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	<title>C(h)ristian's Blog &#187; Perussuomalaiset</title>
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	<description>Masculinities and the Obsession of Nation</description>
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		<title>All Those Mighty Men Defending Democracy and the Freedom of Speech? Is Plebiscitarian Democracy Swiss Style the Future of Finnish Democracy- the Solution of a New Finnish Radical Right Populist Party? (I)</title>
		<link>http://www.norocel.eu/?p=530</link>
		<comments>http://www.norocel.eu/?p=530#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Jun 2010 19:22:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>O Cristian Norocel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[democracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[direct democracy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Finland election 2011]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[freedom of speech]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Juha Mäki-Ketelä]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Muutos 2011]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Perussuomalaiset]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[populism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[radical right populism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[referendum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sweden elections 2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Uusi Suomi]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.norocel.eu/?p=530</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[2010 and respectively 2011 are going to be very lively years, at  least politically in the northern part of the EU; Sweden will held  parliamentary and local elections on 19th September 2010, and Finland in  the first half of 2011, most likely in April. What distinguishes these  elections from the previous [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>2010 and respectively 2011 are going to be very lively years, at  least politically in the northern part of the EU; Sweden will held  parliamentary and local elections on 19th September 2010, and Finland in  the first half of 2011, most likely in April. What distinguishes these  elections from the previous ones is the ever greater presence of Radical  Right Populist (<strong>RRP</strong>) parties. This blog entry will be divided into two parts, first focusing on Finland and the possible rearrangements on the Finish political scene before the Finnish Parliamentary elections. The second part, which will be published in a later entry, will more carefully analyze the change in attitudes towards the main Swedish <strong>RRP</strong>, the Sweden Democrats (<strong>SD</strong>/Sverigedemokraterna), especially on behalf of the media and the party&#8217;s preparations for the coming elections in September.</p>
<p>In Finland, it seems that <strong>RRP </strong>parties attempt to make even deeper inroads into the national parliament. In the 2007 elections the True Finns (<strong>PS</strong>/ Perussuomalaiset/ Sannfinländarna) received some 4.5% of the votes which translated into 5 seats in the Finnish Parliament (Eduskunta/Riksdagen). Not only that, but it seems that <strong>PS </strong>was not perceived as a political force to be avoided, or ringed by the<em> cordon sanitaire</em> like in Sweden. As such, the 2009 EU elections witnessed the alliance between the populist <strong>PS </strong>and the Christian-Democrats (<strong>KD</strong>/Kristillisdemokraatit/Kristdemokraterna) which led to their presence in the European Parliament with 2 representatives.</p>
<p>But that appears to be only the beginning.  Recently, the online newspapers <strong>Uusi Suomi</strong> (New Finland) published an article about the emergence of a splinter group from <strong>PS</strong> as a full-fledged party, after having gathered the required 5,000 signatures (in Finnish, <a title="Muutos 2011 Uusi Suomessa" href="http://www.uusisuomi.fi/kotimaa/94225-listalla-5000-nimea-%E2%80%93-suomeen-uusi-puolue" target="_blank">tässä</a>).  The Finnish Broadcasting Company (<strong>YLE</strong>/Yleisradio/ Rundradion) reported on the possibility of this new <strong>RRP</strong> political force in Finland as well (more extensively in Finnish, <a title="Muutos 2011 YLE:ssa" href="http://yle.fi/uutiset/kotimaa/2010/06/muutos_2011_-liike_muuttumassa_puolueeksi_1741013.html" target="_blank">tässä</a>; briefly in Swedish, <a title="Muutos 2011 på internytt" href="http://svenska.yle.fi/nyheter/artikel.php?id=188166" target="_blank">här</a>).</p>
<p>The new political force, which reunites the more immigrant critical voices from <strong>PS</strong>, is lead by Juha Mäki-Ketelä and in the near future will apply for being recognized as a political entity, submitting the collected signatures to the Minister of Justice. According to its leader, the new political force has quite ambitious plans aiming at 2-3 seats in the future Finnish Parliament. Interestingly the party to be is called <strong>Muutos 2011 </strong>(Förändring 2011/ Change 2011). Mäki-Ketelä appeared to be rather irritated about the anti-immigration allegations and underlined that his future party will focus on the rights of Finnish citizens and the possibility of enforcing a more plebiscitary type of politics in Finland.</p>
<p>A closer look at the party web-pages (in Finnish, <a title="Muutos 2011 suomeksi" href="http://muutos2011.fi/cms/" target="_blank">tässä</a>; and briefly in Swedish, <a title="Muutos 2011 på svenska" href="http://muutos2011.fi/cms/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=47&amp;Itemid=87" target="_blank">här</a>; and English <a title="Muutos 2011 in English" href="http://muutos2011.fi/cms/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=48&amp;Itemid=88" target="_blank">here</a>) resemble a book example of <strong>RRP</strong>: the party would aim to <strong>1)</strong> advance the interest of Finnish citizens; <strong>2)</strong> direct democracy to support parliamentary democracy;<strong> 3)</strong> freedom of speech includes dissidents and those expressing opinions different from mainstream; <strong>4)</strong> abandonment of consensus politics; and last but not least, <strong>5) </strong>rationalization of immigration politics. Indeed <strong>1)</strong> and <strong>2)</strong> sound like the recipe for the modern democratic malaise, with low participation of the citizenry in the elections and an increasing politics of consensus that estranges even more the citizenry. Thus <strong>4)</strong> is pointing an accusing finger, very much in the populist vein, at the Finnish political establishment that is found guilty of building consensus for their policies. <strong>3) </strong>is intimately related to <strong>4) </strong>since they both constitute a critique to &#8220;politics as usual&#8221; of Western democracies. And finally, <strong>5) </strong>does not really come at a surprise if it is to remember that the party is representing <strong>PS</strong>&#8216;  anti-immigration breakaway group.</p>
<p>However, some questions come to the fore. Would the Swiss model of direct democracy energize Finnish democracy, or would be the plebiscitarian option used to stave off immigration policy in Finland? How greater a role played the result of the latest Swiss referendum &#8211; that which witnessed the forbidding of minarets being built in Switzerland &#8211; in <strong>Muutos 2011</strong> decision to embrace plebiscite as means of democratic expression? What kind of effect would have the presence of this party on <strong>PS</strong>? Will it become a part of the mainstream, even a desired coalition partner in the coming Finnish government; will other parties share <strong>PS</strong>&#8216; criticism of immigration and welfare protectionism?</p>
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		<title>Radical Right Populism and Peripheries in Times of Crisis: Glimpses from Finland and Sweden</title>
		<link>http://www.norocel.eu/?p=298</link>
		<comments>http://www.norocel.eu/?p=298#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 24 Oct 2009 15:07:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>O Cristian Norocel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Research]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Evil Other]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Finland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Finnish-speaking Finns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[masculinities]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Perussuomalaiset]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[racism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[radical right populism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sverigedemokraterna]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sweden]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Swedish-speaking Finns]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.norocel.eu/?p=298</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In times of economic insecurity, or simply of general uncertainty, the parties that manage to make the most of it are the radical right populist parties (RRP). With a rhetoric lambasting at the too liberal immigration policies, too expensive services provided to minorities or language communities, they manage to paint a picture of economic distress. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In times of economic insecurity, or simply of general uncertainty, the parties that manage to make the most of it are the radical right populist parties (<b>RRP</b>). With a rhetoric lambasting at the too liberal immigration policies, too expensive services provided to minorities or language communities, they manage to paint a picture of economic distress. Things need to be put in order, rationalized, according to some efficiency logic that usually is aimed to disadvantage those groups perceived to have &#8220;exploited&#8221;&nbsp; the system for their own gain, and restore the state, and implicitly its expenses to the common people.</p>
<p>For instance in Finland, the last meeting of the youth arm of the True Finns (<b>PS-n/</b>Perussuomalaiset-nuoret/Sannfinländarnas ungdomsorganisation ) witnessed the return to the <a title="PS-N (Swe)" href="http://svenska.yle.fi/nyheter/sok.php?id=169531&amp;sokvariant=arkivet&amp;lookfor=Sannfinl%C3%A4ndarna&amp;advanced=&amp;starttid=&amp;sluttid=&amp;antal=10" mce_href="http://svenska.yle.fi/nyheter/sok.php?id=169531&amp;sokvariant=arkivet&amp;lookfor=Sannfinl%C3%A4ndarna&amp;advanced=&amp;starttid=&amp;sluttid=&amp;antal=10" target="_blank">bellicose rhetoric</a> against the Swedish-speaking Finns and Swedish language(which has equal standing together with Finnish as one of the official languages of the country). According to them, the Swedish-speaking Finns are demanding too much proportionally to their population&#8217;s size (approximately 5.4% of the whole population of Finland), and that if it is about the state providing services in Swedish, then the Swedish-speaking community itself should provide them. Why? Well, it was ascertained it costs too much, though it was not really clear how economic streamlining could so evidently deprive a serious percentage of the population of services they are entitled to by law and guaranteed by the Finnish constitution. And if this was not a statement persuasive enough, then the argument put forward was a bit more simple: to provide services in another language than Finnish, is actually un-Finnish. Why, again? The discussion about the status of Swedish as a national language  was strangely connect to <a title="PS-N (Swe)" href="http://svenska.yle.fi/nyheter/sok.php?id=169559&amp;sokvariant=arkivet&amp;lookfor=Sannfinl%C3%A4ndarna&amp;advanced=&amp;starttid=&amp;sluttid=&amp;antal=10" mce_href="http://svenska.yle.fi/nyheter/sok.php?id=169559&amp;sokvariant=arkivet&amp;lookfor=Sannfinl%C3%A4ndarna&amp;advanced=&amp;starttid=&amp;sluttid=&amp;antal=10" target="_blank">betrayal</a> of Finland. More clearly, having Swedish as the second national language may at anytime give the opportunity to the increasing Russian minority to demand the same status for Russian. This could lead to the hypothetical situation of Finland being transformed into a country with three official languages.</p>
<p>However, looking a bit closer at the<a title="Finland statistics (Eng)" href="http://www.stat.fi/til/vaerak/2008/vaerak_2008_2009-03-27_en.pdf" mce_href="http://www.stat.fi/til/vaerak/2008/vaerak_2008_2009-03-27_en.pdf" target="_blank"> official numbers</a> provided by Statistics Finland (Tilastokeskus/ Statistikcentralen), one may notice that of the whole Finnish population, 4,844,047 of them are Finnish-speaking Finns, followed by 289,951 persons being Swedish-speaking Finns. How many Russian speakers are in Finland? They are some 48,740 strong, or in other words some 1% of the Finnish-speaking population, and even less of the overall population of Finland. How can the Russian community be used as a threat to the Finnish majority? Does <b>PS-n</b> attempt to portray a future for the Finnish-speakers as a &#8220;threatened majority&#8221;, that needs to be suspicious of its own, homegrown Other- the Swedish-speakers-, but also keep an eye on the ever increasing outside Other- the Russian-speakers? Even more interesting it was one of the participant&#8217;s comment that the Swedish-speaking Finns are planning to &#8220;join forces&#8221; with the un-Finns. Does it sound like the classical reasoning of the inner Other plotting with the outside Other to demise the righteous and the True? Will this suffice for ensuring <b>PS</b>&#8217;s success in the next elections, considering that the readily identified solution is turning Swedish into a minority language, and watching its exile to the peripheries of Finnish society together with the Sami language, and the Romani language?<b><b> </b></b></p>
<p>On the other side of Gulf of Bothnia, in Sweden, the Sweden Democrats (<b>SD</b>/Sverigedemokraterna) held their party convention in Ljungbyhed in Klippans commune in Scania province. The province is the main voting reservoir for <b>SD</b>, and in the aforementioned commune, <b>SD</b> received some 7.5% of the votes for the local council. During the convention, Jimmy Åkesson was confirmed his leadership <a title="SD-elections (Swe)" href="http://www.dn.se/nyheter/politik/jimmie-akesson-omvald-1.976587" mce_href="http://www.dn.se/nyheter/politik/jimmie-akesson-omvald-1.976587" target="_blank">position</a>. Statistically, <b>SD</b> cannot pride itself with too impressive numbers: in the most recent elections for the representative in the Swedish Lutheran Church the party pooled 2.84% and increased from 4 to 7 mandates, which was duly dismissed as <a title="SD SLC elections (Swe)" href="http://www.dn.se/nyheter/sverige/kyrkovalet-2009-sd-frimodig-kyrka-1.956803" mce_href="http://www.dn.se/nyheter/sverige/kyrkovalet-2009-sd-frimodig-kyrka-1.956803" target="_blank">a setback</a> by  mainstream commentators.</p>
<p>For most of <b>SD</b>&#8217;s existence as a political force in Sweden, it has been at best ignored, if not purposefully isolated by&nbsp; other political and social actors. The media boycott of even the main yellow press paper in Swede (Aftonbladet), left room to the isolation of <b>SD </b>council representatives in communes across Sweden. It was later revealed that the party representatives&#8217; isolation is not waterproof, and that little by little they come to be tolerated, if not accepted by representatives of other parties. However, this prolonged and consistent isolation allowed <b>SD</b> to play the role of <a title="SD (Swe)" href="http://sydsvenskan.se/kronikepuff/article554411/Motvinden-ar-SDs-medvind.html" mce_href="http://sydsvenskan.se/kronikepuff/article554411/Motvinden-ar-SDs-medvind.html" target="_blank">the martyr</a>. This may have serious implication for the shape of the political scene in Sweden, with parliamentary elections being scheduled for 2010. Some have even ventured to argue that <b>SD</b> may become the kingmakers of the coming Swedish Cabinet. <b>SD</b>&#8217;s central topic for the coming elections appears to be a call to a stop of the immigration, so that to ensure the protection of the Swedish workers from outer competitors, and a return of the welfare state before the turn of the century.</p>
<p>Interestingly, Aftonbladet decided to publish an <a title="Åkesson in Aftonbladet (Swe)" href="http://www.aftonbladet.se/debatt/debattamnen/politik/article5978707.ab" mce_href="http://www.aftonbladet.se/debatt/debattamnen/politik/article5978707.ab" target="_blank">opinion piece </a>authored by Åkesson this week, a first in the mainstream media. The piece, which is basically a critique of the present immigration policy in Sweden, with rather grave accusations against the Muslim community in Sweden, identified as the main Evil Other in the <b>RRP </b>tradition (this has already a history in countries like Denmark, Austria, and The Netherlands, to name just a random few), was met with uproar. The article is a Swedish adaptation of the widely popular <b>RRP</b> theory of Eurabia,i.e. the danger posited to European culture and national specificity by an ever growing and menacing Muslim minority.</p>
<p>Even before being more closely discussed, <b>SD</b>, in general, and Åkesson&#8217;s peice in particular were hastily labeled as &#8220;racist&#8221;.&nbsp; More worrisome, it was revealed that Aftonbladet, not Åkesson, chose the fiery title that read:&nbsp; &#8220;The Muslims are our greatest enemy&#8221;. One can only wonder who benefits from over-using &#8220;racism&#8221;, and the concept entering the banality of daily life? Should not the main political attempt to engage in a punctual debate with <b>SD</b>? Is it be too painful to admit that not even Sweden remained untouched by the <b>RRP</b> waves that sweep Europe?</p>
<p>On a more general level, the most pressing questions are how the mainstream parties, in particular with regard to the electoral competition and the post-electoral parliamentary alliance building processes, and the societies, in general, will react to the constant ascension of the aforementioned parties? Ignoring them and exiling them to the peripheries is no longer actual, not even in Sweden. On the other hand, the increased visibility of such parties may be accompanied by the sudden rise to prominence on the agenda of mainstream parties of precisely this kind of issues.</p>
<p>Swedish language is an integral part of Finland, but it needs the decided commitment of all Finnish political parties (former president Ahtisaari&#8217;s plea for Swedish language in Finland is an excellent example of that). Healthy debates about such topics as language policies, regional development according to the interests of all language groups, and the opportunity of accommodating to an increasing immigrant population in Finland, need to be discussed openly, and it is necessary to argue against <b>PS</b> &#8217;s overt simplifications and menacing portrayal of the Other.&nbsp; At the same time, the topic of meaningful integration of immigrants, and the benefits of immigration for the whole society are highly actual in Sweden. These issues require at times engaging in a dialogue with such parties as <b>PS</b> and <b>SD</b>, not simply dismissing them for being <b>RRP</b>.</p>
<p>What is more important, however, is to be able to look for explanations behind manufactured statistics, and vitriolic rhetoric, and provide well balanced and honest insights into these subjects. But is not this one of the biggest challenges: to be able to explain that there is no Evil Other even in times of economic uncertainty, and that curiosity not fear should be the driving force of societies?</p>
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