Leaders of European far-right parties gathered in Lisbon at the end of the week to show solidarity with Portugal’s Chega Party that hopes to win the snap election in March next year.
Chega’s
leader, Andre Ventura, welcomed his counterparts, including France’s Marine Le
Pen. The gathering celebrated the surprise gains by Geert Wilder’s far-right
party in the Dutch general election a few days earlier.
Chega,
third in Portugal’s dissolved parliament, is hopeful of taking over from the
long-standing Socialist Party, currently disgraced by a corruption
investigation.
Chega,
meaning “enough”, is a national conservative party, formed by Ventura in 2019,
that has been gaining much support ever since.
Similar
parties are the strongest, or gaining strength, in Switzerland Italy, Greece, Hungry,
Poland, Finland, Sweden, Serbia and Spain.
The move
to the far-right has included a convergence with centre-right groups. This has involved national coalitions as well
as shifts within the European Union - and it looks set to continue.
It is
expected to change major policies in Brussels after the EU election in less
than a year from now. For example, it
could press for an eastward expansion of the EU in the continent, and maybe a
change in trading arrangements with China.
A predominantly far-right European Council
would have a different attitude to the United States should Donald Trump be
re-elected president.
The most
concerning problem for far-rightists in Europe is mass immigration from Africa.
Results in next year’s election in Portugal -
and even before that elections in other EU countries - are sure to play a key role
in the way Europe progresses in the next few years with illegal immigration.
What
Portugal and all other countries in Europe want to stop is an unmanageable
number of illegal of immigrants being smuggled in by human traffickers.
Turkey, Greece
and Italy have been inundated. The problem continues to move westward, confronting
coast guard and other services in Spain and Portugal.
In
Britain, politicians from the Labour left to the conservative right are alarmed
not only by the number of illegal immigrants crossing the English channel from
mainland Europe, but the tens if not
hundreds of thousands of legal immigrants annually seeking to study, or
get employment as care workers or nurses, in many cases at 20% discount wages.
In
contrast, the number of Portuguese citizens going to live in Britain fell by
41% in the 12 months to September this year, according to official statistics
published by the British government.
Portugal
wants its useful citizens back from the UK and everywhere else, including the
United States. A support programme is in
place until at least the end of this year to financially help emigrants and
their families returning from abroad who want to find jobs for themselves or
set up companies.
The
arrangement includes citizens who left Portugal between the end of 2015 and
started working in this country before the end of this year. It is not yet
clear, but it seems very possible this deadline will be extended.