http://www.economist.com/news/europe/21599830-very-bad-fran-ois-hollande-very-good-marine-le-pen-little-local-difficulty
Reading this article the main point I catch, comes from the words of the "Front National" leader, Marine le Pen. As she declars, the results of the last local elections signed the end of the bipolarism of french politics. I think that this is only a part of a change that is going to interest all the european countries. The political reality in all over Europe has changed some years ago with the introduction of the single european currency and with the loss of national identities. From than the "old" bipolarism (left and right wings) has started a gradual process of convergence, and the old political parties formed a new invisible front that we can consider "the front of the euro-adherents". The targets and the following reforms of the old parties have become the same. This monopolarism is doomed to become a new bipolarism with the constitution of the so called "euro-skeptic movements".
I think that the victory of FN in France is only a step that all the european countries have to faced, in this sense some movements have been born (Alba Dorata, Jobbik, German euroskeptic) and Italy lags behind (I don' t consider M5S a political party, but only a disorganized movement).
I want to send a message to Giorgia Meloni "out of the 'old' right-wing party there are grasslands of new opportunities and agreements".
Luca Luciani
Vocabulary:
To be braced for: Prepare mentally or emotionally for something unpleasant - esser pronti ad affrontare.
To be scalding: Essere bruciati.
To hang on: With the emphasis on the preposition, to keep hold; to hold fast; to stick; to be persistent, as a disease. Restare in attesa
Narrow majority: Stretta maggioranza
To be in an awkard position: Essere in una posizione scomoda
To get into the run-off: andare al ballottaggio.

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