In a brighter spot, Geert Wilders and his fascist Party for Freedom were defeated last night. Here's hoping Marine Le Pen and her extremist National Front soon suffer a similar defeat. Meanwhile back in the US the Trump budget makes clear the big business and military interests for whom Trump and his sycophantic enablers are patsies. 29% cut to the State Department. 31% cut to the EPA. 18% cut to the Department of Health. 21% cut to the Agriculture Department. 21% cut to the Labor Department. 14% cut to the Education Department. 12% cut to the Interior Department. 13% cut to Housing. 13% cut to Transportation. AND (of course) 9% increase in defense spending. Gotta keep up the most important welfare program, right? Military spending is already in excess of $600 billion, more than the next 7 highest spending nations combined.
Basically, bye Science, bye Arts, bye Libraries, bye publicly funded media, bye environmental protections, and bye to many social programs that are relied upon by America's most vulnerable. But this national budget is not about Trump and the nitwits of the alt right. These cuts have been on the Republican wishlist for years. This budget represents the apex of neoliberalism in the US. When it passes, crisis will accelerate.
Peace!
The big winner of Wednesday?s election ? and now the largest party of the Dutch left for the first time ? was GreenLeft, headed by 30-year-old Jesse Klaver, hailed by his enthusiastic supporters as the ?Jessiah?.
With more than 95% of votes counted, the party ? formed 25 years ago by a merger of communists, pacifists, evangelicals and self-styled radicals ? boosted its MPs from four to 14 after a storming campaign by Klaver.
?This is a fantastic result for us, a historic victory,? said the party chairwoman, Marjolein Meijer.
The result showed there was ?very fertile ground in the Netherlands for change and a positive and hopeful story?, she said. ?For us this is just the beginning.?
The party celebrated its historic advance with a tweet showing a gif of Kermit the Frog dancing for joy.
Sometimes compared to Canada?s youthful prime minister, Justin Trudeau, Klaver ? who has a Moroccan father and a mother of Indonesian descent ? said on polling day that the left?s answer to the far right?s rise in Europe was to stand up for its ideals.
?What I would say to all my leftwing friends in Europe: don?t try to fake the populace,? he said.
?Stand for your principles. Be straight. Be pro-refugee. Be pro-European. We?re gaining momentum in the polls. And I think that?s the message we have to send to Europe. You can stop populism.?
The Netherlands? youngest ever party leader, Klaver built a strong following on social media through small Meetup events after taking over GreenLeft?s leadership in May 2015.
His rallies were among the campaign?s largest, including an Amsterdam meeting that drew more than 5,000 people ? plus 5,000 more following live on Facebook.
His TV debates were also widely regarded as triumphs. In one debate watched by 1.6 million viewers, Klaver told his far-right, anti-Islam rival Geert Wilders that it was rightwing populism, not Muslim immigration, that was undermining Dutch culture and traditions.
Analysis Dutch general election: a finger in the wind, not a litmus test
After Brexit and Trump?s triumph ? and with Marine Le Pen making waves ? some saw this contest as continuity versus chaos. But the pattern did not fit
Read more
?The values the Netherlands stands for ? for many, many decades, centuries actually ? its freedom, its tolerance, its empathy ? [the populists] are destroying it,? he said during one campaign interview.
?It?s terrible when people are born in the Netherlands have the feeling they are not part of this society and it is not something to be proud of, but something to be ashamed of. And I want to change that.?
GreenLeft was not the only non-mainstream party to prosper in an election that featured a record 28 parties.
Also faring well were: the Party for the Animals, which is forecast to have five MPs in the 150-seat parliament; Denk, aimed mainly at the Turkish and Moroccan community, which is in line for three seats; and the Eurosceptic Forum for Democracy, with two.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/mar/15/dutch-elections-greenleft-jesse-klaver
Basically, bye Science, bye Arts, bye Libraries, bye publicly funded media, bye environmental protections, and bye to many social programs that are relied upon by America's most vulnerable. But this national budget is not about Trump and the nitwits of the alt right. These cuts have been on the Republican wishlist for years. This budget represents the apex of neoliberalism in the US. When it passes, crisis will accelerate.
Peace!
The big winner of Wednesday?s election ? and now the largest party of the Dutch left for the first time ? was GreenLeft, headed by 30-year-old Jesse Klaver, hailed by his enthusiastic supporters as the ?Jessiah?.
With more than 95% of votes counted, the party ? formed 25 years ago by a merger of communists, pacifists, evangelicals and self-styled radicals ? boosted its MPs from four to 14 after a storming campaign by Klaver.
?This is a fantastic result for us, a historic victory,? said the party chairwoman, Marjolein Meijer.
The result showed there was ?very fertile ground in the Netherlands for change and a positive and hopeful story?, she said. ?For us this is just the beginning.?
The party celebrated its historic advance with a tweet showing a gif of Kermit the Frog dancing for joy.
Sometimes compared to Canada?s youthful prime minister, Justin Trudeau, Klaver ? who has a Moroccan father and a mother of Indonesian descent ? said on polling day that the left?s answer to the far right?s rise in Europe was to stand up for its ideals.
?What I would say to all my leftwing friends in Europe: don?t try to fake the populace,? he said.
?Stand for your principles. Be straight. Be pro-refugee. Be pro-European. We?re gaining momentum in the polls. And I think that?s the message we have to send to Europe. You can stop populism.?
The Netherlands? youngest ever party leader, Klaver built a strong following on social media through small Meetup events after taking over GreenLeft?s leadership in May 2015.
His rallies were among the campaign?s largest, including an Amsterdam meeting that drew more than 5,000 people ? plus 5,000 more following live on Facebook.
His TV debates were also widely regarded as triumphs. In one debate watched by 1.6 million viewers, Klaver told his far-right, anti-Islam rival Geert Wilders that it was rightwing populism, not Muslim immigration, that was undermining Dutch culture and traditions.
Analysis Dutch general election: a finger in the wind, not a litmus test
After Brexit and Trump?s triumph ? and with Marine Le Pen making waves ? some saw this contest as continuity versus chaos. But the pattern did not fit
Read more
?The values the Netherlands stands for ? for many, many decades, centuries actually ? its freedom, its tolerance, its empathy ? [the populists] are destroying it,? he said during one campaign interview.
?It?s terrible when people are born in the Netherlands have the feeling they are not part of this society and it is not something to be proud of, but something to be ashamed of. And I want to change that.?
GreenLeft was not the only non-mainstream party to prosper in an election that featured a record 28 parties.
Also faring well were: the Party for the Animals, which is forecast to have five MPs in the 150-seat parliament; Denk, aimed mainly at the Turkish and Moroccan community, which is in line for three seats; and the Eurosceptic Forum for Democracy, with two.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/mar/15/dutch-elections-greenleft-jesse-klaver
