ABSTRACT

Since the European-wide domination of social democratic governments during the mid- to late-1990s, Right-wing parties have returned to power in the three largest Mediterranean democracies – Italy, France and Spain. This alternation has been symptomatic of growing majoritarianism in Southern Europe, a trend which has gone against much of the rest of the continent, and of a decline in clientelist effectiveness also traditionally seen as the Southern ‘norm’.

This volume assesses the subsequent periods of incumbency of these three governments, considering the salient features of each in their reaction to winning government and implementing policy, given their divergent historical roots and paths to power. In particular, it focuses on the evolving role of perceived extremist elements on the Right, and adaptation to a European arena which imposes a level of continuity on incumbents of whatever hue, attempts to defend national interests notwithstanding. Lastly, it considers the extent to which the swing to the Right has already reached its peak, given the evidence of recent national and regional elections in France and Spain.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|14 pages

The Mainstream Right

What is Right in Italy? *

chapter 5|19 pages

The Right in Power

The Berlusconi Anomaly: Populism and Patrimony in Italy's Long Transition

chapter 6|16 pages

The Raffarin Premiership

A Case of Failed Political Leadership

chapter 8|15 pages

The Right and Europe

The Right and Europe in Italy: An Ambivalent Relationship

chapter 9|17 pages

Jacques Chirac's Balancing Acts

The French Right and Europe *

chapter 10|18 pages

The Popular Party and European Integration

Re-elaborating the European Programme of Spanish Conservatism

chapter 11|17 pages

The Extreme Right

Legitimation and Evolution on the Italian Right Wing: Social and Ideological Repositioning of Alleanza Nazionale and the Lega Nord

chapter 12|16 pages

An Extremist Autarky

The Systemic Separation of the French Extreme Right