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As the United States deserts Ukraine, and Europe with it, leaders on the continent are closing ranks and arming up to defend their democracies against Russia. In Britain, Prime Minister Keir Starmer elicits comparisons to Winston Churchill. In France, President Emmanuel Macron is channeling Charles de Gaulle’s argument for independence from Washington. Germany changed its strict budget rules to spend more on defense. Marco Rubio, the U.S. secretary of state, came to Brussels yesterday to urge them on.
But Russia isn’t the only threat to democracy in Europe. Far-right and autocratic parties here have gained ground for a decade. They’re already part of the government in six capitals. And the impulse to ramp up defense may energize their voters.
Europe is rearming to battle fascism and autocracy abroad. Unfortunately, this may also empower fascism and autocracy at home.
Welfare vs. warfare
To understand why, remember the state of European politics: Economies are stagnating, governments are unpopular and efforts to keep the far right out of coalition governments are barely holding. Now, as critics see it, leaders want to spend money containing Russia instead of helping their citizens.
In Britain, Starmer plans to increase military spending from 2.3 percent of the economy today to 3 percent early in the next decade. At the same time, he plans to cut Britain’s annual welfare bill by some 5 billion pounds (about 6.5 million dollars) a year. It’s a risky proposition after the economy shrank in January and at a time when the hard-right Reform U.K. party is snapping at Labour’s heels in some working-class regions. British voters say welfare spending is more important than military spending. “Welfare Not Warfare,” read a banner at protests last week.
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