Anti-elite populists hail Renzi’s demise
• Mainstream politicians relieved Austria’s Eurosceptic Norbert Hofer failed at the polls
Europe’s populists greeted with glee on Monday the demise of Italy’s premier but their enthusiasm was tempered by the failure of Austria’s Norbert Hofer to become the EU’s first far-right president. Topping off a 2016 that saw the shock election of Donald Trump as US president and Britain’s decision to leave the EU, Matteo Renzi quit on Sunday after a crushing referendum defeat.
Europe’s populists greeted with glee on Monday the demise of Italy’s premier but their enthusiasm was tempered by the failure of Austria’s Norbert Hofer to become the EU’s first farright president.
Topping off a 2016 that saw the shock election of Donald Trump as US president and Britain’s decision to leave the EU, Matteo Renzi quit on Sunday after a crushing referendum defeat. “My experience of government finishes here,” Renzi told a press conference.
Many mainstream politicians were uneasy about Renzi’s proposed constitutional reforms, while Italians fed up with the economy saw the vote as a chance to ditch him.
But it was also a clear victory for Italy’s xenophobic Northern League and the Five Star antiestablishment movement, whose leader Beppe Grillo hailed Trump’s win as a “massive screw you”. Grillo, who supports a referendum on Italy leaving the eurozone — and therefore potentially the EU — on Sunday demanded that elections be called “within a week”.
Anti-establishment figures across Europe, both on the left and the right, hailed Renzi’s demise. The result “adds another people to the list of those wanting to turn their backs on Europe’s absurd policies [that are] plunging the continent into misery,” said Marine Le Pen of the far-right National Front, who is expected to make it into the runoff in France’s presidential election in May.
Brexit figurehead Nigel Farage tweeted that the “vote looks to me to be more about the euro than constitutional change”. Far-right Dutch MP Geert Wilders, topping polls ahead of national elections in March, tweeted “Congratulations Italia!” Centre-left German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said that while Renzi “did the right thing”, his toppling is “not a positive message to Europe at a difficult time”.
Mainstream politicians reacted with relief to Austria’s Eurosceptic Norbert Hofer failing to become the EU’s first far-right president.
Hofer, like populists elsewhere, had stoked concerns about immigration and globalisation, vowing to “get rid of the dusty establishment” and fight “Brussels’ centralising power”.
Experts said the winner, former Greens chief Alexander Van der Bellen, exploited Hofer’s ambivalent stance on Austria’s EU membership in the wake of Brexit. “Trump and Brexit had a reverse effect in Austria,” Carnegie scholar Stefan Lehne said.
“The idea of Austria’s possible EU exit scared them and made them choose a candidate who is not from the establishment per se but mainstream and much more pro-European.”
Lehne said the election casts doubts on the “inevitability of the triumph of populism”.
European Parliament president Martin Schulz tweeted that the result was a “heavy defeat of nationalism and anti-European, backward-looking populism”.
Carsten Nickels of the Teneo think-tank in Brussels said that voters are “impatient with the political centre, which keeps explaining that the world ‘out there’ is complex and it requires time to find solutions”.