New Far - Right Group in EU Assembly Outlines Tough Immigration Plans
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The European Parliament's first-ever group of right-wing deputies on Wednesday outlined a tough programme on immigration and future enlargement of the European Union, saying that their common basis was to be a "union of patriots."
The new group, expected to be
officially formed next Monday, will be named "Identity, Tradition and
Sovereignty", its prospective leader, Euro MP and deputy chief of
France's National Front party Bruno Gollnisch told reporters.
Gollnisch, member of the EU parliament since 1989, is waiting for a
verdict on charges of questioning the Holocaust. Europe needed a new
policy aimed at "reversing the migration flows" of immigrants from
outside Europe, Gollnisch said, adding: "It is racist to have
immigrants coming into Europe to do the work that Europeans don't want
to do." He also said that the EU should take a "circumspect view
against future enlargement" of the now 27-member bloc, arguing that
further opening up the union's borders could lead to an influx of
workers seeking jobs in the member states.
Ironically, the creation of the new 20-member right-wing group became
possible only with the accession of Romania and Bulgaria to the EU on
January 1. With five Euro MPs from Romania's anti-Roma xenophobic
Greater Romania Party and one from Bulgaria's extreme Ataka party, the
new group managed to get just the threshold number of deputies needed.
The EU parliament's rules stipulate that an official caucus in the
assembly needs a minimum of 19 members. The diverse group from seven
different countries also includes Jean-Marie Le Pen, leader of France's
National Front, Alessandra Mussolini, granddaughter of the former
Italian fascist leader Benito Mussolini and the leader of Belgium's
separatist Flemish nationalist party Vlaams Belang, Frank Vanhecke.
Another prominent member is Andreas Moelzer, ex-aide of the former
pioneer of the modern right, Joerg Haider of Austria. "We want to
defend the identity of our nations peacefully and legally," said
Gollnisch. He said that the group had chosen to be a "union of
patriots," a motto heralded by Le Pen.
Gollnisch said his group would work for the interests and the
sovereignty of each EU member state and was committed to Christian
values "and the heritage of Europe's traditional culture." He also said
the new caucus was opposing "a single bureaucratic and monolithic
European super-state." The group plans to formally announce its
creation in the parliament's full plenary session in Strasbourg next
Monday. From then on, the group will be entitled to EU funding and some
positions within the European parliament, such as a vice-presidency of
a law-making committee. Conservative French MEP Joseph Daul,
newly-elected leader of the parliament's biggest political group, said
Tuesday that the creation of the right-wing caucus was a signal for
politicians to watch their messages and not to fuel extremism on the
left or the right. Separately, the leaders of the parliament's green
group said that setting up a political organisation would not increase
the influence of right-wing Euro MPs in the 732-member EU assembly.
However, such a group would be "the antithesis of the very values this
parliament stands for," green MEPs Monica Frassoni of Italy and Daniel
Cohn-Bendit of Germany added.
Further Information:
Deutsche Presse-Agentur http://www.dpa.de/en/unternehmenswelt/





