TTR, I think you'll find that the neo-liberals such as the UK Conservatives and the Dutch VVD etc. are still the right wing parties. The ones who push Laws to help big business, to help the wealthiest top 5% stay in that position.
I have no idea what the socio-economical stance of Farage UK is or that of le Pen etc. What I do know from the Dutch PVV (Wilders party) that they are far right on immigration and very much left socio-economically. They were the biggest party at the Dutch November elections and, depending on your viewpoint, did/didn't become the largest NL party at the EU elections. In the 20 years of their existence they have never had to formulate policy. Fix issues. Come up with solutions. Wilders has been brilliant at slating the government and pointing out what he thinks is wrong but has yet to come up with a single solution. He now has the power in his hands, working together with his 3 right of centre coalition partners, to solve all the stuff he's been complaining about for 2 decades.
IMO, he will struggle. Why? Well, the PVV is a party whose constitution permits just the one member and that is Wilders. As they have been on the fringes they haven't had may MPs etc. No party members who are au fait with how politics and government works. Nobody who has the knowledge and experience to become a Minister or Secretary of State. They also dropped one at the election. Greatly underestimating how many seats they'd win so they didn't have sufficient names on their list of candidates. Enough to fill the 37 seats they won. Others on the list who didn't win a seat are, in football parlance, the bench. I can't remember how many they had "in reserve". Them one of their number was appointed speaker of the house. He moved seats and one of the "subs" took his place. They now have to supply a number of Ministers and SoS's. Some of them will come from outside of politics. The rest will come from the group who have the 37 seats. There is the possibility that they will end up with more MPs taking up Ministerial/SoS posts than they have "subs on the bench". That means that, although they won 37 seats in the election they could well end up with 36 or less votes in the "Commons". Monumental blunder there.
IMO, they are also going to struggle with their manifesto wishes. Much of the anti immigration and repatriation stuff in the manifesto, which is the same stuff Wilders has been pushing for 2 decades, has been shelved because it's against one or more of NL Law/Constitution and/or against EU Law and/or against ECHR and/or against International Treaties NL has signed up to. Then there's the socio-economical stuff. He was going to raise the minimum wage substantially. That's been dropped. Every resident has health insurance with an annual €385 excess clause. He called it a tax on ill health and he's right. They would scrap it. Now the plans for the coalition are out there, it appears it won't be scrapped but merely reduced to €165 a year..... in 2027, just in time to win votes for the next election (provided the coalition goes full term and we have the next election in November of that year). There are also some tax breaks for big business and the top 5% as well as some proposed new tax gathering from the rich that now won't happen. Raising the minimum wage and scrapping the health insurance excess are the 2 major policies for the PVV's new voters.


Reply With Quote
