Last week, attempting to steal the far right's thunder, the technocratic Government of Lucas Papademos set up a camp for illegal immigrants and promises to establish dozens more.
In the Netherlands the power of the far right was demonstrated last week when Geert Wilders' Freedom Party, anti-Muslim and anti-EU, brought down the Government, wrecking a long-standing financial pact with Germany which had been one of the pillars of EU stability.
In France, when the National Front polled 17.9 per cent in the first round two weeks ago, President Nicolas Sarkozy immediately toughened his rhetoric.
Across Europe, from Britain, where UKIP averaged 14 per cent in last Friday's local elections, to Finland, where the extreme nationalist True Finns party has increased its share of the vote from 4 per cent to 19 per cent in four years, to Hungary, where the anti-Roma, anti-Semitic Jobbik party holds the balance of power, the far right is seizing the initiative provided by recession and the threat of a eurozone meltdown.
The only crumb of comfort is that so far none of these rapidly growing parties has succeeded in forging a meaningful alliance with any of the others across national borders.
Nicolas Lebourg, an authority on the far right at the University of Perpignan, was yesterday quoted as saying: "Europe is a dry prairie waiting for someone to light amatch."
But given the nationalistic obsessions of all these far-right parties - Golden Dawn says "the nation comes first, democracy after" - the EU's national borders would seem to be unbreachable firebreaks.
It's about the only consolation there is.Independent