Judy Wudraff:
But first: the Sunday elections of Austria were the last sufficient shift to the correct policy of Europe, since 31-year-old Christian Kurtz was elected chancellor on the anti-immigration platform.
Now he can form a government with the extreme right party, founded in the 1950s by former Nazis.
This follows the recent elections in Germany, where the extreme right party raised the race and struck the returning leader Angela Merkel.
In Sweden, there is also a serious problem from the right and neo -Nazi group, which looks in the elections next year.
Special correspondent Malcolm Brabant Kh.Kh. He examined the political landscape in Germany and Sweden, and he begins his report in Scandinavia.
Malcolm Brabant, special correspondent:
In the parking lot in Gothenborg, supporters of the movement on scandalous resistance are formed for the fact that, as they hope, they will become their largest March to disseminate the ideology supported by the mother of eight Paulina Forswinds.
Polina Physium, movement on the resistance of the Scandinavian resistance:
When the whites become a minority, they will be destroyed. I want my children to have a safe future. I want them not only to have a safe Sweden. I want them to have a reliable world. And I want other people to fight for the same.
Malcolm Brabant:
Turning to their neonacial colleagues, the rhetoric of the Forspesonda is honed.
Polina Forswind:
(Through the translator) I am the daughter of the welder, the grandson of the forester. My line consists of hardworking men and women. These are people, like them, we can thank the social security system that our false politicians now give imported darkness.
Malcolm Brabant:
Clearly waiting for the problem, the leaders of the movement have muscular protection, passing by silent protest. The sign says “there are no Nazis on our streets.”
This protester will give her name only Joanna.
Johanna, anti -Nazi protest:
They are racist people. These are people who think that some people are better than others, and I will not defend for it. This is not what I think there is a place in modern society.
Malcolm Brabant:
Experts say that the resistance movement is aggressively recruiting, and believe that this demonstration symbolizes the growth of the extreme right.
This happened on Yom Kipur, the Jewish Day of Atonement.
Allan Stuttzinki is the leader of the Jewish community of Gotharg.
Allan Stuttzinki, leader of the Jewish community:
(Through the translator) Nazism returned. The descendants of the killers today organize the same marches, waving the same flags, shout the same slogans and have the same racist agenda.
Malcolm Brabant:
Anna Johansson is a member of the ruling Social -Democratic Party. This is considering the possibility of banning the movement of Scandinavian resistance.
Anna Johansson, Swedish Social -Democratic Party:
In Sweden and in Denmark, as well as in other countries, extreme parties grow, and hatred spreads around.
Malcolm Brabant:
“Go home to mom,” he shouts. “Nazi pigs”, the singing of antibortal protesters, when the bottle flies through the air.
Damon, northern resistance:
If anyone calls himself a Nazi, most of us will dissociation with this person. This is nothing that we are for ourselves. I never call myself a Nazi. I am a national socialist.
Malcolm Brabant:
The party of Hitler was also called a national socialist, but Damon, a 40-year-old welder, insists that he is a non-violent family man.
Damon:
The demographic landscape of our whole Europe is changing, therefore, in fact, this is the problem of preserving my heritage for my family and our relatives.
Malcolm Brabant:
This demonstration was stopped without a destination. The movement on the Scandal resistance at present was trapped between the police line and anti -fascist protesters. And it seems that this demonstration does not go further.
Violence is briefly erupted when the resistance movement tries to break through the police lines, and several marches are arrested.
Polina Forswind:
We are not your enemy. We are the enemy of the government.
They say that we live in democracy, but we never had elections if we want to take all these people.
Malcolm Brabant:
When a crisis with refugees in Europe began in 2015, Sweden copied Germany’s policy in the open air, and 160,000 migrants entered the country. Two years later, Sweden has more rigid boundaries and began to deport some beginners.
A new atmosphere of anxiety with the Gumbo ward, entertaining an anti -Nazi rally.
Floid Gumbo:
I arrived in Sweden more than 20 years ago. The climate in Sweden, people were so friendly, and everything was completely different, more hospitable. And I feel that everything has gradually changed.
I am very concerned because I have children, because I think that what I experienced here is not the same climate, the atmosphere that they will experience here.
Anna Johansson:
Not so long ago, the Nazis destroyed Europe. And it really bothers me. I think the German elections were terrifying.
Malcolm Brabant:
Johansson refers to the success of the right alternative to Germany or AFAD last month, when he first entered the parliament with 13 percent of the vote.
Hugh Bronson, Alternative for Germany party:
AFD appeared only in the fact that Merkel left traditional conservative Christian voters. They were looking for a house, and AFD offered them a safe place.
Malcolm Brabant:
Hugh Bronson – Deputy Leader of AFR in Berlin.
Now his party, the third largest in parliament, requires Angela Merkel to impose more stringent immigration rules.
Your opponents claim that you are a party of hatred. What will you answer?
Hugh Bronson:
We adopt foreigners who respect our laws, pay their taxes, send their children to school and continue our usual life. The problem is that people who abuse the system in order to have a better life, or allow others to pay for their best life, or who are criminals.
Malcolm Brabant:
Outside of the Opera House in Dresden, former East Germany, singer Luke Bergett is struck by the political landscape, displaced to the right.
Luke Gelt:
I am afraid that they will tear Europe. They are going to raise the walls again. They are going to build new walls between countries, and that Europe will be more close to themselves.
Malcolm Brabant:
Antimmigrant sentiments are strong in Dresden. The city was the birthplace of the pan-European anti-Islamic movement, and it gave the largest number of votes for the right party.
On vacation, in order to celebrate the German association after the fall of communism, the retired engineer Wilfrid Schmidt explained why he sent Angele Merkel.
Wilfried Schmidt, pensioner engineer:
(Through the translator) Let's say so. We all must admit that Germany undergoes social changes that are becoming more difficult to control. On the one hand, there is mass immigration from difficult regions, which is becoming increasingly uncontrolled, people with completely different concepts of life, from the fundamental various structured societies that are problematic.
Malcolm Brabant:
About a million migrants joined Germany in 2015. Chancellor Merkel consistently defended her policy in the field of refracters, but now she was punished by voters who believe that she ignored their fears.
Chancellor Merkel promised to listen to the people who voted for the AFD, and she says that she was going to try to defeat them with the one that she calls a good policy. But she will not own a party in her coalition.
But the chancellor must find new partners who are ready to be tough in immigration.
When she tries to create a coalition, the Chancellor agreed to place an annual limit of 200,000 on the number of immigrants, which, as she had previously refused to do. But will this be enough to discard the people who left her in the elections?
The question is for Werner Pacelt, political scientist at the University of Dresden.
Werner Patselt, Dresden University:
Since the Chancellor Merkel made so many turns in German domestic politics, it would not be surprising if she tried to make a U -turn by winning voters.
But this is really a difficult political task, because many of them are so disappointed with the Christian democratic union as a whole and in particular the chancellor Merkel that they will do everything to avoid returning.
Malcolm Brabant:
Returning to Sweden, the leading party is horrified by the concept of the right of the right and tries to isolate them.
Anna Johansson:
Experience shows that when you accept ideas from these right -wing parties, they spread. These parties have their own agenda, implemented by other parties. And I would not like to see that this happened in Sweden.
Floid Gumbo:
We are all people. We share this world. We are all here. There is enough space for all of us.
Malcolm Brabant:
But this is an appeal that more and more Swedes rejects, since the country and most of Europe are experiencing a crisis of identity.
For PBS Newshour, I'm Malcolm Brabant in Goetourg.