Charlie Hebdo fallout: Specter of fascist past haunts European nationalism

By Jacob Heilbrunn
January 13, 2015

Members of DUEGIDA, Duesseldorf's section of anti-immigration movement Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the West (PEGIDA) demonstrate in Duesseldorf

When up to a dozen world leaders and roughly 1.5 million people gathered in Paris on Sunday to mourn the murder of 10 editors and cartoonists of the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo and seven other people by three French-born Islamic radicals, they wanted to demonstrate that Europe will always embrace liberal and tolerant values.

But the more telling event may turn out to be a counter-rally that took place at a 17th-century town hall in Beaucaire, France, that was led by Marine Le Pen, the leader of the far-right National Front. In Beaucaire, the crowd ended Le Pen’s rally by singing the French national anthem and chanting, “This is our home.”

Le Pen is at the forefront of a European-wide nationalist resurgence — one that wants to evict from their homelands people they view as Muslim subversives. She and other far-right nationalists are seizing on some legitimate worries about Islamic militancy — 10,000 soldiers are now deployed in France as a safety measure — in order to label all Muslims as hostile to traditional European cultural and religious values. Le Pen herself has likened their presence to the Nazi occupation of France.

Journalists surround Marine Le Pen, France's National Front political party head, who reacts to results after the polls closed in the European Parliament elections at the party's headquarters in Nanterre

Le Pen herself espouses an authoritarian program that calls for a moratorium on immigration, a restoration of the death penalty and a “French first” policy on welfare benefits and employment.

Long after World War Two, fascism is a specter that still haunts the continent. But whether Le Pen’s stances — and those of other nationalist leaders in Europe — qualify as fascist is questionable. The borderline between the kind of populism they espouse and the outright fascism of the 1920s and 1930s, when Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini espoused doctrines of racial superiority, is a slippery one. Scholars continue to debate whether Mussolini was even fascist — or simply an opportunistic nationalist.

The real aim of today’s would-be authoritarians — politicians who appeal to the public’s desire for an iron hand — is to present themselves as legitimate leaders who are saying what the public really thinks but is afraid to say. And these far-right leaders are indeed increasingly popular.

The card they are playing is populism presented as an aggrieved nationalism. They depict Europeans as victims of rapacious Muslim immigrants. Le Pen, Britain’s Nigel Farage of the U.K. Independence Party and others aim to come across as reasonable and socially acceptable, while sounding dog whistles to their followers about immigrant social parasites who are either stealing jobs from “real” Europeans or living off welfare.

Unlike in the 1930s, Le Pen and her compatriots do not deliver spittle-beflecked speeches calling for the extermination of other races. Le Pen avoids the kind of demagogic language used by her father Jean-Marie Le Pen, a former intelligence officer in France’s vicious war in Algeria, who called the Holocaust a mere “detail.”

Indeed, Le Pen is now wooing some Jewish voters frightened of terrorism. She is essentially offering a slicker form of authoritarianism that brands Muslim immigrants as a new internal enemy. The new nationalist argument is that the individual countries of Europe must safeguard their traditional values by rejecting the liberal chimera of a single, united Europe with open borders.

This has paid off for Le Pen’s Front National, which in May led the field in France’s European Union elections, drawing 25 percent of all votes. And these numbers are only predicted to increase.

After World War Two, nationalism largely went into remission in Europe. Until recently, nationalist parties were largely regarded as a noisy but fringe phenomenon. The notion that they would gain public respectability — let alone wield power — seemed outlandish. No longer.

Marine Le Pen, France's National Front political party leader, smiles after delivering a speech at their congress in Lyon

In France, Germany, Greece, Sweden, the Netherlands and Britain, nationalist leaders are seizing on the tragic events in France to argue that they have been right all along. They argue that the open borders and liberal tolerance championed by the European Union are allowing a virulent jihadist virus to infect their countries.

Le Pen  insisted the day after the Paris attacks that Islam is an “odious ideology” In that same Jan. 9 address, she said “The absolute rejection of Islamic fundamentalism must be proclaimed loudly and clearly” and called on French President Francois Hollande to suspend the Schengen Accords that allow for visa-free movement inside Europe.

Meanwhile, Alexander Gauland, a leading member of the libertarian party Alternative for Germany, maintains, “Everyone who has until now laughed or scoffed at the apprehensions of people of a looming Islamic threat are being punished by this bloodshed.”

And Farage, of the U.K. Independence Party, which wants to exit the European Union, says that a jihadist “fifth column” exists in France, one that is the result of multi-cultural policies. In the May EU elections, his party bested both the Conservative and the Labour Party, winning 28 percent of the vote, a big jump from its 16.5 percent in 2009, the last EU election. Twenty years ago, it only drew 1 percent.

The vitality of all these parties is a direct result of the failure of mainstream political elites. Exhibit A is the self-destructive austerity policy  that Germany under Chancellor Angela Merkel has espoused. Haunted by the memory of the soaring inflation that helped destroy Germany’s post-World War One democratic Weimar Republic — leading to Hitler’s rise — Berlin has demanded budget cuts and opposed stimulus programs that could help revive the struggling economies of southern Europe.

Part-time and temporary arts workers, known as "intermittents", hold coffin-shaped cardboard boxes as they demonstrate over government plans to accept the unemployment insurance agreement in Marseille

This is perverse. It has had the effect of miring the eurozone in unemployment and deflation — thereby helping create conditions reminiscent of the 1930s, when economic misery helped radicalize the middle and working classes.

Today, a new generation of leaders on the right has seized on Europe’s economic malaise to argue that the real culprit is Islamic immigrants taking jobs away from the native-born. The underlying sentiment — the demonization of an “out” group — recalls the wave of anti-Semitism that helped propel fascist political parties to triumphs during the 1930s.

The credo of nationalist parties today is that Europe, the cradle of Western Civilization, is directly threatened by a new influx of Muslims intent on reenacting the Islamic invasion of Europe that took place in the eighth century and was only stopped by Charles Martel at the Battle of Poitiers in 732. It’s a message that’s attracting new adherents — some of them Jews, who feel threatened by Muslims.

Skepticism of European unity and immigrants has also proved a potent political move in France’s neighbor, Germany. The anti-euro Alternative for Germany party has entered state parliaments in Thuringia, Saxony and Brandenburg in the past year and its leading figures are making common cause with anti-immigrant groupings.

In Dresden, for example, weekly rallies against immigrants are taking place under the rubric Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the Occident”– PEGIDA. Last October the turnout was roughly 500. At least 25,000 marched Monday — despite condemnations from mainstream politicians, including Merkel.

Supporters of anti-immigration movement Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the West (PEGIDA) hold flags during a demonstration in Dresden

In the Netherlands, populist leader Geert Wilder’s Freedom Party is leading the polls. In Greece, the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn Party entered parliament in 2012 with the slogan, “So we can rid this land of filth.” In Sweden, the anti-immigrant Sweden Democrat Party vaulted to 13 percent of the vote in 2014.

Though parties of the right have a history of squabbling with one another, they have begun to cooperate in the European parliament. If Le Pen were to win the French presidency in 2017, it could spell the end of the European Union and perhaps return the continent to a collection of feuding nation-states

Franco-German cooperation, which has been at the heart of and essential to the European Union since its inception, would come to an abrupt end. The European Union has functioned as a way for Germany to leave behind an assertive nationalism that led to two world wars and create a new and peaceful identity as part of a democratic Europe. If La Pen wins in 2017 many could view it as a repudiation of that vision. The long shadows cast by the Nazi past would make it too difficult for any German chancellor to work with an authoritarian leader like Le Pen in the heart of Europe.

Certainly Europe’s democratic institutions are far stronger than they were in the 1930s. But this is no reason for complacency.

A revived European leadership that addresses immigration and the economy is essential — or the decades-long dream of a united Europe will disintegrate, to be replaced by combative nation-states headed by nationalist leaders. Merkel and other leaders on the continent, for example, will have to allow Britain to opt out of the European Union’s insistence on free movement within EU borders .

For British Prime Minister David Cameron intends to strengthen his island-nation’s border controls. He wants to tightly restrict EU immigrants’ rights, prohibiting claims for British benefits or public housing for four years and deporting those who do not get a job within six months  Otherwise, he will be outflanked on the right by Farage’s U.K. Independent Party, with the possibility of British voters approving a referendum for withdrawal from the EU.

The demons that European leaders tried to suppress after 1945 are back. It won’t be easy to exorcise them.

 

PHOTO (TOP): Members of DUEGIDA, Duesseldorf’s section of anti-immigration movement Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West (PEGIDA) demonstrate in Duesseldorf, January 12, 2015. REUTERS/Ina Fassbender

PHOTO (INSERT 1): Journalists surround Marine Le Pen, France’s National Front political party head, who reacts to results after the polls closed in the European Parliament elections at the party’s headquarters in Nanterre, near Paris, May 25, 2014.  REUTERS/Christian Hartmann

PHOTO (INSERT 2):Marine Le Pen (C), France’s National Front political party leader, smiles after delivering a speech at their congress in Lyon, Nov. 30, 2014.  REUTERS/Robert Pratta

PHOTO (INSERT 3): Part-time and temporary arts workers, known as “intermittents,” hold coffin-shaped cardboard boxes as they demonstrate over government plans to accept the unemployment insurance agreement in Marseille, June 26, 2014. REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier

PHOTO (INSERT 4): Supporters of anti-immigration movement Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West (PEGIDA) hold flags during a demonstration in Dresden, January 12, 2015. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

24 comments

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The author of this article is being somewhat disingenuous when he even makes a rough comparison between trash like Hitler and Mussolini, and the leaders of today’s European nationalists. “Return the continent to a collection of feuding nation-states”? Really? It seems that the European far-right is more concerned with dealing with the very real threat to Western Civilization that radical Islam presents. Can this all lead down the slippery slope to authoritarianism? Certainly. But to do nothing in the face of an enemy that neither thinks nor acts rationally seems much more dangerous than doing nothing. Dealing with radical Islam now, before it does much more damage, does not negate the ability to keep authoritarianism at bay. But letting radical Islam continue to thrive in the West only ensures the growth of a greater counter-radicalism. The longer a wound festers, the more drastic the remedies needed to treat it. Europeans (and Americans) need not give up their hard-earned rights–their very culture–in order to stop radical Islam. Until such time as Islam chooses to live in peace with its neighbors, the fear of rising authoritarianism should not keep Western states from containing this menace.

Posted by Toomuchthinking | Report as abusive

“Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini espoused doctrines of racial superiority… Scholars continue to debate whether Mussolini was even fascist — or simply an opportunistic nationalist.”

The author of this article does not seem to be familiar with the history of fascism or its definition (according to academics such as Roger Griffin, Stanley Payne et al).

E.g. “Fascism is best defined as a revolutionary form of nationalism, one that sets out to be a political, social and ethical revolution, welding the ‘people’ into a dynamic national community under new elites infused with heroic values. The core myth that inspires this project is that only a populist, trans-class movement of purifying, cathartic national rebirth (palingenesis) can stem the tide of decadence.” – Roger Griffin.

Mussolini created the doctrine of fascism after becoming disillusioned with the Marxism of the Italian Socialist Party. It was not an officially racist or anti-Semitic ideology (there were unofficial negative attitudes towards Slavs and Africans, though, which were commonplace in the West at the time).

Instead, Italian fascism stressed the unity of the “spiritual” (as opposed to the biological) Italian nation. Jews were in fact overrepresented in the Italian National Fascist Party throughout the 1920s, and it was not until heavy pressure from Hitler’s Germany that the party adopted anti-Semitic laws (Manifesto della razza).

Thus, racism is not a necessary component of fascism. Rather, it is nationalism (whether it be civic/spiritual or ethnic/biological) that is necessary for fascism. That alone, however, does not define fascism.

Secondly, no credible academic would question whether or not Mussolini, the creator of fascism, was a fascist. That is simply illogical. I believe the author is confusing Mussolini with Francisco Franco here, who is often not considered a fascist by academics.

Posted by Hayden120 | Report as abusive

A well written article which outlines the problem but I feel again misses the underlying issue. The majority of people in the EU do not want immigration and as the writer states nationalist parties say out loud what people are thinking. It matters not one jot what the main stream parties do or say. The majority of people do not want there version of society but wish to formulate there own. The political elite have moved people on to quickly and by doing so have killed there dream of what they feel is a liberal utopian society

Posted by Moties001 | Report as abusive

Is Barack Obama “one of today’s would-be authoritarians”? How do you define “far right”? How can Le Pen’s FN be defined as far right when they are the highest % support party in France nationally? By definition, far right would have to be far right of FN…the new middle. Or, is “far right” a slander word used by the far left against anyone who isn’t on their side? Yes.

Posted by sarkozyrocks | Report as abusive

It’s the start of the end of Merkel and as a bonus also the E-Union.

Posted by Willvp | Report as abusive

Islam is a choice. Until the clerics stop putting fatwas out against cartoonists, and START putting fatwas out against the murderers and rapists who fill the member lists… it is a terrorist organization.

Why is there stilll a fatwa against a cartoonist from Seattle (Molly Norris), but no fatwa against Boko Haram (a child sex ring professing to be in the service of allah)? It is because Islam now is a terrorist organization at the very top levels. It is run wrong and it should be evicted from civilised nations until it can behave.

Posted by AlkalineState | Report as abusive

This is what makes me so GD mad the media and these political leaders NEVER address the issue of how none muslims living in muslims countries are harrassed, attacked and killed. They spout how their own countrymen are racist or haters or what ever but NEVER verbally attack the leaders of thos islamic nations as the same. I have NEVER heard a Middle Eastern leader appologize for attacks on none muslims, as a matter of fact they charge them for practicing their relgion dont see that here in the USA or in Europe, just saying.

Posted by francisarias | Report as abusive

The real issue is this: Religion kills. Plain and simple. All religion. It kills the spirit of free questioning and open inquiry. Whether with a smile or a smirk or a sword, it kills and perverts the mind, with fear and falsehoods and fables, with guilt and poisons and prejudices, with wasted lives yearning for pie in the sky when you die. It kills and slaughters and maims physically, brother against brother, us against them, an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth until all are left blind and toothless, or worse. From the bloody bible to the bloody koran, physical and mental horrors have been committed in the name of religion by hucksters and frauds and fascists who claim to speak for god, and with god, and through god. And we fall for it! God did this, God told me. God loves that. God hates this. God wants this. Oh, and please please please drop another coin in the basket before you leave …as god demands. Their so-called holy books are nothing but recipes for our enslavement and torture, written by self-serving, and all-too-human control-freaks. Like shorn sheep, like lemmings, we are led to our mental and physical debasement and slaughter, time and time again. Enough. Get off your knees! Stand up like the proud Men and Women that you truly are, and choose to live your own lives, in your own ways. Walk tall on your own path – with your own meanings and mistakes and methods. Break the chains of dependency and submissiveness and religion, and breathe the fresh and healing air of freedom. Deeply. Fully. Finally.

Posted by stan11222 | Report as abusive

“Long after World War Two, fascism is a specter that still haunts the continent.” I presume you mean the north American continent. It is the right wing in the US who have been at the vanguard of the fascist movement. Though not specifically labeled as such, America is the place where the money lenders to Hitler settled and hashed out the business plan. Ted Cruz is the prototypical over the top Nationalists/Fascists politician but most of the right is in some sort of state of fascism where corporations are the actually the strong-man-like leaders. Reagan was instrumental in advancing this tradition, and the Bushes and Clinton carried it on as loyal minions to the security state entities that are the muscle for the true owners. Telling us that Muslims are violent and a problem is not the same as being correct about your right wing fascism. The Neocons are evil selfish and babyish people who don’t want to work, they want others to labor while they take the benefits. If they tell me that the Muslims and Mexicans are bad, even if that were true, it would not mean that the neocons are not evil selfish lazy people who steal others labors. I can say that people from New Jersey are fat and drunk and corrupt, but it does not make my political philosophy necessarily correct, even though most people would agree with me regarding the people of New Jersey.

Posted by brotherkenny4 | Report as abusive

Most migration today retards global economic development. Cheap immigrant labor often subsidized by the tax payer keeps industries in the developed world that should have migrated South decades ago. EXAMPLE – The garment industry in California.

The average salary for High Rise Window Washer in Los Angeles, California is $23,739. (3.5 million illegal immigrants)

The average salary for High Rise Window Washer in Indianapolis, Indiana is $37,310. (fewer low wage immigrants)

http://money.cnn.com/calculator/pf/cost- of-living/

http://windowwashersalary.com/IN/Indiana polis/salary/High-Rise-Window-Washer-Sal ary

Posted by Doug57 | Report as abusive

Islamo-Fascism is the problem, not the healthy rejection of it.

Posted by Redford | Report as abusive

“Certainly Europe’s democratic institutions are far stronger than they were in the 1930s. But this is no reason for complacency.”

What a sad irony that westerners do not understand what is going on here. It is exactly complacency and naivete, just like we saw in the 1930′s with Hitler invading neighboring countries, that is undermining the “mainstream” capacity for applying reason; and I use the term mainstream loosely because I’m not so sure it is anymore. The status quo cannot come to terms with the stark reality that a pathos exists in modern Muslim culture and that just because all Muslims are not extremists doesn’t mean that extremists do not rise from that larger culture. This is the cancer that will destroy Europe and most Europeans don’t want it. I do not see anything “racist” or “bigoted” about choosing who you will allow to immigrate to your country. Countries have been doing it for hundreds of years and still do.

Continued complacency to appeal to emotion is a policy paradigm just as disastrous as the policies that allowed Hitler to go on a rampage for years before anyone reacted. Only persons from countries that have a demonstrated pattern of not producing terrorism should be permitted entry, and that ramp to qualify should be applied steeply. Emotional outbursts from political ideologues about what is ideologically correct will be disastrous and we need to grow up and see things for what they are rather than pandering to these emotions.

Posted by Sigurn | Report as abusive

It is NOT facism to keep control of your OWN country. The muslims have invaded their country, and they want them out. Facism comes from the left. I wish the USA had someone like Le Pen. “Le Pen herself espouses an authoritarian program that calls for a moratorium on immigration, a restoration of the death penalty and a “French first” policy on welfare benefits and employment.”

That pretty much sums up what is going on here in America. we are not far behind France. Wake up liberals! if you don’t like freedom, move to a communist country. If you love freedom, wake up or we will ALL lose!

Posted by USAPatriot913 | Report as abusive

It’s usually a mistake to compare anyone or anything to Adolf Hitler or Naziism, and that mistake is made in this opinion piece. There are two objectives that distinguish the German campaign of the 1930s and ’40s from nearly everything else: (1) the objective to kill an entire family of more than 6 million people and (2) the objective to clear out the population in the geographic area from Germany’s Eastern border to the Ural mountains in order to make land available for German settlers. The program of mass murder of European Jews was independent of the second objective, and France cooperated more than most Western European countries (more than Italy). Tthe program to kill intellectuals and professionals in Poland and elsewhere was part of the second objective — done with the intention of depriving local populations of people suited to lead a resistance.

European rightists may not be my cup of tea, but it is unfair to them — and a violence against history — to compare them with Nazis. Indeed, the consensus politics of modern Europe is itself highly intolerant, and there is no reason to concede ownership of the mantle of anti-Naziism to modern day France and Germany.

Posted by Bob9999 | Report as abusive

Europeans deserve their lands to themselves. If Colonialism was bad back in the days of yore–and it was–it is just as bad today when committed against Europeans. Doubly so if the politicians are pushing the displacement and even physical elimination of the native European peoples.

There needs to be no other argument necessary. No justification should be required to defend one’s land, one’s culture, one’s unique racial and national character.

Posted by WorkingClassMan | Report as abusive

Both Hitler and Mussolini were self proclaimed Socialists. One was the leader of a National Socialist party and the other an editor for a newspaper called The Socialist. Neither was Right Wing and were only called that as a slur by communists after Hitler and Stalin had a falling out. Right wing is the opposite of left wing due to the fact that we want less government and more freedom. That is not what leftists want.
Hitler in his own words said this “We are socialists, we are enemies of today’s capitalistic economic system for the exploitation of the economically weak, with its unfair salaries, with its unseemly evaluation of a human being according to wealth and property instead of responsibility and performance, and we are all determined to destroy this system under all conditions.” Do those words sound like the words of any right winger that you have ever met? I’d like to see an example of any other instance of a right wing organization having the words “socialist” or “Workers” in their name like the Nazi’s did. Just one.
The left needs to accept their own and recognize how their own policies of easily swayed emotional reactions and demagoguery have and will always lead to dictatorships.

Posted by jtstreeter | Report as abusive

I feel very deeply concerned with this insidious rise of hyper nationalism/cryptic Nazism that is engulfing people around this embattled world. I have seen, in otherwise normal FB and internet threads dealing with the eroding forces in our nation, a creeping theme to extol Hitler as not all bad, just a victim of pseudo history, written by the “victors”. OMG! Are we so lacking in knowledge that we could entertain such trash? Jim Marrs, a noted, solid researcher, has written a book that foresaw such a rise in Nazi inspired movements. His book, “Rise of the Fourth Reich” addresses this growing trend, dallying with the evil that rent apart nations and killed countless millions. This perverted rise in Fascism, wears a different face, but the dark, malicious heart is the same. I hope this is eradicated from the world ethos or we may well see the monster rise again.

Posted by sweetpea2015 | Report as abusive

So Islamic terrorists murder 17 innocent French citizens, and Reuters says the real story is the threat of the French Right? Hmmm. Isn’t this the same news outlet that after 9/11 claimed “One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter?” Not much left to explain how far the left has drifted off from the shoals of reason. Honestly folks, I firmly believe that if the author of this article weren’t so severed from reality, this Jacob Heilbrunn entity might simply have a love of taunting that cannot be tamed. Of course, such is today’s left anyway.

Posted by Brigattista | Report as abusive

in the us the right wing takes the same tack–mobs always go after the most vulnerable people.

Posted by notquiteover | Report as abusive

But we know the “leaders” were never together with the million and a half(the picture with all the pres is widely known and they are not in the same manifestation), and yet, many more millions seem to embrace whatever these hotheads spill out to advance the corporate agenda; good brainwashing, maybe too late to change and definitely going to get worse. Hold on to your pants people.
Now, to talk about immigration, can we talk about imperialism before? or if you prefer, the occupation of nations by other nations and its corporations, that thing that was going on from the 1500′s to about 70-60 years ago? Oh, but that has nothing to do with this new white supremacy trend, violence just appears out of nothing, those were all very ungrateful countries, good thing we left…..

Posted by pssdffthnkr | Report as abusive

@sarkozyrocks: The political terms “left” and “right” date to the French Revolution and where certain groups sat in the Legislative Assembly. The Feuillants (monarchists) sat on the right and Girondists (republicans) and Jacobins (radicals) sat on the left. Henceforth, the political spectrum has always been described in terms of “left” and “right.” The most liberal groups are on the left and the most conservative groups are on the right.

Posted by ErikMD | Report as abusive

I hear these same sorts of arguments all the time from far right Fox News viewing Americans.

Posted by stanford1 | Report as abusive

Just to be clear, scholars do NOT “continue to debate whether Mussolini was even fascist — or simply an opportunistic nationalist.” I am currently a PhD student studying the history of Italian Fascism, so I’m qualified to disagree. Mussolini and a handful of others INVENTED Fascism, plain and simple. Scholars debate 1. whether or not Nazism was a form of Fascism or something altogether different (although related) and 2. how “totalitarian” Italian Fascism really was. But they do NOT debate whether or not Mussolini was a Fascist. He was. There’s no debate.

Posted by Anonymous002 | Report as abusive

The entire planet needs to be concerned about fascism.

Posted by WPalmerIV | Report as abusive