks means that new elections now look likely. In Sweden, the Sweden Democrats are not formally a part of the government but prop up the governing conservative coalition and exert considerable influence over migration policy.

In the Netherlands, the anti-Islam candidate Geert Wilders was kept out of the cabinet despite his PVV party winning the most seats – but PVV holds five of 16 cabinet posts, including the asylum and migration role. Giorgia Meloni is Italy’s prime minister with the support of a coalition that includes her own far-right Brothers of Italy party but also the more conventional Forza Italia – and she is now accepted on the international stage. And in Finland, the Finns – who have compared immigrants to “parasites” and want to ban undocumented migrants from receiving healthcare – hold seven of 19 ministerial positions.

It is worth recognising that all of these parties have distinct national characters, and that Meloni’s politics, say, are different from Alice Weidel’s in important ways. “Meloni and Marine Le Pen in France regard the AfD as too rightwing for them, which is why they’re in a different grouping in the European parliament,” John said. “But the essence of the phenomenon is the same everywhere.”

This piece by Jon Henley from earlier this month provides a useful anatomisation of a “vicious cycle” getting repeated again and again. As a radical right party gains more seats, the mainstream shifts to close off the threat. But that just reinforces the salience of immigration as an issue and a sense that the fringe party is now influential. “When moderate parties rule out cooperation with the radical right citizens know … a vote for the far right is wasted,” Guardian Europe columnist Nathalie Tocci argues. “But when they wink at the far right, that disincentive evaporates. And voters tend to prefer the original to the copy.”

***

The future | Serious questions over whether firewalls can hold

There are some countries where firewalls are still intact. In Belgium, even as a firmly rightwing coalition formed, the nationalist Vlaams Belang party was excluded despite making significant electoral gains. In France, Le Pen’s National Rally is the largest party in parliament but has been excluded from government.

But few would bet against National Rally finally breaking through at the next presidential election – and prime minister Francois Bayrou’s comments that many French people feel “submerged” by immigration have been seen as indication of the influence they wield from opposition.

There is a bleak but reasonable question, too, about whether firewalls are really fit for purpose if far-right parties are consistently getting 15-20% in elections. “The firewall has become an article of faith in many places – do you believe in it, yes or no; are you a good person, yes or no,” John said. “And there’s no doubt that the American motivation for raising it is thoroughly malign. I certainly think that not forming coalitions with the likes of the AfD remains the least of all evils, and that rule certainly needs to remain. But whether we like it or not, the Vance argument that there is a democratic deficit has more resonance now than it did a few years ago.”

What else we’ve been reading

  • Beast Games, Amazon’s garish attempt at a real-life Squid Game is the latest convergence between YouTube and TV. The dystopian competition mirrors the loud, frenetic and overwhelming style of content you might find on the video-sharing platform – and viewers are loving it. Or, at the very least, they’re tuning in. Adrian Horton incisively unpacks the move towards “value-neutral entertainment over art”. Nimo

  • Angela Giuffrida has a shocking report on how toxic waste dumped by the mafia is behind a spike in cancer rates near Naples. “The silence stinks more than the rubbish,” one activist says. “Half of my family has been decimated by cancer.” Archie

  • There is plenty of information out there that demonstrates the various ways in which the NHS is failing. This Guardian video report looks at what those figures mean in reality for one GP in a medical practice in the north-east of England. “Fix poverty, fix society and actually you fix a lot of health,” Dr Paul Evans says. Nimo

  • I loved the author Olivia Laing’s piece for Vittles about “the right to eat badly”, and why Waitrose pumpkin and pine nut tortellini is the only acceptable sustenance when she’s working deeply on a book. Archie

  • As political parties across Europe shift to the right, fuelling anti-immigrant rhetoric, Spain has taken a different path, embracing a more open approach to immigration. In her insightful report, Ashifa Kassam explores how this progressive stance has not only had cultural benefits but also driven remarkable economic growth. Nimo

Sport

Football | Celtic nearly forced extra time with a heroic performance in the second leg of their Champions League playoff against Bayern Munich before Alphonso Davies’ injury time goal for the home side saw them scrape a 3-2 aggregate win. Meanwhile, Feyenoord pulled off a surprise 2-1 aggregate win against AC Milan.

Tennis | An emotional Emma Raducanu was knocked out of the Dubai Tennis Championships by Karolina Muchova 7-6 (6), 6-4 in a hard-fought second-round showdown.

Formula One | Max Verstappen has accused the Formula One governing body, the FIA, of failing to focus on the issues that matter after what he believes is an irrelevant crackdown on swearing. The FIA recently announced rule amendments that will impose heavy fines for swearing and may even lead to race bans.

The front pages

The Guardian’s top story is “US and Russia to seek ‘economic opportunities’ after Ukraine war”, while the Financial Times has “US and Russia hail detente as path to rapid ending of Ukraine conflict”. “UK on collision course with Russia over peacekeeping troops in Ukraine” says the i while the Telegraph splashes with “Zelensky could fall as price of peace”. The Times looks to Biggles: “Typhoons” – as in the fighter planes – “may help to keep peace in Ukraine”. “Tory anger at judge who said criticising our ruling was ‘unacceptable’” – that’s the Daily Mail while the Mirror has an interview with one of the bereaved families in the Southport stabbings: “We were so happy, we had everything”. The Metro reports on “Debt-ridden Thames Water’s £3bn bailout”. “‘Our blood was boiling’ … farmers’ anger at talks” – no progress on inheritance tax in the Express.

Today in Focus

Will British troops be sent to Ukraine?

Keir Starmer says he is willing to deploy British forces to Ukraine as part of a peace agreement. But are they prepared? Dan Sabbagh reports

Cartoon of the day | Jon Davis

The Upside

A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad

The inaugural “Hostel Hoolie” in Braemar in the Cairngorms brought 40 women together for a weekend of adventure, camaraderie and personal challenge. The event offered trail running, hillwalking, cycling, yoga, and even a woodland sauna. Despite wild weather, spirits remained high, and evenings were spent by the fire, in the local pub or braving icy dips. The weekend highlighted a growing trend of women, particularly those in their 30s and beyond, seeking adventure in a non-competitive, community-driven environment. Organisers aim to challenge societal notions of ageing, proving that strength and ambition don’t fade with time. Alice Lemkes of the Adventure Syndicate, which co-hosted the event, says: “When women get together in the outdoors, the energy is just so incredible. It’s a lovely, positive, reinforcing loop.”

Bored at work?

And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow.

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