zaterdag 29 november 2025

Een powermove van jewelste: eigenhandig verschuift Dilan Yesilgöz het midden van de politiek

 




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Een powermove van jewelste: eigenhandig verschuift Dilan Yesilgöz het midden van de politiek

De afgelopen maanden was ik wegens ziekte vaak met andere dingen bezig, maar het nieuws, en met name het politieke nieuws, wist toch telkens mijn gezichtsveld binnen te sluipen. Wat mij sinds de verkiezingen het meest fascineert is het getouwtrek om ‘het midden’: dat zou terug zijn, of juist onder druk staan. Bovendien was er onenigheid over wat het midden ís.
Zijn VVD en GroenLinks-PvdA middenpartijen? Deze kwestie kan ik makkelijk oplossen: volgens mij zijn er twee definities. Onder de ruime definitie vallen alle partijen die de rechtsstaat respecteren en bereid zijn te regeren. Van oudsher omvat dit alles van PvdA tot en met VVD. GroenLinks heeft nooit geregeerd, maar gezien de ambitie van GroenLinks-PvdA om dit wél te doen, en om een brede linkse partij te zijn, zou ik ook de fusiepartij een middenpartij noemen.
Dan is er de smalle definitie, volgens welke een middenpartij letterlijk een middenpositie inneemt tussen links en rechts. In deze definitie zijn alleen D66, CDA en ChristenUnie middenpartijen – en, vooruit, 50Plus. Onder Sybrand Buma en Wopke Hoekstra was het CDA zelfs ronduit rechts, maar Henri Bontenbal heeft het teruggebracht naar het midden.
Nog een onenigheid betrof het etiket voor mogelijke kabinetten. Sommige duiders, denk aan Telegraaf-columnisten Ronald Plasterk en Afshin Ellian, noemen een coalitie van GroenLinks-PvdA, D66, CDA en VVD ‘centrumlinks’. De gedachte erachter is simpel: D66, CDA en VVD zijn midden, en GroenLinks-PvdA links. Maar dit klopt niet. Als je GroenLinks-PvdA links noemt, dan is de VVD rechts. D66 is midden, hangend naar links; CDA is midden, hangend naar rechts. Dit kabinet zou een ode zijn aan de symmetrie. Toch noemt ook de VVD zelf, in een stuk vorige maand op de eigen website, een kabinet van de vier grote middenpartijen „een links kabinet”.
Nog zo’n kwestie: Dilan Yesilgöz blijft steevast verwijzen naar haar lievelingscombinatie (D66, CDA, VVD, JA21, mogelijk nog BBB) als ‘centrumrechts’. Ik zou dit eerder een rechtse coalitie noemen. De VVD, een rechtse partij, neemt hier immers een middenpositie in tussen enerzijds D66 en CDA en anderzijds het radicaal-rechtse JA21, en mogelijk BBB. Ik snap Yesilgöz’ voorkeur voor de term centrumrechts: die ademt redelijkheid en stabiliteit. Maar voor media is dat geen reden die framing over te nemen – wat ze wel doen.
Er zijn ook mensen die vinden dat Yesilgöz’ voorkeurscombinatie centrumrechts is, en de andere optie centrumlinks, omdat ze zich op die manier verhouden tot de kiezers. Die zijn immers naar rechts opgeschoven, wat een middenkabinet relatief links maakt. Maar dit is niet hoe politieke etiketten werken. Op deze manier zou, in een land met overwegend extreemrechtse kiezers, een extreemrechts kabinet een ‘middenkabinet’ heten. Maar termen als links en rechts zijn niet relatief: ze hebben een inhoudelijke betekenis. Een kabinet van GroenLinks-PvdA, D66, CDA en VVD mag dan links zijn ten opzichte van de bevolking, het zal geen typisch links beleid maken. Daar zou de VVD immers nooit aan meedoen.
Wie bepaalt waar het midden ligt, beslist wat normaal is en wat abnormaal
Maakt het uit, deze definitiestrijd? Ja, want wie bepaalt waar het midden ligt, beslist wat normaal is en wat abnormaal. Het fanatiekst hierin is Yesilgöz, die al ver voor de verkiezingen verkondigde dat GroenLinks-PvdA „uit het midden van de Nederlandse politiek gerukt” was. Ter illustratie noemde ze de vernielingen op campussen en steun voor Hamas, beide geenszins de GroenLinks-PvdA-partijlijn. Verder bleef het bij vage kreten als: „Er wordt geëist dat gewone, hardwerkende Nederlanders hun leven aanpassen naar hoe de radicalen het willen.”
Al dan niet bewust volgde Yesilgöz hier de strategie van radicaal- en extreemrechtse politici in verschillende landen om heel links tot radicaal te bestempelen.

Alternative für Deutschland doet dit expliciet, zo schreef correspondent Nynke van Verschuer onlangs in NRC over een document waarin de partij haar strategie beschreef. „De AfD probeert een wig te drijven tussen de middenpartijen SPD en CDU/CSU, die samen de regering vormen. Daartoe moet de AfD de SPD consequent als radicaal-links afschilderen, volgens de strategie, zodat kiezers van CDU/CSU aan de samenwerking gaan twijfelen. Doel is dat de CDU/CSU niet anders kan dan met de AfD in zee gaan.”               
Iets soortgelijks doet Yesilgöz, maar dan met haar eigen kiezers als publiek. Ze hitst ze als het ware op tegen links, om die afkeer vervolgens in te zetten in de formatieonderhandelingen: ‘Ik kan samenwerking met links niet aan mijn kiezers verkopen.’ Het is een powermove van jewelste: eigenhandig verschuift Yesilgöz het midden van de politiek. Dat daarbij het een en ander sneuvelt – de reputatie van een mede-middenpartij, het belang van rationele argumenten, een sterke onderhandelingspositie in de gesprekken met JA21 – neemt ze op de koop toe, of vindt ze überhaupt niet erg. Het is een roekeloze strategie die, in de brede definitie, niet past bij een middenpartij.

woensdag 26 november 2025

‘Zionists play all sides’: Pro-Israel influence spans Britain’s politics, says expert






 

‘Zionists play all sides’: Pro-Israel influence spans Britain’s politics, says expert

Analyst says pro-Israel groups are cultivating links with European far-right parties campaigning on anti-migrant and anti-Muslim rhetoric that often fuels domestic unrest

Aysu Bicer  |18.11.2025 - Update : 18.11.2025
‘Zionists play all sides’: Pro-Israel influence spans Britain’s politics, says expert

  • 'Zionists play all sides of every political equation, so it’s not just the far right ... All the mainstream parties in the UK are pro-Zionists,’ claims British sociologist David Miller
  • ‘What they’re doing is trying to play off their assets against one another … That’s why you see them trying to get a Reform government into place, because they realize that Reform will be even more racist against Muslims than the current Labour government,’ says Miller

LONDON

Israel’s invitation of British far-right figure Tommy Robinson, long known for anti-Muslim activism and street mobilization in the UK, has triggered fierce backlash in Britain and renewed scrutiny of growing ties between Israel’s right-wing government and European far-right movements.

Analysts say Robinson’s trip – and the politics surrounding it – reflect a deeper ideological convergence that is reshaping alliances across Europe.

Robinson, founder of the English Defense League, traveled to Israel in October at the invitation of Diaspora Affairs Minister Amichai Chikli of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party.

The visit was immediately condemned by major British Jewish organizations, including the UK’s Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Jewish Leadership Council, who issued a joint statement calling Robinson “a thug who represents the very worst of Britain.”

In a video posted from Ben Gurion Airport, Robinson claimed he was “here to show solidarity with the Jewish people and the Israeli people,” describing Israel as “a beacon of freedom and democracy … and all the places surrounding this are human rights violations (sic), terror states and jihad states.”

His appearance, analysts say, highlights a broader pattern: Israel’s far-right leadership cultivating links with European far-right parties, even as these groups campaign on anti-migrant, anti-Muslim rhetoric that often fuels domestic unrest.

Robinson’s visit came amid months of anti-migrant protests in the UK, where far-right groups rallied outside hotels housing asylum seekers and mobilized street demonstrations. At a recent “Unite the Kingdom” rally in London, speakers declared that “Islam has no place in Europe,” while witnesses reported Israeli flags among crowds “hurling obscene anti-Palestinian abuse” at counter-protesters.

For David Miller, a British sociologist known for his work on Islamophobia and propaganda, Robinson’s rise – and the violent scenes that shook the UK this summer – are no coincidence.

Miller argues that the nearly week-long riots in several UK cities this summer fit into a longer trajectory in which “pro-Israel lobby groups” have played a role in elevating Robinson and other far-right figures to redirect social and economic grievances toward Muslims.

According to Miller, this alignment has been driven by “financial backing and political support from pro-Israel networks based mainly in Tel Aviv and the US,” aimed at channeling working-class anger toward Muslim immigrants while reinforcing support for Western and Israeli military agendas.

‘Zionists play all sides’

Miller said the relationship between Robinson and figures within the Israeli establishment reflects a strategic repositioning.

“We make a mistake if we think that the Zionists, or right-wing Zionists, have links with the so-called far right in the UK or in Europe,” he said.

“Actually, the Zionists play all sides of every political equation, so it’s not just the far right ... All the mainstream parties in the UK are pro-Zionists.”

He emphasized that many key figures in these parties or groups receive “thousands, sometimes millions, of pounds of funding from the Zionist movement.”

Miller described this as “an attempt to colonize and occupy the whole political, administrative hierarchy and functions of the UK state, as they are doing in other countries as well.”

For Miller, the traditional notion of a separate neo-fascist far right no longer applies.

“There isn’t a far right that is just one block. What we used to refer to as neo-fascist or neo-Nazi, that has gone. And the reason it’s gone is that the Zionists have co-opted most of the far right,” he said.

“Most of the organizations to the right of the Conservative Party – for example, UKIP, Reform UK, Tommy Robinson and his collection of people coming out of the English Defense League – all of these are organizations which are assets and agents of the Zionist colony in Palestine.”

‘They realize their propaganda isn’t working’

Miller traces this political realignment back to the late 2000s.

“It was around 2009-2010 that … American Zionists came over to the UK and to the rest of Western Europe to convince people who were then on the far right that they should abandon their Judeo-skepticism and change their politics, so that their main focus of racism and campaigning was Islam and Muslims,” he said.

“They created something which called itself the ‘counter-jihad movement,’” he said, describing networks spanning Denmark, Belgium, the Netherlands, and the UK, organized under “counter-jihad Europe” and linked to a US-based global coordination body.

“That’s grown since then into an international network, and that, of course, is funded in large part by the Zionist movement – not necessarily by the Zionist state itself – but by the movement.”

Miller argues that this influence extends across the UK’s political spectrum, claiming that beneficiaries of this funding include parties from Labour to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party.

“What they’re doing is trying to play off their assets against one another … That’s why you see them trying to get a Reform government into place, because they realize that the Reform government will be even more racist against Muslims than the current Labour government.”

He suggested that Reform UK could even emerge as the next government unless a strong left-wing alternative takes shape.

Under Netanyahu, Israel has sought closer ties with European nationalist governments – from Viktor Orban’s Hungary to Giorgia Meloni’s Italy – as part of a shift analysts say reflects a fusion of Zionist and Islamophobic movements – once seen as opposing forces.

“Nobody likes Israel anymore across the whole world, so they realize their propaganda isn’t working, and that the only thing which does work, according to their polling, is anti-Muslim hatred,” said Miller.

“That’s why they’re pivoting towards anti-Muslim hatred as a key note in current and contemporary Zionist propaganda.”

https://www.aa.com.tr/en/world/-zionists-play-all-sides-pro-israel-influence-spans-britain-s-politics-says-expert/3747191#

JD Vance might want to run in 2028 – but does he have a Palantir-shaped problem? Arwa Mahdawi

 





Opinion

JD Vance might want to run in 2028 – but does he have a Palantir-shaped problem?

Arwa Mahdawi
The VP wouldn’t be where he is today without the patronage of the Palantir co-founder Peter Thiel. But with voters becoming more and more concerned about the firm’s surveillance tech, could that relationship affect his chances?
The US is the land of the free and the home of the world’s most expensive, and most excruciatingly drawn-out, elections. In most democracies, the election cycle lasts just a few weeks or months. In most democracies there are strict laws regulating how long politicians can campaign, and how much money political parties can accept. But the US is not most democracies.
Which is why, despite the fact we’re not even a full year into Trump 2.0, there’s already chatter about 2028. Assuming Donald Trump doesn’t find some sort of legal loophole that lets him run again (not unthinkable!), JD Vance is widely seen as his heir apparent, with Trump saying a presidential ticket with Vance and secretary of state Marco Rubio would be “unstoppable”. Meanwhile, Rubio, it was recently reported, is telling his inner circle he’d support Vance for president.
In his role as vice-president, Vance is already under constant scrutiny. But, as 2028 approaches, he will be put under the microscope. And if he wants to get the top job there are a few liabilities that he should probably sort out.
His personality is one of them: Vance can come off as smug and obnoxious. But that’s something he can work on. This is a man, after all, who has changed his name many times; a former atheist who converted to Catholicism in 2019, a few years before running for political office. A man who once called Donald Trump “America’s Hitler” and now calls him boss. Vance is adept at shape-shifting.
A liability that might be rather harder to shake off, however, is his ties to the shadowy $450bn technology company Palantir. Vance would not be where he is today were it not for the mentorship of Peter Thiel, the company’s billionaire co-founder. Thiel encouraged the hiring of Vance at his investment firm Mithril Capital in 2016, then spent $15m on Vance’s senate campaign. Some people see Vance as a sort of avatar for Thiel in the White House. Which is worrying because Thiel has said he doesn’t “believe that freedom and democracy are compatible”.
It’s hard to explain exactly what Thiel’s firm does in non-buzzwordy language, but here are a few examples. The company has a multimillion-dollar contract with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement to help improve “deportation logistics”, and has been building an “ImmigrationOS” that, according to a contract seen by Business Insider, will include “near real-time visibility into instances of self-deportation”. Palantir, which has been called “the AI arms dealer of the 21st century”, also works very closely with Israel’s military. A June report from the UN special rapporteur Francesca Albanese says there are “reasonable grounds to believe Palantir has provided automatic predictive policing technology” to Israel – which is as dystopian as it sounds – as well as “core defence infrastructure”. When the Palantir co-founder Alex Karp was heckled by a pro-Palestine protester in May and accused of killing Palestinians, he shrugged it off with: “Mostly terrorists, that’s true.”
Many potential Vance voters don’t give a damn about Palestinians. But they are suspicious of big tech and the surveillance state – and they are very wary of the Trump administration’s deepening ties to Palantir. The podcast bros who helped get out the vote for Trump in 2024, for example, have repeatedly voiced concerns about the company. On a 9 September episode of his podcast Joe Rogan referenced an article from the financial news site Benzinga about the Trump administration employing Palantir to gather the “personal data of American citizens” and called it “kinda creepy”. Rogan went on to quote the article’s comments about Palantir creating “detailed profiles of American citizens” and asked, alarmed: “Who signed off on this?” Over a dozen other rightwing influencers, including Tucker Carlson, have worried aloud about Palantir’s capabilities and its objectives for the US.
All this is a big problem for Vance because, as he recently acknowledged while speaking to university students: “I get asked about Palantir a lot because there’s this internet meme out there that somehow I am super in bed with Palantir.” Meme or not, it’s hard to ignore the links between the two, which are, increasingly, generating headlines. You’ve made your bed, Vance; now you’ve got to lie in it.
 Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist