Friday, November 30, 2018

What the G20 Should Focus On: Right-Wing Nationalism

 
By Nida Khan

It’s that time again; the gathering of world leaders for the G20 summit. This year’s forum, held in Argentina on November 30th and December 1st, will focus on many things from the global economy, trade and transatlantic relations to a U.S./China showdown, various regional tensions and much more. But what will likely not appear on the agenda, in a bilateral meeting, nor in a sideline discussion, is one of the greatest challenges the world faces right now: the rise and consolidation of power of right-wing nationalists.

All across Europe, the United States and the west at large, there is a recurring theme where societies are becoming increasingly diverse and simultaneously there is a rise in xenophobia and hate crimes. It’s no coincidence that at the same time, there are significant gains that right-wing and nationalist parties/individuals have made globally and there is cause for great alarm. The question is, what are we going to do about it?

In Italy, the Five Star Movement and right-wing League recently formed a coalition government. Part of their program includes ‘mass deportations for undocumented migrants’, and Italy’s new Interior Minister has made outrageous statements like ‘we must stop being the refugee camp of Europe’. In Austria, the right-wing anti-immigrant conservative Freedom Party (which was formed in 1956 by a former officer in the SS by the way), won 26 percent of the vote last year — 26 percent.

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Source: Medium.com 

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