Across Europe, nationalist parliament speakers spark controversy

Across Europe, nationalist parliament speakers spark controversy
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban speaks during a meeting with US President Donald Trump in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, DC. (Reuters)
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Across Europe, nationalist parliament speakers spark controversy

Across Europe, nationalist parliament speakers spark controversy
  • According to Catherine Fieschi, a researcher at the Robert Schuman Center at the European University Institute of Florence, PM Orban “has paved the way” for the current trend

VIENNA: As far-right parties have topped polls across Europe in recent years, nationalist politicians have taken the helm of four parliaments, stirring controversy.
Czech lawmakers elected the country’s first-ever far-right parliament speaker on Wednesday, becoming the latest parliament in Europe to be headed by a nationalist and pro-Russian politician since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
One day after Czech far-right leader Tomio Okamura — who has called for an end to aid for Ukraine — was elected parliament speaker, he ordered the removal of the Ukrainian flag from the building, where it had been hoisted in solidarity.
Austrian historians this week also urged the Alpine country’s first far-right parliamentary speaker to call off a planned event on November 11 that “honors a declared antisemite,” the late politician Franz Dinghofer, Austria’s vice chancellor in the 1920s and a Nazi party member during World War II.
In Italy, Austria, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, nationalist politicians have won the parliamentary presidency, joining Hungary, where nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s party has held the post since 2010.
In all four countries, the change followed an agreement with other political parties, as the nationalists lacked an absolute majority.
And the elected parliament speakers were not from the same political party as the head of government, as is the case in Hungary.
According to Catherine Fieschi, a researcher at the Robert Schuman Center at the European University Institute of Florence, Orban “has paved the way” for the current trend.
Since Orban’s return to power in 2010, he “has shown that it is possible to remain in the European Union” without respecting its treaties, she said.
Moreover, the trend has accelerated since Donald Trump’s return to the White House, with the US president’s “character hardly acting as a repellent” in European countries marked by a different “political culture” and an “ambiguous” relationship with Russia, she added.
Due to some countries’ shared communist past and their geographical proximity to Moscow, they try to refrain from any “escalation” with Russia, Fieschi said.
These countries also benefit considerably from European funds, and fear they might have to share money from Brussels with countries such as Albania, Montenegro or even Ukraine that aim to join the EU, she added.

- ‘Gaining respectability’ -

For nationalist parties, which have seized on such concerns, taking the helm of parliament is a major step forward, experts told AFP.
In Slovakia, the Hlas party got the parliamentary presidency in March thanks to its support for nationalist premier Robert Fico’s party and the far-right SNS party since joining a coalition in 2023.
The Socialists and Democrats Group in the European parliament excluded Hlas from its parliamentary group, saying its positions on “Russia’s war in Ukraine, migration, the rule of law and the LGBTQ community have raised serious concerns and have no place in the progressive family.”
Austria’s far-right parliamentary speaker Walter Rosenkranz — who faces widespread criticism for being a member of a far-right student fraternity known for its strident pan-German nationalism — has not tried to build consensus beyond his own political camp since assuming office last year.
“For these parties, which have long been outside the system, taking control of presidencies allows them to counterbalance the executive branch, as governing parties have often sought coalitions due to their weakened position,” said Cyrille Bret, associate researcher at the Jacques Delors Institute.
This position is “particularly suited to protest parties in the process of gaining power,” he said.
“They can use their powers of oversight to criticize the government without assuming responsibility themselves, not to mention the budgetary gains.”
This also allows them to “raise their profile and gain respectability.”


Massive Russian attack hits Ukraine energy infrastructure: Kyiv

Updated 1 sec ago

Massive Russian attack hits Ukraine energy infrastructure: Kyiv

Massive Russian attack hits Ukraine energy infrastructure: Kyiv
KYIV: A massive Russian attack hit Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, killing one person and prompting power cuts in several regions, Kyiv authorities said Saturday.
Moscow has in recent months escalated its attacks on energy infrastructure in Ukraine, damaging natural gas facilities which produce the main fuel for heating in the country.
Experts have said Ukraine risks heating outages ahead of the winter months.
“The enemy is massively attacking Ukraine’s energy infrastructure again. Because of this, emergency power outages have been introduced in a number of regions of Ukraine,” Energy Minister Svitlana Grynchuk wrote on social media, without specifying where.
“Emergency power outages will be canceled after the situation in the energy system stabilizes,” she said. “Despite the enemy’s plans, Ukraine will have light and heat this winter.”
Air raid alerts were triggered across Ukraine overnight, with authorities in northeastern Kharkiv and southern Odesa reporting drones strikes on energy facilities.
A drone strike on the eastern city of Dnipro ripped through a nine-story building, killing one woman and wounding six, including a child, according to emergency services.
In the capital Kyiv, civil and military authorities said falling debris had caused fires in two locations in the central Petchersky district.

- ‘Technological disaster’ -

Russia has targeted Ukraine’s power and heating grid throughout its almost four-year invasion, destroying a large part of the key civilian infrastructure.
Drones also hit energy infrastructure Ukraine’s southern Odesa late Friday evening, the region’s governor Oleg Kiper said on Telegram.
“There was damage to an energy infrastructure facility,” he said, reporting no dead or wounded.
The attacks on energy infrastructure have raised concerns of heating outages in Ukraine as the war enters its fourth winter.
Kyiv’s School of Economics estimated in a report that the attacks shut down half of Ukraine’s natural gas production.
Ukraine’s top energy expert, Oleksandr Kharchenko, told a media briefing Wednesday that if Kyiv’s two power and heating plants went offline for more than three days when temperatures fall below minus 10 degrees Celsius, the capital would face a “technological disaster.”
Ukraine has in turn stepped up strikes on Russian oil depots and refineries in recent months, seeking to cut off Moscow’s vital energy exports and trigger fuel shortages across the country.
On Friday evening, drone attacks on energy infrastructure in southern Russia’s Volgograd region caused power cuts there too, governor Andrei Botcharov said on Telegram.