And even putting belgium aside, which i really shouldn't because israel have had a 25% increase in jewish immigration from it last year due to anti semitic incidents, i was generally speaking about european trends in the votes, mainly in france.
Yeah, we don't know yet what the exact background of the Brussels shooting was, seems like a no-brainer that it was motivated by antisemitism, just remains to be seen whether it was the muslim kind or the classic Neo-Nazi kind of antisemitism.
In Berlin (which has the biggest Jewish community in Germany), there are a rising number of antisemitic incidents as well, and similar to elsewhere in Western Europe, the perpetrators often have an immigrant muslim background.
Some of the right-wing populist parties in Europe are quite vehemently pro-Israel and anti-Muslim, but that is not an universal trend. Marine Le Pen has moved the Front National in that direction too.
Still, in France it seems right-wing antisemites (who are doing well because they're anti-immigrant) seem to get along relatively well with the immigrant antisemites, which is quite baffling sometimes. There are some strange things happening there, like Jean-Marie Le Pen (who would prefer Africans died of Ebola instead coming to Europe as I mentioned earlier) being friends with
this guy.
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Election results in Germany:
48% turnout, a 5% rise compared to 2009, helped by having several regional/local elections on the same day in most states.
CDU/CSU 35,1 (-1,7)
SPD 27,3 (+6,5)
Greens 10,6 (-1,5)
FDP 3,4 (-7,6)
The Left 7,4 (-0,1)
AfD 7,0 (+7,0)
other parties 8,8 (-2,6)
Since there was no 5% threshold this time, some of the more obscure parties will get to send one candidate each into parliament, like the Pirates, the Free Voters, several ecologically oriented parties, but also the NPD.
Our local Eurosceptics (the AfD) got in as expected, but didn't do as well as some people predicted. They are relatively moderate and economically oriented compared to other anti-EU parties and stated that they won't cooperate with right-wing populists.
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In France, Front National placed first with 25%, before UMP with 21%, President Hollande's Socialists with 14% and the Greens with 9%.
I guess Front National is doing so well because people are disappointed with the political establishment (a lot of it is a "Fuck You" for Hollande probably) and because integration of huge amounts of Muslim and African immigrants is not working very well there.
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In Austria, FPÖ managed to rise to 20% (+7%), but placed third behind the SPÖ (24%) and ÖVP (28%).