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In an interview conducted by Yves Steiner, historian Jacques Rupnik analyses the political evolution of the eastern European countries that joined the EU in 2004. "There is a paradox. The transition towards democracy and the market economy is a veritable success. The population's quality of life rose before and after joining the EU. But at the same time, a rejection of the elites is establishing itself. It's a rejection of those who orchestrated the entry into the EU, from Poland to Hungary, via the former Czechoslovakia. ... This stays inline with a new political situation, characterised by polarisation and a push toward populism. These populist currents criticise the consensus that animated all the governments, on the right and the left, since 1989: adhesion to a market economy, development of the rule of law and the adhesion to NATO and the EU. By attacking this, we are setting upon the post-communist legacy, not the communist one".
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