Opinion

Voters worldwide are nixing the left

The opinion pages, economic journals and liberal Web sites are atwitter (a-Twitter?) these days over French economist Thomas Piketty’s “Capital in the Twenty-First Century.”

Left-wingers cite Piketty’s statistics showing growing wealth inequality — though some have been challenged by the Financial Times — in support of Piketty’s policy response, huge taxes on high incomes and accumulated wealth.

The only problem is that voters won’t cooperate.

They don’t seem interested in centralized direction from the chattering classes. The protest votes around the world are mostly going not to redistributionist parties of the left but to various anti-centralization parties of the right.

Current polling points to Republican victories in the 2014 off-year elections, and Pew Research reports that 65 percent want the next president to follow policies different from Barack Obama’s. Our Anglosphere cousins Britain, Canada and Australia all have center-right governments.

Then there are last week’s European Union parliament elections.

In Britain, the United Kingdom Independence party, which wants out of the EU and tougher limits on immigration, came in first, ahead of recently redistributionist Labor.

In France, first place went to the more sinister Front National led by Marine Le Pen. President Francois Hollande’s Socialist party, which Piketty has supported, won 14 percent of the votes.

The Denmark People’s party won there. Parties for which Nazi comparisons are not wholly unjustified — Jobbik in Hungary, Golden Dawn in Greece — won seats in those countries.

The European fringe parties aren’t a united lot (UKIP won’t caucus with Front National). They express attitudes specific to each nation and lack a common platform. What they have in common is distaste for nanny-state liberalism imposed by unaccountable EU bureaucrats and executives.

In effect, they’re saying that the EU’s original purpose — to unite Europe to prevent a third world war — is obsolete, now that war in Europe (beyond the former Soviet Union) is unthinkable. Instead, they see the democratic nation-state as their protector and the legitimate object of their allegiance. And, despite some fringers’ admiration for Vladimir Putin, they tend to prefer capitalism to mandarin-mandated economic redistribution and regulation.

Europe and North America aren’t the only parts of the world rejecting Piketty politics. In the world’s largest democracy, India, 554 million people voted and gave a resounding victory to Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party.

Modi promised to unleash free markets and encourage growth as he had done in the state of Gujarat. The BJP won 282 seats. The Congress party, in power for 49 of India’s 67 years, promised more welfare and won 44.

Across the Pacific, a plurality of voters in Colombia favored Oscar Ivan Zuluaga, endorsed by former President Alvaro Uribe, over incumbent Juan Manuel Santos. Zuluaga criticized Santos for negotiating with the FARC narcoterrorists rather than continuing Uribe’s tougher policies.

Either could win the runoff June 15. But the weak showing of Santos, widely praised internationally, suggests Colombians put a priority on public safety. Redistribution isn’t an issue in a country with great economic inequality.

Not all elections around the world go the same way, and sometimes voters just rotate politicians in office. Americans have twice elected a leftish president. But over the last 40 years, Piketty’s years of increasing economic inequality, the biggest electoral successes have been free-marketeers (Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan) and light-on-redistribution moderates (Tony Blair, Bill Clinton).

Leftists hope the Piketty book will spark an electoral surge for redistribution that will let them install nanny-state policies micromanaging ordinary people’s lives. But the lesson of recent history is that, even when the inequality increases in the economic marketplace, there’s not much demand in the political marketplace for economic redistribution.