Europeโ€™s leaders cannot stop talking about democracy. President Emmanuel Macron says he wants to kickstart a democratic โ€œresurgenceโ€, and Friedrich Merz, the German chancellor, has warned of an โ€œaxisโ€ of autocratic states targeting liberal democracy in Europe. Having promised to โ€œfightโ€ for what she calls European โ€œvaluesโ€, Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, has just announced a new โ€œdemocracy 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 Europeโ€™s โ€œmatureโ€ democracies, there is a steady corrosion of the rule of law, a degradation of political discourse and the normalisation of racism, xenophobia and discrimination.

Growing up in a count

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