Extremist right-wing European parties took advantage of the crisis caused by the spread of the Corona virus to develop a conspiracy vision of the world, differing - according to what it ideologically serves - from one country to another, considering that the crisis may be an excuse to impose an authoritarian form of government outside the parliamentary control, or to lay chips under the skin of In order to track the citizens.

With this introduction, the French newspaper "Le Monde" summarized an interview with the director of the Jean-Goris Foundation for Political Extremism, Jean-Yves Camus, in which he analyzed the different positions of the European extreme right towards managing the "Covid 19" crisis.

In his interview with Lucy Soyer, Camus said that the responses of the European right-wing parties were adapted by country, and according to quarantine measures, where these measures are more stringent, the extreme right accuses the authority of being false and incompetent, and where the measures are lighter, the same charge is ready .

With the different positions of the right-wing party leaders regarding the behavior of their governments, we find the usual commonalities between them present, as all their speeches focus on the issue of returning to the national borders, says Camus.

Speech closer to conspiracy theory

It is common for right-wing poles - according to Camus - to repeat that they were the first to warn of the dangers of transporting strategic industries, and from immigration and globalization that generate permanent movements, this Norbert Hofer of the Austrian Freedom Party claims that he was the first to demand medical checks at airports, and these are Marin Le Pen says it is the first to demand the closure of the border in France.

Camus says that the far-right parties all claim that the European Union is an unnatural being, because the natural world system is based on the nation-state system. It is also unanimous in criticizing governments' lack of preparedness for the epidemic, to the extent that the National Rally in France accuses the government of "collusion".

Researcher Camus explained that the extreme right likes the idea of ​​"hidden causes", and therefore his questions focus on the origin of the virus. Although he does not say that his spread was intended, he is demanding that he shed light on the hypothesis of his "leakage" from the Wuhan laboratory in China, so that the European Parliament member for Swedish Democrats, Charlie Wimers, is reviving the issue of anti-communism.

However, the prevailing feeling among the far right - according to Camo - that the crisis will be an excuse to impose an authoritarian form of government outside of parliamentary oversight, and that some of them are convinced that it will lead to laying chips under the skin for tracking.

Camo said that the extreme right is trying to show that there is double standards, by restricting the freedoms of citizens on the one hand, and leniency with groups of the population that do not respect quarantine controls on the other.

For example, UK Independence Party founder Nigel Farrage complains that the police visited him because he went to Dover to film a report on the secret arrival of migrants, while Marie Le Pen roared against the suburbs and considered them "outlaw areas", and accused the French government of lying in "everything" Absolutely".

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State lied

Camus said that Marie-Le Pen's obsession depends on the idea of ​​"lying to the state," a position consistent with the nature of the anti-regime party such as the national grouping, which will lose its credibility if it joins national unity, because its vision of the world is based on a contradiction between the people and the elites, and between "people with fixed roots". And “nomads”, and between “patriots” and “believers in globalization”.

Although the President of the French Republic, Emmanuel Macron and Health Minister Olivier Ferrand made it clear beyond any doubt that the country is facing an unprecedented health crisis due to a virus that the best scientists in the world have not yet been able to comprehend about its reality, Le Pen voters who do not believe in the vicissitudes of predestination believe that the authorities always You know, and if you don't say it, it hides.

When asked, do the far-right parties gain political points from the health crisis? Camus said that this is not the case everywhere, and set an example in Italy, where Matteo Salvini shot the Conte government because he left it, but that did not help him in the elections, and if the crisis benefited others in other countries, as in Belgium, where it rose Right-wing Flames Pelang's chances of voting intentions.