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Belgium: right-wing Vlaams Blok benefits from hostility to
government
By Paul Bond
30 June 2004
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Regional and European elections on June 13 have dealt a serious
blow to Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt.
While exposing further the escalating social tensions, the
elections are setting the scene for a further rightward shift
in Belgian politics. For the first time it has been suggested
that other parliamentary parties may enter talks with the racist
Flemish nationalist Vlaams Blok (VB). This comes barely two months
after a Belgian court convicted the party of a systematically
racist campaign against immigrants.
In Dutch-speaking Flanders, the economically dominant north
of the country, Verhofstadts Flemish Liberal Democratic
Party (VLD) was beaten into third place in the regional assembly
by the Christian Democrats and VB. At the regional election, VB
took nearly a quarter of the votes in Flanders.
Many dismissed this simply as a protest vote against Verhofstadt.
Verhofstadt himself insisted that the European results (in which
the VLD polled 13.56 percent, again placing them third behind
VB, who took 14.34 percent of the vote) were not as bad
as all that. The VLD retained its three seats in the European
assembly. VB also took a third seat.
The Flemish Christian Democrats (CD-V) took four seats at the
European assembly, as did the social democratic Socialist Party
(PS) in francophone Wallonie. In the poorer southern region the
Reform Movement (MR), the VLDs sister party, took three
seats, as did the Flemish social democrats.
The humiliation suffered by the VLD was further compounded
when Britain vetoed Verhofstadts appointment as next president
of the European Commission. Verhofstadt was the favoured candidate
of the French and Germans. He had supported their opposition to
unilateral US military action against Iraq, which did not endear
him to the most open supporters of Washington within the European
Union. London regards him as a European federalist.
This rejection has further compromised his position in Belgium.
The Belgian daily Le Soir openly asked if this was the
end of his political career, while La Libre Belgique described
the obstacles to his continued involvement in domestic politics.
Verhofstadt had not been able to put a gloss on the VLDs
poor showing in the regional elections, where VB continued to
extend their influence. VB received 24 percent of the vote in
Flanders. Around one million people voted for them, out of a Flemish
population of some five and a half million. As well as substantially
increasing on their 19.9 percent showing at last years general
election, they took 32 seats in the 124-seat regional assembly.
There was clearly an element of protest in the voting. In Wallonie
the far-right Front National (FN) polled most in areas with high
unemployment. One FN voter in Charleroi told reporters, A
vote for the FN scares the traditional parties. It is a warning
cry ... I dont want the FN to get into power. The
fact that popular protest takes such a right-wing form is a cause
for serious concern, however. The FN was also able to maintain
its share of the vote in rural regions that have historically
provided the bedrock of fascist movements. In Charleroi its candidate
received 16.9 percent of the vote, an increase on the 12 percent
it gained at the general election.
Across Wallonie, the PS increased its majority. It also moved
ahead of MR to become the largest single party in the Brussels
region.
In Flanders the leading electoral list was the centre-right
alliance between the Flemish Christian Democrats (CD-V) and the
Nieuw Vlaams Alliantie (NV-A). Many commentators have noted that
this makes VB the largest single party in Flanders.
Since 1989 the other parliamentary parties have maintained
a cordon sanitaire around VB. Under this agreement, no mainstream
party was to cooperate with VB or form a coalition with it. However,
after the general election VB was increasingly dictating the tone
and terms of public debate. In the absence of any political perspective
to oppose them, the cordon sanitaire amounted to little more than
a safety fence for the VB.
As soon as the election results were posted, CD-V leader Yves
Leterme stated adamantly that he would not be entering into any
coalition with VB and that he would maintain the cordon sanitaire.
Leterme is charged with forming the next Flemish administration.
With VB holding a quarter of the seats, Leterme is faced with
building a three-way coalition to keep it out of office. The Flemish
Greens (Agalev) have already said it will not enter a coalition
with the CD-V, and most commentators expect an alliance with the
VLD and the social democrats.
Jan Renders, head of the ACW (another party within the CD-V/N-VA
list), quickly rejected the possibility of any coalition with
VB. Renders warned that any deal with VB would cause meltdown
for the CD-V.
Renders comments, though, were made the same day that
Leterme held meetings with leaders of the VB. Leterme said that
he was seeking clarification on elements of the partys
programme.
There is little to clarify. VB advocates ending immigration,
and repatriating North African immigrants. It calls for the division
of Belgium along racial lines, with the formation of an ethnically
pure Flanders. In common with other hard-line proponents of free
enterprise, it has adopted a social programme aimed at ending
democratic rights and smashing organisations of the working class.
When a Ghent court found VB in breach of laws against racism
earlier this year, it noted that the party systematically
portrayed immigrants as freeloading troublemakers in order to
drum up support for a collective expulsion of foreigners.
The party was only able to stand in these elections because its
appeal against the conviction is still pending.
That appeal is due to be heard in November. If the appeals
court upholds the Ghent courts ruling, VB could be cut off
from state funding. However, the partys president Frank
Vanhecke said that the ruling was pushing it to new legal
pursuits. There have been proposals to cut some statements
from the partys manifesto, and perhaps change the name of
the party.
There are also the first indications that the cordon sanitaire
is beginning to fray, precisely because VB offers the mechanisms
for a rightward shift in domestic politics. There was public criticism
of Leterme, but his position is not an isolated one. Verhofstadt,
for example, told Flemish papers Het Volk and Het Nieuwsblad
that he believed it was time to open a frank dialogue with VB
in order to expose the simplistic weaknesses of their
politics.
Boudewijn Boukaert of the liberal think-tank Civitas told Le
Soir that VBs claims of undemocratic treatment would
be proved correct if it were denied a place in government. Citing
the example of Jorg Haiders Freedom Party in Austria, Boukaert
advocates allowing VB a role in government as they would have
extreme problems and would pay the price at the next elections.
An indication of the direction the Belgian government is likely
to take can be seen from a recent letter to unemployed people.
In order to reduce the number of long-term unemployedcurrently
standing at 171,288the National Employment Office wrote
to 90,000 people under 30 who have been without work for 15 months,
telling them to find a job within four months. Those who are not
successful risk losing part of their unemployment benefit.
See Also:
Belgiums Flemish
fascists, the Vlaams Blok, seek gains in Euro elections
[31 May 1999]
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