As the center declines, the Green Party rises

The news media goes on and on about the rise of the far-right in Europe (for example: The hard right is going for Europe's jugular).
They aren't wrong. The far-right in Europe is on the rise while the center-left is on the decline, but the whole story is a lot complicated than that. For starters, it isn't just the center-left that is in decline.

A study conducted by Italy’s Istituto Cattaneo found that the parties of both of the centre-left and centre-right could both lose so many seats in next year’s contest that they would no longer have a majority together in the EU legislature.
...The Istituto Cattaneo study gathers data from polling across the continent and finds that the socialists will likely win 19.7%, down from 24.9% in the last elections in 2014.

The centre-right European People’s Party group is on course for 25.1%, down from 32% – an even steeper fall, but from a higher base.

The decline of the neoliberal center-right is increasing.
Yesterday's big news came from Germany, and the misleading way it is being reported is why I'm writing this essay.

Chancellor Angela Merkel has been a seemingly invincible figure in German politics...The chancellor already had watched her power drain away for a year, ever since inconclusive national elections that left her trying to hold together the same tired and unwieldy governing coalition, as a far-right party entered Parliament for the first time to become the leading voice of the opposition.

This leaves you with the depressing impression that Germany is going from center-right rule to far-right rule. You would never know from reading this that the big winners from this month in Germany was the Green Party.

Internationally, most attention has focused on the xenophobic, far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD, which gained 12 percent of the vote and entered the state Parliament for the first time. But the environmentalist Greens made even more impressive gains, securing 19.5 percent of the vote. The results of the Hesse election are eerily similar to those of the Bavarian election that took place earlier this month. There too the two main parties flopped—to the benefit of the Greens and the AfD.

It was the leftist Green Party, not the far-right, that knocked the neoliberal centrist Merkel out of politics. What's more, the Green Party is polling second in Germany.
So the real story here is the rise of the Green Party in Germany, not the rise of a neo-nazi party. It makes you wonder why this almost never gets reported in America.

It isn't just Germany where the Greens are rising.

In the Netherlands, the GreenLeft party, which boosted its tally of MPs from four to 14 in general elections last year, has also advanced to second position in the polls since then, from 9% to nearly 13%.

Greens also did great in Belgium. In Iceland the prime minister is a Green.

Elsewhere in Europe the main opposition to the ruling neoliberal centrist isn't on the far-right, but is instead on the left.
In Britain the center-right Tories are foundering on Brexit. Despite an unprecedented news media assault, leftist Jeremy Corbyn will still defeat the likely Tory leader in an election.
In France, neoliberal centrist and globalist darling Macron is sinking fast in the polls.
While the news media talks endlessly about the far-right National Front, the French see the far-left Melenchon as being the primary opposition. Like Corbyn, the political elites hate Melenchon.

Finally, let's not overlook the Green Party USA. Despite being written off entirely by the news media, and demonized by the Democrats, the Green Party is growing in the U.S.

Party leaders say there are now over 255,000 registered Greens in the 21 states, plus the District of Columbia, that give voters the option to register with the party, an increase from 216,000 in July 2016.

Their growth is due not just to the failure of Mr. Sanders campaign, but to what many Greens see as the success of Ms. Stein’s, which raised three times as much money, $3.4 million, and got over three times as many votes as she did in 2012. She appeared on the ballot in 45 states, the most ever for a Green nominee, and won over 1.4 million votes, or roughly one percent.

So why does the news media ignore this trend?

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Roy Blakeley's picture

As to your question at the end, there are not many news media these days. They are mostly propaganda arms of the neoliberal center left and the neoliberal center right (bearing in mind that the terms "left" and "right" are not particularly meaningful in this context) and they have limited concern for the truth. They do not want a Green alternative to be taken seriously, just like they did not want Bernie to be taken seriously, so they ignore Green results when they do well and emphasize them when they do badly.

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polkageist's picture

Of course the media ignores the Greens and any other leftist group. The neoliberal establishment does not want competition. How can they steal the commonwealth if people have a choice? Our corporate masters are doing a good job of neutering news media and alternative opinion. Maybe there is hope because many people still see the obvious bias in news. Otherwise, there wouldn't be some of the vote results that we see or some of the poll results that we can occasionally find or the general weltschmerz that we suffer. One can only hope.

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-Greed is not a virtue.
-Socialism: the radical idea of sharing.
-Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.
John F. Kennedy, In a speech at the White House, 1962

The Liberal Moonbat's picture

2016: Trump points at what NAFTA's done to America, Bernie champions a $15 minimum wage, Hillary makes vague emotional appeals about racism and sexism and stuff.

...*doodlydoodlydoodlyWHOOOOSH*...

2000: Nader foretells what NAFTA's going to do to America, insists the minimum wage be "pegged to" inflation, demands an end to the War On Drugs and appoints a First Nations woman as his running mate.

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In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.

Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!

lotlizard's picture

Nationwide, if federal election were next Sunday
25 %   CDU – Christian Democrats; chancellor Angela Merkel’s party
20       Greens
16.5    AfD – Alternative for Germany; right-wing populists
14       SPD – Social Democrats
11       Left Party
  9.5    FDP – Free Democrats, laissez-faire-economics party; “liberals” (European terminology)
  4       other parties (each below 5 percent cutoff, winning no seats)
——
Source (INSA poll released Oct. 29):
http://www.wahlrecht.de/umfragen/index.htm

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@lotlizard @lotlizard
Weren't they the right wing party? Or were they the Leftists and the Christian democrats the Right? "Christian" sounds like a right wing party.

FDF sounds like US Libertarians.

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I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

lotlizard's picture

@The Voice In the Wilderness  
with a particular affinity for positions favored by the Roman Catholic church.

A lot of people who vote for the AfD formerly voted for the Christian Democrats, but now perceive Merkel and her party as no longer conservative in any sense of the word.

The Social Democrats were founded in 1863 as full-fledged socialists and are Germany’s oldest still-existing political party.

People whose politics are further to the left than the Social Democrats’ tend to revile them for their counter-revolutionary role at key junctures in German history, such as voting for German entry into World War I in 1914, or bloodily suppressing socialist/communist uprisings in 1919.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustav_Noske

A well-known saying, “Wer hat uns verraten? Die Sozialdemokraten!” (“Who betrayed us? The Social Democrats!”) comes from the lyrics of a song sung at communist rallies during the Weimar Republic.

Just last night, the German TV channel Arte broadcast a docudrama about the Kiel Mutiny, which ushered in the abdication of Kaiser Wilhelm II and the establishment of the Weimar Republic.

It’s the centennial, the 100th anniversary, of these events, after all.

The narrator of the docudrama was Sahra Wagenknecht, Left Party politician. The Left Party absorbed the former communists of East Germany. Wagenknecht is regarded as a maverick for going against her own party in favoring limits on immigration.

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@lotlizard
Sounds much like the USA with the political populists moving left and Right leaving the corrupt Middle to eventually collapse.

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I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

lotlizard's picture

@The Voice In the Wilderness  
markets and the like.

If only Germany were more like the U.S., they say, then maybe cutthroat monopoly capitalism disruptive innovation would also happen in Germany.

Why aren’t there any Germany or Europe-based companies going toe-to-toe with Google, Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, AirBnB, Uber, etc.? The FDP’s conventional answer is that creative young minds are stifled by bureaucratic barriers, over-regulation, and cultural antipathy to greed and ambition visionary enterprise, so they go elsewhere to make their mark.

Right now the FDP is kind of a one-man show (Christian Lindner).

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Not Henry Kissinger's picture

European parliamentarians applauded Costa on 14 March when he spoke of how an anti-austerity alliance between the mainstream and radical left had shielded Portugal from right-wing populism. “What sets democratic politics apart from populism is that it does not tap into people’s fears… but instead gives them back hope in the future,” Costa told MEPs at the European Parliament in Strasbourg.

The coalition government has functioned better than even its creators could have hoped. Since the PS administration entered office in November 2015, Portugal has, for the first time this century, caught up with the rest of Europe: economic growth last year reached a 17-year high of 2.7 per cent, above the eurozone average of 2.5 per cent. More than 270,000 jobs have been created over the last two years, while unemployment, which peaked at 17 per cent in 2013, fell below 8 per cent in December 2017 for the first time in more than 13 years.

The government has increased state pensions, the minimum wage and public sector pay while cutting taxes and improving welfare benefits for the lowest-paid. Costa has achieved this at the same time as complying with the EU’s strict fiscal rules, which prohibit budget deficits of more than 3 per cent of GDP. Government borrowing has been reduced to 1 per cent; the lowest figure since the restoration of Portuguese democracy in 1974.

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The current working assumption appears to be that our Shroedinger's Cat system is still alive. But what if we all suspect it's not, and the real problem is we just can't bring ourselves to open the box?

Amanda Matthews's picture

how could they keep us in line if we actually KNEW there were options other the the Official Party Line??

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I'm tired of this back-slapping "Isn't humanity neat?" bullshit. We're a virus with shoes, okay? That's all we are. - Bill Hicks

Politics is the entertainment branch of industry. - Frank Zappa

Portugal also has done away with the war on drugs through decriminalization and implementing effective treatment programs for addicts. Yet, no one follows or talks up their example. Same 'ole bullshit.

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2017/dec/05/portugals-radical-drugs-pol...

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