
Right-wing parties have gained a lot in the most recent European Parliament elections as a result of growing dissatisfaction with the social formation throughout the EU. Most likely, this increase in seats won was driven by both classic older conservatives and younger voters who have attempted to renew the soul of nationalism in their own countries.
Before the European Parliament elections, 32 percentage of French 18- to- 25- yr- olds said they’d voting for the “far correct” National Rally party, carefully reflecting the subsequent election outcome. Led by Marine Le Pen,” the National Rally party is on course to win 31.5 percent of the vote—more than twice the 14.7 percent projected for] French President Emmanuel ] Macron’s liberal Renaissance party”.
However, Germany’s AfD group secured better- than- expected effects, coming in second in Germany’s EU legislative election, winning almost 16 percentage of the voting. Importantly, AfD gained considerable ground among younger voters, surging 12 percent points to 17 percentage among 16- 24- year- olds.
Germany and France both experience this social quake, which is not unique to these two nations. All over Europe, there are becoming more and more thoughts of Euroscepticism and unease over emigration.
Members of the European ruling class are now realizing that the reaction against the crony plan, which was started shortly after World War II, is escaping communist confinement and continuously growing.
Nobody should be surprised by this. When Britain voted to leave the European Union in 2016, we saw the first obvious indications of this immune response to globalism. Yet the ruling class in the United Kingdom did not pay attention to the message their voters sent as immigration soared.
Although one of the main goals of Brexit was to regain control of England’s borders, the number of legal arrivals has nearly doubled. This increase has resulted in a significant rise in anti-immigration demonstrations by people who are trying to preserve their heritage and culture. In consequence, the Conservative Party in the United Kingdom, which has been its main governing party since 2010, is now facing historic defeats ahead of the July 4 national elections, partly due to its failure to maintain control over its borders.
Of course, according to leftist media, the rise of so- called “far- right” populism, manifesting itself through legitimate electoral wins, is positioned as a threat to democracy. However, this is a rhetoric blunder.
Democracy is not in danger. Their “democracy” is in danger as the right is finally acting as a legitimate counterweight to the status quo dominated by an establishment left and right that appear and act in a very similar way.
When liberals use the word “democracy”, they do n’t mean the will of the voters. Rather, the word democracy is used as a substitute for leftist hegemony, or as Curtis Yarvin explained,” When they say democracy, they mean oligarchy”.
” Traditional” conservatives and “centrist” leftists both share the same immigration policy. That’s a major reason why the left is terrified of legitimate right-wing opposition as opposed to the conventional “opposition in- name-only” conservatism they are accustomed to eradicating. In a recent analysis from the New York Times titled” Just How Dangerous Is Europe’s Rising Far Right”? Leftist political containment strategies were unsuccessful, according to author Roger Cohen.
” Across Europe, the far right is becoming the right, absent any compelling message from traditional conservative parties. If’ far’ suggests outlier, it has become a misnomer. The parties of an anti-immigrant right have seen the barriers that once held them out crumble as they are absorbed into the arc of Western democracies, not to mention the parties that have soared.
Much to the dismay of liberal elites, authoritarian “barriers” in the form of “hate speech” legislation, social stigmatization, corporate media exclusion, and outright censorship are proving ineffective because the reality of deteriorating social and economic conditions, due in part to mass migration across the West, is too great to ignore. The revitalization of traditional forms of nationalism through legitimate right-wing opposition was not only necessary but inevitable after decades of placing a premium on the well-being of immigrants over that of native-born citizens.
The rise in “far right” popularity in Europe is shaking democracy to its core, as it should, showing how unresponsive “democracy” has become to the needs of the people Western governments were supposed to serve.