The conclusion seems clear within the 27 countries of the European Union: the far-right was the big winner of this vote. Far-right parties also won the European elections in Italy, Austria, Hungary and Belgium. How did Europe slide towards this extreme? A number of research projects at the University of Luxembourg shed light on this question, and attempt to provide answers to better understand the ongoing redrawing of the political map.
In 2019, as the health crisis caused by the emergence of COVID-19 erupted, researchers began to ask how the pandemic might affect society, the economy, politics and mental health. Josip Glaurdic and Christophe Lesschaeve were working on electoral behaviour and political competition over the past three decades in the Balkan countries. Then pandemic intervened, and new questions arose: "The region we were interested in was one of the hardest hit by Covid-19. Southeast Europe had the darkest figures regarding coronavirus-related mortality. We thought the problem was political and sought to understand the phenomenon by focusing on nationalism and populism, the two ideologies that currently dominate the political landscape in almost all’of Europe. We, therefore, measured individuals’ adherence to these ideological visions to understand how much it was or wasn’t a determining factor in predicting belief in conspiracy theories, trust in science, vaccination...", explains Glaurdic. The researchers’ findings are unequivocal: "Nationalism and populism prevail over all’other explanations of individuals’ behaviour and beliefs related to the pandemic, even education." He adds: "Managing a pandemic is just one aspect of contemporary society; there are also economic inequality, migration... the extent of nationalist and populist divides in those areas as well is simply astounding. The polarisation of society is insane."
Economy, insecurity and identity withdrawal
European society has evolved, and its concerns, once economic, are now increasingly identity-based. "There has been a shift towards more cultural issues over the past few decades. Immigration has become the focal point of a new narrative. Cultural identity in society influences voting preferences more today than economic interest", notes Christophe Lesschaeve.The recent success of Conservative political parties is also at the heart of a number of projects led by Conchita d’Ambrosio, together with Anthony Lepinteur and other members of her research team. In particular, she has examined the impact of individual economic insecurity on voting choices. "We have demonstrated how much economic insecurity encourages political activism, but of a certain type: support for more conservative and right-wing parties", she explains before adding: "It seems that since the 2000s, economic insecurity matters more in predicting political preferences than in the past."
This growing sense of global insecurity fueled by worries about unemployment, digitalization, artificial intelligence, pandemics, armed conflicts, and the ecological crisis is reflected in a new PhD programme at the University of Luxembourg, co-funded by the FNR. "Economic Insecurity: Causes, Consequences, and Actions (EICCA)" will fund 14 PhD positions across the Social Sciences , in partnership with LISER , and aims to provide new ways of measuring economic insecurity understand its origins and impact, and evaluate the political responses.