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News > United Kingdom

Jeremy Corbyn at European Socialists Congress: EU Support for Austerity Behind Rise of Far Right

  • British opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn is seen after his speech at the Party of European Socialists annual meeting in Lisbon, Portugal, Dec. 7, 2018.

    British opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn is seen after his speech at the Party of European Socialists annual meeting in Lisbon, Portugal, Dec. 7, 2018. | Photo: Reuters

Published 7 December 2018
Opinion

"The far right feeds on fears fueled by falling living standards, damaged communities, insecure work and underfunded public services."

British opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn urged Europe's Socialists Friday to challenge the political establishment and team up with like-minded leftists to check the rise of "fake" right-wing populists.

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“EU support for austerity and failed neoliberal policies have caused serious hardship for working people across Europe,” Corbyn said in a speech to the annual congress of the Party of European Socialists in Lisbon. It had “damaged the credibility of European social democratic parties and played a significant role in the vote for Brexit.”

He added that Europe must come together to fight against the rise of right-wing and neliberal policies. Failing to do so "will smooth the path to power of the fake populists," Corbyn said in a speech to the annual congress of the Party of European Socialists in Lisbon.

"The far right feeds on fears fueled by falling living standards, damaged communities, insecure work and underfunded public services. It diverts the blame away from the powerful few responsible for economic and social failure and onto minorities."

Far-right anti-immigration forces have been on the rise in Europe in recent years, coming to power in Italy, Austria, Hungary and Poland, gaining clout in Germany and France, and scoring their first success in Spain on Sunday.

"If the European political establishment carries on with business as usual, the fake populists of the far right will fill the vacuum," Corbyn said.

He called on left-leaning leaders to work together as they do in Portugal where the minority Socialist government is backed in parliament by the two far left parties.

Speaking just ahead of a Dec. 11 British parliament vote on Prime Minister Theresa May's Brexit plan, Corbyn reiterated that Labour felt the deal should be rejected while a better one, ideally for a long-term customs union with the EU, remained possible. "We think the deal she brought back is not acceptable," he told reporters earlier. "It pleases nobody."

"First thing is to oppose this deal, get the government to negotiate a better deal along the lines we set out and if they can’t do that they should resign and we have a general election."

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