All eyes on EU liberals as coalition with far-right tests campaign promise Dear readers, Welcome to EU Elections Decoded, your essential guide for staying up to date and receiving exclusive insights about the upcoming EU elections. This is Max Griera, writing from Brussels! Subscribe here. In today’s edition Will the EU liberals stick to their promise to keep the far-right at bay? Bits of the week: Voice of Europe to be sanctioned; EU Council wants to reassess tools to battle foreign interference after elections; new projections; Renew’s Hayer in trouble for selfie with neo-nazis. Having made the fight against the far-right one of the centrepieces of the EU liberals’ campaign, it remains to be seen how they will react to the far-right joining forces with Dutch liberals in a new government in the Netherlands. Will they be true to their word? After criticising the centre-right European People’s Party for its government coalition agreements with far-right parties in Italy, Finland, and Croatia, the EU liberals are now facing the far-right surge in their own home. One member of the liberal Renew group, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s liberal VVD party, is joining forces with Geert Wilders’ far-right PVV in a new government. Another liberal party, Sweden’s Liberalerna, already signed a coalition agreement with the far-right in 2022 but kept the party out of government. In comments to Euractiv, the secretary-general of ALDE, VVD’s European political family, said they are monitoring the situation and awaiting further developments: “We are not going to judge a national party, we judge the actions of a party”, Didrik de Schaetzen said. “We want to make sure that our values are defended, VVD in government will ensure that our values are being respected and that the rule of law is going to be maintained,” he argued, adding: “We have monitoring schemes to make sure that none of our values are being transgressed.” He pointed out that this coalition agreement does not change the party’s determination not to work with the far-right at the EU level. However, these new developments go completely against what ALDE has been saying in recent months. During their electoral congress in Brussels, national member parties approved a resolution vowing to “support the [far-right] cordon sanitaire.” Meanwhile, France’s Valérie Hayer, the leader of Renew group, bringing together ALDE and other liberal parties in the European Parliament, has said that “compromising with the extreme right is not acceptable,” also announcing on X that she will “call a meeting with all the group’s member parties on 10 June”. Renew’s internal procedures make clear that MEPs can be kicked out by secret ballot, but the motion needs to be put forward by the group’s presidency, the group’s bureau, or a group of MEPs representing at least five national delegations and a third of the entire group. The European Democratic Party, a faction of Renew Europe, expressed its “total disagreement” with the developments in the Hague. “In contradiction to ALDE’s commitments” The Socialists and Greens have also been quick to voice their concerns. “Supporting a government led by a far-right party is a dramatic breach of the democratic cordon sanitaire around the far right, and in sharp contradiction with ALDE’s stated commitments,” said the Greens group co-president and lead candidate Terry Reinke. She demanded that ALDE and Renew make sure there are “consequences for their Dutch member party” decision to ally with the far-right, “which has historical significance”. Meanwhile, the Socialists and Democrats group President Iratxe García told Euractiv that they “expect a strong stance from Renew,” highlighting that “it’s up to Renew to decide its position, where it stands, and whether it respects the declaration as a group”. Just a week ago, Socialists, Greens, Liberals, and Left parliamentary groups signed a declaration promising to keep the far-right at bay “at any level” – which the conservative EPP, the biggest parliamentary group, refused to sign. |