Slava EUkraini: Zelensky drives the EU anti-establishment to massive gains
By: Rachel Marsden
The right wing’s gains in the European elections are a logical pushback against leaders that care more for Kiev than their own citizens
Hey, are we sure that Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky isn’t a Kremlin
stooge? Because he just managed to accomplish exactly what European elites are
constantly accusing the Kremlin of trying to do – getting the so-called
far-right elected in a bloc-wide surge in the European parliament. Although it
was really just a vote for anti-establishment populists.
Arguably, nowhere were the results of Zelensky’s efforts more obvious than in
France, where Macron’s establishment party took the biggest electoral beating,
against Marine Le Pen’s National Rally party, whose candidate list was headed up
for the EU vote by Jordan Bardella. The 28-year-old grew up in the Parisian
suburb of Saint Denis, which now stands as a shining example of how
establishment policies can transform a real life place into something out of a
‘Grand Theft Auto’ video game. Thanks to Zelensky, no one in charge cares
though, because Saint Denis isn’t in Ukraine.
It didn’t take French President Emmanuel Macron walking around the Élysée Palace
in a Zelensky-style hoodie to telegraph his priorities, though he did it anyway
for anyone who may not be well-versed in jackhammer-grade subtlety. And now for
the ‘pièce de résistance’ – or final death-blow, depending on how you look at
it. On the last day in the French parliament before the European parliamentary
elections, Macron invited Zelensky to monopolize the floor of the National
Assembly. So forget any debate about all the damage that Macron’s policies have
done to France. Zelensky was there to speak, totally unopposed, about his own
needs and those of Ukraine, which isn’t actually in the EU, even though
Europeans are paying for it like it is.
Hear that, French voters? The ‘President Emeritus’ of Ukraine says Macron is
awesome. He can’t be bothered to renew his own now-expired democratic legitimacy
through an election of his own, and fresh off from hanging out with the Western
elites on the Normandy landing beaches, celebrating the nonexistent Ukrainian
regiment that we’re probably now supposed to believe stormed the beaches
alongside its Western allies (the one that wasn’t working with the Nazis, like
the one that Zelensky cheered in the Canadian parliament last year), and telling
you all how great you should feel about what Macron is doing – “for Ukraine.”
Excuse us, sir, but this is a Wendy’s! Or rather an election that has nothing to
do with you. But Macron and his establishment cronies insisted on letting
Zelensky’s foreign interests walk right in and place their order, hijacking the
final stretch of the election campaign.
In contrast, Macron’s office had said that “the conditions weren’t reunited”
for Russia to be involved – not even in anything to do with French parliament,
mind you, but just in D-Day commemorations that same week. If the Soviet Union
and the Red Army had said the same during World War II – that the conditions
weren’t ‘reunited’ for their involvement on the side of the allies – then
Macron, as president of France, would probably be issuing his official
statements in German right now.
Zelensky’s 11th-hour appearance was another establishment-sponsored smokescreen
to mask reality for the French people with pure ideology. It was one final
insult to voters before they had the opportunity to make themselves heard. Just
the last of many insults that are now far too numerous to count. But frankly,
voters didn’t even need this particular last straw.
Where to even start? Perhaps with the most obvious price that French and
European voters are paying – the one that impacts every single day of their
lives. The cost of everything has skyrocketed with no end in sight, all because
Brussels decided that the special interests of European and American elites in
Ukraine superseded those of the average person’s ability to make ends meet. So
out went cheap Russian gas in favor of pricier American fuel, and in came cheap
and duty-free Ukrainian farm products that effectively decimated the revenues of
European farmers already struggling with EU climate change diktats and spy
satellites to ensure their paperwork compliance.
“For Ukraine,” a bloc-wide censorship regime was also implemented. Not only for
Russian media platforms offering information and analysis typically marginalized
by the ideological handmaidens of the mainstream establishment French press,
where freedom of expression has objectively declined recently, according to a
recent NGO report – but demands were also made of online platforms, such as
Rumble, that refused to censor content from those same Russian outlets. The new
Berlin Wall was being built around Europe online.
Then, as Zelensky demanded that his guys on the battlefield be allowed to use
their Western weapons to hit Russia, Macron went over to Germany and held up a
little sheet of paper with a map on it, as if that would convince both German
and French voters to let Zelensky off the leash at the risk of dragging Western
citizens into an escalating conflict as he sees fit. Like backup singers,
Western leaders started singing a tune of mobilization, which has gone over
about as well as one might expect.
Zelensky’s demands, and Macron’s catering to them, has even freaked out some
of the French establishment. Take Macron’s idea of sending French ‘trainers’
into Ukraine, which makes it sound like they’d just be going over there to teach
the guys shoved into vans on the streets of Kiev how to fight Russians by
perfecting their air squats and kettlebell swings.
Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s former adviser, Henri Guaino, knows
exactly what sending ‘instructors’ means. He pointed out in a TV discussion that
the Vietnam War started with a handful of American ‘instructors’. Yeah, and that
turned out so well for Washington that it’s now virtually synonymous with
failure.
The gist of Guaino’s comment is that it’s fine for the president to authorize
troops on specific missions like a hostage rescue or something, but if this ruse
is going to drag France into a war, which it risks doing, then there really
should be a national debate and a vote on it. Well, the French people just
voted. And before heading to the polls, 38% of them said that sending Macron a
message with their vote was their top priority, according to an Ipsos poll, even
though Macron wasn’t even running for anything himself. Mission accomplie!
Macron didn’t waste time after the electoral rout in announcing a
double-or-nothing bet, calling a national election for the end of June to see if
voters really meant it. Maybe he can invite Zelensky back again for that
campaign, too. Not that he even needs to when the French, and Europeans in
general, are apparently acutely aware of the role of Ukrainian influence, and
the complicity of establishment elites, in destroying their countries and their
lives.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN