Revolutionaries elected to European Parliament

Revolutionaries elected to European Parliament
By Norm Dixon
Europe's ruling social democratic and labour parties were dealt a
sharp rebuke by voters in elections for the European Parliament (EP) held
June 11-13. Social Democrats rule in most of the European Union's 15 member
states and have pursued policies dominated by austerity and privatisation.
They backed the US-directed NATO war against Serbia. Dissatisfied voters
abstained in record numbers, while many others voted for conservative opposition
parties. However, Europe's far-left and green parties have scored some
significant gains.
The European People's Party, which groups representatives of the continent's
conservative parties in the 626-seat EP, for the first time since 1979,
when Euro MPs began to be directly elected, has won more seats than the
social democratic parties, which are grouped in the Party of European Socialists.
The British Labour Party, which lost 33 of its 62 seats, and Germany's
Social Democrat-Green coalition were heavily outpolled by their conservative
rivals. The German Social Democratic Party's vote was more than 10% less
than its winning 41% in the September German general election. The German
Greens, whose leader is Germany's foreign minister and the government's
vocal defender of the NATO war in the Balkans, dropped to 6.4% from the
10.1% they received in the September general election and the 13.1% in
the 1994 European election.
The rate of abstention ranged from 29% in Italy to 77% in Britain (abstention
was 15% in Belgium, where voting is compulsory). The average abstention
rate across the whole EU was a record 51%.
A range
of far-left parties have entered the EP. In France, the Lutte Ouvriere-Ligue
Communiste Revolutionaire (LO-LCR) list won 5.2% of the vote and almost
1 million votes. This means the Trotskyist LO will take three seats and
the LCR, affiliated to the Fourth International, will take two.
The LCR is the larger of the two parties but the LO has a longer tradition
of electoral participation. LO's lead candidate, Arlette Laguiller, has
regularly stood in elections and receives respectable tallies; she was
top of the joint list. Respected LCR leader Alain Krivine will become a
Euro MP.
The disastrous result for the French Communist Party, which won just
7%, suggests that many Communist Party voters switched to the LO-LCR in
protest at CP participation in the French Socialist Party-dominated coalition
government.
The LCR's weekly newspaper Rouge said the LO-LCR result, “despite
massive abstention by working people, confirms the growing support for
the far left since 1995. The media are mostly talking about the high score
for the far right and the greens. But it is also clear that the far left
has affirmed itself as a significant, stable political force.”
According to Rouge, those who voted for the LO-LCR list voted
against the bosses, the right and the far right, and punished the French
government for its policies: “Socialist Party Prime Minister Lionel Jospin
and his Communist and Green partners received a clear warning. People will
no longer tolerate the policies of a government which is privatising, questioning
retirement pension rights, encouraging the explosion of part-time work
and job insecurity, and doing nothing about unemployment.”
The LO-LCR deputies will try to unite the left — including those who
voted for the governing parties — around demands for an immediate change
in government policies. “Outlaw redundancy measures and 'downsizing' in
companies which are making huge profits, while cutting jobs. Impose a reduction
of the working week, in a way that creates new jobs, without worsening
working conditions. Defend the retirement pension against government attacks.
Give papers to all the undocumented immigrants”, Rouge demanded.
In Italy,
the left-wing Party of Communist Refoundation won six EP seats, including
one supporter of the party's far-left Bandiera Rossa tendency.
In Germany, the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) achieved its best
ever result, scoring 5.8% of the vote and six Euro MPs for the first time.
The abstention rate in Germany was 45%. The PDS almost doubled its vote
in the former West Germany, in Hamburg jumping from 1.4% to 3.3%. In the
former East Germany, the PDS vote was close to that of the Social Democratic
Party and overtook it in the states of Mecklenburg and Saxony.
In the Netherlands, the ex-Maoist Socialist Party (dubbed the “Tomato
Party”) won its first Euro MP. The SP was the only Dutch parliamentary
party to oppose NATO's bombing of Serbia.
The Scottish Socialist Party failed to win a seat despite winning almost
40,000 votes and 4% of the vote. Support for the SSP was highest in Glasgow
where 11% voted for the party. The SSP even managed 2.5% of the vote in
the remote Highlands and Islands electorate.
Arthur Scargill's Socialist Labour Party won more than 81,000 votes
in England and Scotland.
Overall, the representation of Green parties in the EP has increased
by nine seats to 36 despite the German Greens' loss of five seats (down
from 12), the Swedish Greens' loss of two seats (down from four) and the
Italian Greens' loss of one seat (from three).
The French Greens debuted with nine seats after scoring 9% of the vote,
the Netherlands' Green Left party won four seats (up from one), Belgian
Greens won four seats (up from two) and the Greens in Austria and Finland
each won two seats (up from one in both cases). The Irish Greens retained
their two seats. The Spanish Greens won their first seat. The British Greens
gained more than 625,000 votes and retained one seat.
Support for green parties seems to have been boosted by a scandal over
dioxin-contaminated food in Belgium and is more of a protest vote than
a left vote. Green parties in Belgium, France and Holland supported the
NATO war against Serbia. In France, Germany and Italy, Green ministers
participate in less-than-impressive governments, while the Dutch and Belgium
greens are desperate to participate in government.
In the Netherlands, the Green Left party is prepared to join a coalition
government with the Christian Democrats as well as the Labour Party. The
good result for the French Greens came after a particularly right-wing
campaign led by one-time May-June '68 hero Daniel Cohn-Bendit, who supports
the neo-liberal European Monetary Union.
In the Belgian general election, the French-language Ecolo and the Dutch-language
Agalev green parties won 13.7% of the votes for the federal parliament,
up from 8.4% in 1995. The two parties are expected to hold 20 seats in
the 150-seat parliament.
In other interesting results, the Welsh Plaid Cymru (Welsh nationalists)
and the Scottish Nationalist Party each won two seats. In Northern Ireland,
Sinn Fein won 17% compared to the Social Democratic and Labour Party's
28.1%.
In France, hopes that far-right National Front, which split a few months
ago, would fall below 5% and lose its Euro MPs were dashed. The two factions
received about 9%. In Belgium, the fascist Flemish Bloc keeps on growing
with 16% in Flanders (the Dutch-speaking northern half of the country)
and is now the biggest party in the main Flemish cities.
[Thanks to International Viewpoint for many of these results.]

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