AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.
Create a link to this page
Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:
The assassination of Dutch politician Pim Fortuyn shocked Europeans, and deserves notice here.
Fortuyn was a 54-year-old maverick, a professor turned journalist turned politician, who upset the cozy world of Dutch politics when his brand-new party won a third of the seats in local elections at Rotterdam, Holland's second-largest city. Fortuyn, who called for lower levels of immigration and lower taxes, and for a crackdown on crime, was sometimes called a populist, but more often a right-winger, or an extreme right-winger. His party was contesting the national parliamentary elections when he was gunned down.
His death is the most lurid symbol of the vilification of conservative opinion in the brave new world of the EU. While it is often wrong to extrapolate from the deeds of lone gunmen, Fortuyn's murderer may well have been politically motivated. Dutch police are holding a 32-year-old eco-activist -- a man of the wild Left. The timing of Fortuyn's murder, within a fortnight after the French presidential elections, was also suggestive. As all the world knew, Jean-Marie Le Pen made it into the French run-off. Le Pen is a demagogue who has said deplorable things. But in a race that included a former Trotskyite (Lionel Jospin), as well as current Communists, of both the Third and Fourth Internationals, it was grotesque to treat him as a portent of the end- times. In Europe, radicals and totalitarians of the Left are part of the order of things, but the non-establishment Right is beyond the pale.
Consider, also, the elasticity of European definitions. The 73-year-old Le Pen carried the baggage of a French Right tainted by Algerian ...
Source: HighBeam Research, Europe: A Murder and Taboos.(Brief Article)