Europe's right-wing parties urge Brexit
June 18, 2016Leaders of Europe's biggest populist and far-right parties gathered Friday near Vienna, rallying against migration and the European Union while urging Britons to vote to leave the 28-nation bloc.
The gathering in Vösendorf saw a convergence of anti-immigration, euro-skeptic parties that have disrupted the European political establishment in the past year as the continent continues to grapple with a historic refugee crisis and economic weakness.
The meeting was hosted by Austria's Freedom Party (FPÖ), which almost won presidential elections in May and which is leading opinion polls ahead of the next scheduled elections in 2018. Politicians from nine countries attended the meeting, including Marine Le Pen of France's National Front, politicians from the Alternative for Germany (AfD) and Italy's Northern League.
The so-called political elites of Europe "are scared that the United Kingdom is regaining its liberty, its freedom to trade with whom it pleases," Le Pen told the crowd of some 2,000 people. "We want all the peoples of Europe to take back these liberties. The will of the people has to be respected," she said.
"France possibly has a thousand more reasons to want to leave the EU than the English," and all bloc members "need to question their relations with the EU," Le Pen added.
FPÖ leader Hans-Christian Strache blasted immigration and bemoaned German Chancellor Angela Merkel's refugee policy. He accused the German leader of causing "irreparable damage" to Europe by opening up her nation's borders to hundreds of thousands fleeing conflict zones.
"We don't want Europe to be a carbon copy of the United States... We want a Europe of fatherlands," Strache said."The new fascism comes from the left and from radical Islam."
Seeking cooperation
The gathering, called the "Patriotic Spring," was designed to strengthen cooperation among populist, anti-immigration parties that have been on the rise across Europe amid the arrival of a record number of refugees, recent militant attacks, and high unemployment.
In Germany, where populist parties had thus far struggled to gain traction in the post-war era, the AfD has won significant support in recent state elections and could gain representation in the Bundestag in Berlin next year.
AfD leader Frauke Petry joined Strache last week for a symbolic trip to the top of the Zugspitze, Germany's highest mountain. AfD politician Marcus Pretzell, joined the gathering in Vienna.
"Patriots love what Germany once was, what Germany could be," Pretzell said. "But they cry when they look at the current state of their country."
bw/sms (AFP, Reuters, dpa)