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The Economist hello and welcome to the Intelligence from the Economist.
I'm your host Jason Palmer.
Every weekday we provide a fresh perspective on the events shaping your world.
In a way, Jean Marie Le Pen was ahead of his time.
In the 1970s, France's far right firebrand revived a strain of xenophobia that today is worryingly on trend again.
Our Paris bureau chief reflects on his life at the center and then the fringes of politics and Latin America lags behind much of the world when it comes to financial inclusion.
People tend not to trust banks or see much benefit in using them.
Our series the World Ahead finds that is changing more rapidly than it is elsewhere.
First up, though, there's a story that just keeps playing out across Europe at the ballot box.
Disillusioned citizens are increasingly turning toward parties of the hard and far and extreme right parties that were once seen as fringe players.
In the Netherlands, it was Geert Wilders and his Party for Freedom.
In France, Marine Le Pen and her National Rally, the Alternative for Germany, or AfD party, is steadily gaining support ahead of federal elections there next month.
You might not have heard much yet about what's going on in neighboring Austria, but with some uncomfortable reminders of history, the hard right there is making its way towards leading the country.
The president of Austria has asked Herbert Kickel, who's the leader of the hard right Freedom Party, to begin talks on forming a coalition government.
This follows the failure of the centrist parties to try and construct their own coalition.
Christopher Lockwood is our Europe editor.
The FPO won the election that happened at the end of September, and during the intervening time the other parties tried to get together a new government that would keep the FBO out of power.
But those talks fell apart at the weekend, and so the president has had no alternative but to ask the FBO to have a go at it.
And so that is now happening.