Europe, at the moment, is united only by a coin (not even for all countries), but it's beginning to have many problems within
its member states. The latest example comes from the election results in Belgium. King Albert II started
consultations after the polls have declared the victory of
the Flemish separatists.
The first effect
of these results was a strong agitation in the financial markets,
scared that the political debate in the country will move on national
identity, putting on a side the restoration of public debt.
In reality, the election results
were not a great news, because days before the vote the hypothesis of a
strong growth of the right party was on all the newspapers. But today it is a certainty. The party New
Flemish Alliance (N-VA), led by Bart De Wever, 39, is the first party in the northern region of
Flanders, where Dutch is spoken, and it's the first party in the country.
The success of the Flemish Independence Party
has highlighted the difficulties of cohabitation between the north
and south of the country. The desire to assert their identity and their
differences is not so far from the policy of the Northern League in
Italy. So the symbol of European Union, Belgium, and especially the city of Brussels, became instead the symbol of the great
divisions within the states.
The N-Va party is not the only one to take home a great result.
De Wever won in Flanders, but in the south was the Walloon-Italian
Socialist, Elio Di Rupo, to obtain 35% of the vote. So if the party of Bart De
Wever is the first separatist party to obtain such a large number of
votes, Di Rupo may instead become
the first Belgian Socialist Prime Minister since 1974, the first of
Italian descent and the first homosexual.
The only requirement, now, is to act quickly to form a new
government. More than the risk of separation
(however advanced by many newspapers) the real problem is the long
coalition negotiations. Time that Belgium cannot afford because it will have presidency of the European Union in the semester that begins July 1st. And then there
is the debt ratio which is likely to exceed 100% this year or in 2011 and
the new government should solve this problem.
King Albert II
has started the election procedures, receiving the outgoing Prime Minister, Yves
Leterme, and accepting the resignation of his government. And he will probably entrust the job of prime minister to the PS leader Elio
di Rupo: the first time a Dutch and a descendant of immigrants will have
this role.
At the moment the only certain data is the reform of
the federal state, a point that De Wever has no intention to yield.
Marianna Lepore
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