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Santa Fe New Mexican

"The Ups and Downs of
European Politics" By Steven J. Hill 12/27/02
Several months ago, American media outlets were
sounding shrill alarms over the rise of the far right in Europe. But
recent election results in Germany, Sweden, Austria, and elsewhere
reveal that the panic button was pushed prematurely.
In Germany, the largest economy in Europe,
the red-green coalition of Social Democrats and the Green Party eked
out a close victory in September. In Sweden, the ruling Social
Democrats scored an unexpected victory, handily beating the
predictions. Recent elections saw center-left governments take the
reins in Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic. Meanwhile, the
fortunes of the far right have fallen on harder times. Following the
media frenzy over France's Jean-Marie Le Pen making the runoff in
their presidential election, his party failed to win a single seat
in the National Assembly races. In Austria, the bogeyman of Europe
who started the far-right alarm, Jorg Haider of the Freedom Party,
saw his party plummet. After a stunning upset in the Netherlands for
the assassinated Pim Fortuyn's party, bickering internal politics
led to its collapse and Fortuyn's party is expected to virtually
disappear when new elections are held on Jan. 22.
So the scary forecasts of the American
media were overblown considerably. But this is not that unusual.
Unfortunately American reportage on Europe often is fraught with
half-truths and Hogan's Heroes stereotyping. And this in turn has
led to profound misunderstandings between the two continents.
For instance, rarely do American journalists point out that
Europeans still enjoy free health care for all, cradle to grave;
free education through university level; comparatively generous retirement for their
elderly; an average of five weeks paid annual
vacation, more sick leave, parental leave, and a shorter work week
with comparable wages for their workers (French workers, with their
35-hour work week, work nearly a full day less per week than
American workers, who now work on average 42 hours per week). Social
spending in Europe runs some 50 percent above that in the United
States. Environmental, food safety and labor laws are the envy of
activists in the U.S.
In fact, what was lost upon the U.S. media is that the leaders
and political parties known as the "far right"
in Europe for the most part do not seek to overturn the European
social state or its proactive government regulation. On the
contrary, they accept its existence to a degree even the Democratic
Party doesn't accept today. In some countries the far right parties
attained their recent electoral successes by defending the welfare
state that the center-left parties had been rolling back the last
few years. Their leaders called for things like a re-commitment to
quality public health care, elderly care, mass transit, subsidized
housing, and the protection of the public pension and education
systems.
Thus, in many respects, Europe's multiparty politics do
not fit the old left-right axis typically employed by American journalists.
It's comparing apples and oranges. Yet American media
routinely fail to distinguish these unique political characteristics
of the European landscape. Instead, much ink dwells on the very real
anti-immigrant sentiment that, while cause for concern, is hardly
unique to Europe.
The two sides of the Atlantic both are founded on their own
variant of capitalism, but in crucial ways follow different social models.
The United States is noted for our freewheeling, free enterprise
economics, while Europe's social democracies seek to regulate capitalism for the
general welfare and to spread the benefits around.
While American observers tend to disparage the constraints on growth
and higher unemployment that may result from the European model,
Europeans scratch their heads over America's
income inequalities, our consumerism, and our readiness to
sacrifice the social contract for individual material gain.
The net result is that neither side knows each other terribly
well. And yet, in this age of globalization, never has it been more
important that we learn to cooperate on issues of security,
trade, human rights, and the global environment. The European and
American nations share much in common. Hopefully we can learn more
about those mutual aspects, and get past media stereotypes that
perpetuate trans-Atlantic misunderstanding.
Steven Hill is senior analyst for the Center for Voting and
Democracy and author of a new book, "Fixing Elections: The Failure
of America's Winner Take All Politics" (Routledge Press).
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