Dalla Svezia a Fratelli d’Italia

L’“onda nera” europea non è solo il frutto di nostalgie autoritarie

Jimmie Akesson, Party leader of the Sweden Democrats votes at a polling station in Stockholm, Sweden, Sunday, Sept. 11, 2022. Sweden is holding an election that is expected to boost a populist anti- immigration party that is vowing to crack down on gang violence shaking many people's sense of security. The Sweden Democrats won seats in parliament for the first time in 2010 and have steadily gained more votes in parliament with each election. (Tim Aro/TT News Agency via AP)
Jimmie Akesson, Party leader of the Sweden Democrats votes at a polling station in Stockholm, Sweden, Sunday, Sept. 11, 2022. Sweden is holding an election that is expected to boost a populist anti- immigration party that is vowing to crack down on gang violence shaking many people's sense of security. The Sweden Democrats won seats in parliament for the first time in 2010 and have steadily gained more votes in parliament with each election. (Tim Aro/TT News Agency via AP)
  • Chi pensa che l’affermazione di Giorgia Meloni, Jimmy Åkesson, Marine Le Pen, Santiago Abascal e soci possa essere spiegata, combattuta o limitata andando in cerca di incancellabili nostalgie per regimi autoritari, commette un grave errore di prospettiva.
  • L’anacronismo, nell’analisi scientifica delle dinamiche politiche, non giova. E conduce su sentieri scivolosi.
  • Ci sono analogie tra Svezia e Italia: la scelta di scartare molti dei temi e dei toni populisti e puntare sul binomio nazionalismo-conservatorismo paga cospicui dividendi.

Per continuare a leggere questo articolo

VAI ALLA PAGINA DELL’AUTORE