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Why Is the Right Doing So Well in Europe?For a start, they don't spend like drunken sailors.

Gordon Brown. Click image to expand.We've been waiting and waiting, but the widely predicted European backlash—against capitalism, free markets, and the right—has never come. There are no demands for Marxist revolution, no calls for nationalization of industry, not even a European campaign for what the Obama administration calls "stimulus"—a policy more colloquially known as "massive government spending."

On the contrary, in last weekend's European parliamentary elections, capitalism triumphed, at least in its mushy European form. Admittedly, these European polls are a peculiar species of election. Far fewer people vote in them than vote in national elections, and those who do vote are far vaguer about what their Euro deputies actually do once they are elected to the European legislature. The European parliament's gradual accumulation of real power seems to have had no effect whatsoever on its popular image, which is still that of a do-nothing institution composed of clapped-out politicians who cost everybody a fortune in airplane tickets. As a result, fringe parties, including the so-called far right, always attract protest voters and do unusually well.

Nevertheless, European parliamentary elections also provide the only cross-continental simultaneous political snapshot currently available. Although national elections take place at different times and according to different national rules, these most recent, largest-ever European elections took place over a four-day period, according to the same rules, in 27 countries. This time around, with some exceptions, they told an unusually consistent story.

In France, Germany, Italy, and Poland—four of Europe's six largest countries—center-right governments got unexpectedly enthusiastic endorsements. In the two other large countries, Britain and Spain, left-wing ruling parties got hammered, as did socialists in Hungary, Austria, Bulgaria, and elsewhere. In some places the results were stark indeed: In London this weekend, I could hardly walk down the street without being assaulted by angry, screaming newspaper headlines, all declaring the Labor government of Prime Minister Gordon Brown weak, corrupt, tired, arrogant, and, yes, very unpopular. In some constituencies, European candidates of the ruling Labor Party finished behind fringe parties that normally don't get noticed at all. So rapidly are British ministers resigning from the Cabinet that it's hard to keep track of them (four in the last week—I think).

But how is it possible that the European right is doing so well—and so much better than their U.S. counterparts—during what is widely described as a crisis of global capitalism? At least in part, the Europeans are winning because their leaders have the courage of their economic convictions. While it is true that the continental European welfare states have kicked into high gear over the last six months, there are few equivalents of either George W. Bush's budget deficits or Barack Obama's spending binge. And where there have been—in Britain, for example—the high spending has hardly bought popularity. The theoretical version of this Euro-American policy gap is the recent public spat between economic historian Niall Ferguson and economist Paul Krugman, both of whom are at least as well known for their newspaper polemics as for their academic writing. Very crudely, Ferguson and the German government think massive deficits and government borrowing will lead to inflation and ultimately the collapse of the currency. Equally crudely, Krugman and the U.S. administration think he's wrong.

For the record, Ferguson is, at least by origin, a British Tory. For the record, there aren't any U.S. Republican polemicists making the same arguments in quite as public a way. With a few exceptions, the American center-right's loudest and most articulate voices have been focused almost exclusively on national security for the better part of the last decade. Lip service was paid to "small government" and "reduced spending" while successive Republican Congresses, hand in hand with a Republican White House, enlarged government and spent like crazy. How can they now criticize Obama's possibly lethal budget deficits when their own were so vast, so recently?

None of this is to say that any of Europe's conservatives would necessarily go down well in the United States. (Picture Silvio Berlusconi, paparazzi and alleged teenage mistresses in tow, campaigning in Mississippi.) It's also true that they don't necessarily have much in common: Allegedly, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy can hardly stand to be in the same room at the same time. But if nothing else, the success of the European center-right during the current crisis proves that there is something to their political formula. They are fiscally conservative. They are, if not socially liberal, then at least socially centrist. They haven't been swayed by the fashion for big spending. They are trying to keep some semblance of budget sanity. And, at least at the moment, they win elections.

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Anne Applebaum is a Washington Post and Slate columnist. Her most recent book is Gulag: A History.
Photograph of Gordon Brown by Stefan Rousseau/AFP/Getty Images.
COMMENTS

European politics are dramatically different from the US. Even though Europe is closest to the US in terms of core political values -- freedom of speech, democracy, rule of law -- there is a whole range of issues that separate us from them.

Xenophobia for one. Immigration to Europe -- from anywhere, let alone the recent waves from Africa and the Middle East -- is a relatively new thing. Europeans are accustomed to having closed societies without any diversity whatsoever. One religion; one language; one set of national value stretching back for centuries. Consequently, there is a very strong ethnocentric current that runs through every European nation. Many of them eye foreigners (even ones from other European countries) with a degree of suspicion. Hence, the consensus on immigration and European unification are, by American standards, extremely right wing. Nationalists win seats in the European parliament because many Europeans both fear the notion of sharing power with nations who were until recently their adversaries. Consequently, the European Constitution keeps losing. And Berlusconi can win the Prime Minister spot in Italy by appealing to nationalist tendencies and not so subtle hints that foreigners are unwelcome.

If I had to draw a conclusion on the recent victories of the American left versus the European right, it would be the following:

(1) On fiscal policy, we are moving closer together. The conservative parties in Europe want to halt and curl back some of their most excessive social programs. Why? Because an excess of such programs curb necessary economic growth. Meanwhile, Americans increasingly see the value of additional programs. Why? Because they see their "poorer" European and Canadian neighbors eating better, living longer, and having more fun. The end result is that we look more and more the same on these issues.

(2) On social policy, well, Europe and America are becoming more disparate. Europeans of all stripes do not like immigrants. Meanwhile, America is built by immigrants. Europeans fear greater unification of the continent. By contrast, Americans long ago recognized the value of a true federal government; nowadays, politicians pay only lip service to "states rights" while forging straight ahead with a national social agenda.

-- robot-rock
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The recession started under left wing governments in most of the EU. The natural inclination for the people is to throw the bums out. Also keep in mind that the biggest busts in the EU were in states that had leftist administrations - the UK and Spain. (I don't know which party governed Ireland). But those were the countries that had the big house price bubble and the bust that followed. The rest of the EU doesn't want to pay to bail out the UK, Spain, and Ireland. Germany did NOT have a housing bubble. Neither did France.

And in the UK itself, the leftist party is unpopular because they have been in power too long, they presided over a bubble and its consequent bust, and they participated in all sorts of tawdry excesses during the bubble years. Their expense account scandal has a tremendous impact on public attitude toward UK politicians, particularly the ones in power.

-- Andrewp111
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