Europeโs leaders cannot stop talking about democracy. President Emmanuel Macron says he wants to kickstart a democratic โresurgenceโ, and Friedrich Merz, the German chancellor, has warned of an โaxisโ of autocratic states targeting liberal democracy in Europe. Having promised to โfightโ for what she calls European โvaluesโ, Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, has just announced a new โdemocracy shieldโ and a Centre for Democratic Resilience to prevent foreign interference and deal with external threats. I keep hoping for similar scrutiny of democratic backsliding within the EU โ but so far it has not happened.
Foreign interference, disinformation and the creeping illiberalism of Hungary, Poland and Slovakia deserve attention. But lost in this fretting is a more inconvenient truth: within Europeโs โmatureโ democracies, there is a steady corrosion of the rule of law, a degradation of political discourse and the normalisation of racism, xenophobia and discrimination.
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