Last summer, Giorgia Meloni’s Italian government approved a so-called “anti-Gandhi law,” which criminalizes even nonviolent protests and passive resistance. The highly controversial “Security Decree” was recently followed by a further one, introducing measures such as preventive detention during public gatherings and signaling a shift toward police-state measures. Civil society organizations warn that these “security packages” constitute “one of the most serious attacks on the right to protest in recent republican history.”When Hungary was still governed by Viktor Orbán, it presented itself as a champion of illiberalism. Yet it was not an outlier. By the end of last year, it had been joined by Italy, Germany, and France in what watchdogs call a common deterioration of civic space. This trans-European trend coincides with efforts to prevent civil society organizations from participating actively in the EU’s political life.This downward spiral is bound up with a political turn. For this exclusion of civil society from decision-making processes goes hand in hand with pro-corporate politics at the expense of the vulnerable, while reducing once-inalienable rights to privileges that belong only to a few. My recent report “Shrinking Civic Space in the European Union” identifies key political tactics and narrative strategies that have been deployed to scale up attacks on civil society around the EU.A Transnational AttackGrowing support for the far right in the EU has bolstered the political actors who are driving this erosion of fundamental freedoms.Indeed, many of the attacks on civil society were first systematically tested in states with autocratic tendencies and in areas where a tactical alignment between the EU center-right establishment and the far right was already explicit. This was especially true with regard to migration and environmental policy.Yet such moves have increasingly been replicated all over the EU. Many examples can be seen…
