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EUROPEAN UNION

Europe’s press mourns Brexit vote

Europe's press was awash with gloom and doom over Brexit on Saturday, warning that it was a boon for nationalists while urging EU leaders to meet the challenge of their "rendezvous with history".

Europe's press mourns Brexit vote
Photo: AFP

A cartoon in the Dutch paper AD Haagsche Courat styled after Edvard Munch's “The Scream” showed the German, Dutch and British leaders howling in horror, holding their hands to their faces.

“It's not an exaggeration to call it a disaster,” Spain's El Pais daily said in an editorial about Britons voting to leave the European Union in Thursday's referendum.

It urged EU nations to offer their citizens “ideas, plans, real leadership,” adding only then could the EU “be saved from the dangerous abyss it has reached”.

“A black day for Europe – OUTch!” was the banner headline of the German daily Bild, while Spain's El Mundo ran a cartoon showing the Beatles crossing Abbey Road towards an abyss.

“The Brexit shock will have profound geopolitical implications,” said an editorial in Italy's leading Corriere della Sera. “The European project will not be the same and the role of Europe in the world will inevitably be reshaped.”

Calling the UK referendum result a “blow to Europe”, Corriere said it marked the end of a period of optimism and cooperation in European history that began with the fall of the Berlin Wall.

“Europe is a common home that is on fire,” said Laurent Joffrin of France's left-leaning daily Liberation. “Its leaders have a rendezvous with history.”

He said Britons had voted with their pocketbooks and their disaffection was shared across the EU.

“The demographics of the vote leaves no doubt: the poorer and older you are in Great Britain, the more you reject the European project,” he said.

“Workers across the continent don't believe in it anymore. They are turning towards their national identities as the only credible rampart against the excesses of globalisation.”

Die Welt chastised German Chancellor Angela Merkel for her role in fanning anti-immigration sentiment, saying she “contributed to it significantly with the times she went it alone with her refugee policy.”

Populism could doom several EU leaders facing elections, said Italy's Il Fatto Quotidiano under the headline “Now everyone is scared”.

“The anti-establishment wave risks sweeping away” Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy in Spain's elections on Sunday, it said.

A “chain reaction” could follow that would doom Italy's Matteo Renzi in an October referendum as well as the French and German leaders, who face elections next year, the paper said.

But Austrian daily Die Presse warned against lambasting political elites in the aftermath of Brexit, which journalist Rainer Nowak said was seen as a “new victory of the underdogs over the decadent establishment”.

“Things cannot work without elites at a decision-making level,” he said. “(Rejecting) experts, universities, high culture, thinkers and debate… would be bad for everyone… not just Europe.”

Many editorialists saw the break with Britain as a watershed, with Jerome Fonglio of France's leading daily Le Monde saying it should prompt “deep thought about what (the EU) should be and the direction it should take”.

Italy's left-leaning La Repubblicca called on the youth of Europe to revitalise the European project.

“Europe belongs to you,” said a front-page headline. “Don't let the peddlers of fear win.”

Philippe Gelie of France's right-leaning daily Le Figaro slammed EU leaders for failing to plan for a possible Brexit.

“The crisis sparked by the British divorce requires sang-froid and intelligence,” he said, while warning that the bloc has become too unwieldy with 28 — and soon 27 — members.

In the end, wrote Herve Favre of France's La Voix du Nord: “Maybe one day we will thank our English friends for delivering the shock treatment that resuscitated the European patient.”

POLITICS

‘A Brexit-style exit would not benefit Italy at all’: The Brit-Italian candidate running for MEP in Italy

Former British member of the European Parliament Sir Graham Watson is now an Italian candidate with a strongly pro-European message.

‘A Brexit-style exit would not benefit Italy at all’: The Brit-Italian candidate running for MEP in Italy

Sir Graham Watson, who represented South West England in the European Parliament between 1994 and 2014, is looking to make a comeback by representing North-East Italy under the pro-European party Stati Uniti d’Europa (‘the United States of Europe’).

For Sir Graham, an Italian citizen through his marriage of 37 years, his party’s manifesto aligns with both his political stance and his personal one.

“I’m definitely not a fixed person in the slightest,” he says. “I spend time here in Florence, time in Canada, time in Scotland and I’ve also worked in Brussels, Germany and Hong Kong.”

“I’m what you might call a vagrant,” he jokes, adding that Theresa May’s famous comment about citizens of the world being “citizens of nowhere” is not true in his case. 

The 68-year-old has spent the last 10 years as a semi-retired professor after he left the European Parliament back in 2014. 

He had little to no intention of returning, but says the party’s leaders, former Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and ex-Foreign Minister Emma Bonino, reached out and asked him to represent the north-east of the country, which includes the regions of Veneto, Emilia-Romagna, Friuli-Venezia Giulia and Trentino-Alto Adige.

READ ALSO: Can foreign residents in Italy vote in the European elections?

He is running as capolista (lead candidate) for Stati Uniti d’Europa, an alliance between Renzi’s Italia Viva and Bonino’s Più Europa, plus smaller groups such as the European Liberal Democrats. Its manifesto reads “A stronger Europe is a stronger Italy.”

“I think they invited me firstly because I’m qualified and secondly because they wanted to practise what they preach by adding people from different walks of life,” adds Sir Graham. 

“I am an Italian citizen but I’m more Scottish than anything.”

He mentions success in the ballot would be evidence to the people of the UK that there is still a place for them in Europe.

“Let me make myself clear, I’m here to serve Italy and my constituents, largely because I do not want the same things happening to them as to us,” he says.

“We British became the unwelcome guest. If in the end we had not opted to leave, we might have been thrown out anyway.”

Sir Graham said he was also compelled to accept Renzi and Bonino’s invitation as he became “increasingly concerned” about the rise of the far right in Europe.

READ ALSO: ‘The acceptable extreme’: Italy’s PM paves way for far right in EU elections

He fears Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party may get the most seats and says the message relayed by hard-right populist League party leader Matteo Salvini along with Marine Le Pen and Nigel Farage that the European Union is taking away people’s sovereignty, is untrue.

“A Brexit-style Italian exit from the Union would not benefit Italy at all and that’s what made me want to stand,” he continues. 

“I know being in the north-east I’d probably have to take on Salvini, but I welcome that. It gets the political blood coursing through the veins.”

In response to Salvini’s slogan meno Europa (‘less Europe’), he says: “What does it even mean? It means more Russia, more China, fewer investments, less work and less opportunity.

“I’m happy to take Salvini on.”

The elections for European Parliament are due to take place between June 6th to June 9th. Find out more information here.

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