Europe's
center is barely holding — and Trump plans to blow it apart
Despite
recent election wins for moderates in the Netherlands, Germany and the U.K.,
the far right is stronger than ever.
By TIM
ROSS
in
Jaywick, England
December
12, 2025 4:00 am CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/europe-far-right-center-politics/
In recent
elections, voters in Europe have given hope to embattled centrist politicians
across the Western world.
Donald
Trump may have romped back into the White House, but the international movement
of MAGA-aligned populists has run into trouble across the Atlantic. At
elections in the U.K., France, Germany, the Netherlands, Romania — and in a
sprawling vote across 27 EU countries for the European Parliament — mainstream
candidates defeated populist hardliners and far-right nationalists.
“There
remains a majority in the center for a strong Europe, and that is crucial for
stability,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said, after the
EU Parliament elections last year. “In other words, the center is holding.”
Sixteen
months later, that hold is looking anything but secure.
Hard-right
and far-right politicians are now leading the polls in France, the U.K. and
even Germany. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s approval rating is a dire
21 percent. His French counterpart, Emmanuel Macron, is even lower, at 11
percent — and the mood is so grim that this fall’s spectacular theft at the
Louvre is being treated by some as a giant metaphor for a country unable to
manage its challenges.
Even von
der Leyen’s own EU conservatives now rely on the votes of far right lawmakers
to get her plans approved in Brussels. One outraged centrist likened the shift
to those German politicians who enabled Adolf Hitler to take power.
Populists
at the extremes, meanwhile, cast themselves as the obvious alternative for
populations that want change. And now they can expect Trump to help: In a
brutal rupture of transatlantic norms, a new U.S. National Security Strategy
aims to use American diplomacy to cultivate “resistance” to political
correctness in Europe — especially on migration — and to support parties it
describes as “patriotic.” Trump himself told POLITICO he would endorse
candidates he believed would move Europe in the right direction.
On that
trajectory, in the next four years the political map of the West faces its most
dramatic upheaval since the Cold War. The implications for geopolitics, from
trade to defense, could be profound.
“What
[Europeans are] getting from Trump is the strategy of maximum polarization that
hollows out the center,” said Will Marshall from the Progressive Policy
Institute, the centrist American think tank that backed Bill Clinton in the
1990s. “The old established parties of left and right that dominated the post
war era have gotten weaker,” he said. “The nationalist or populist right’s
revolt is against them.”
Nowhere
is this recent transformation more dramatic than in the U.K.
As the
sun sinks toward the horizon over a calm sea one Thursday evening in November,
half a dozen regulars huddle around the bar in the Never Say Die pub, a few
yards from the beach at Jaywick Sands, on the east coast of England.
Built in
the 1930s as a resort 70 miles from London, Jaywick is now the most deprived
neighborhood in the country. The area had such a bad image that in 2018 a U.S.
MAGA ad used a photograph of a dilapidated Jaywick street to warn of the
apocalyptic future facing America if Trump’s candidates were not elected.
It is
here among the pebbledashed bungalows and England flags hanging limp from
lampposts that a new political force — Nigel Farage’s rightwing Reform UK — has
built its heartland.
At the
bar, Dave Laurence, 82, says he doesn’t vote, as a rule, but made an exception
for Farage, who was elected to represent the area last year. “I quite like him.
He’s doing the best he can,” Laurence says as he sips his pint of lager, with
’80s pop hits playing in the background. “I’ll vote for him again.”
Laurence
freely describes himself as “racist” and says he would never vote for a Black
person, such as the center-right Conservative Party’s leader Kemi Badenoch.
What troubles him most, he says, is the number of immigrants who have arrived
in the U.K. during his lifetime, especially those crossing the Channel in small
boats. Soon, Laurence fears, the country will be “full of Muslims and they’ll
fucking rebel against us.”
With its
anti-establishment, immigration-fighting agenda, Farage’s Reform UK offers
voters a program tightly in tune with far-right parties that have gained ground
across the West. According to opinion polls, Farage now has a real chance of
becoming the U.K.’s next prime minister if the vote were held today. (A general
election is not due until 2029).
It’s
startling to note that as recently as July 2024, Starmer’s Labour Party won a
historic landslide and some of his triumphant election aides traveled to the
U.S. to advise Democrats on strategy. Today, Starmer is derided as “First Gear
Keir” as he fights off leadership rivals rumored to be trying to oust him. And
Reform isn’t the only force remaking British party politics. To the left of
Labour, the Greens have also made recent gains in the polls under a new leader
calling himself an “eco-populist.”
Farage’s
stunning rise from the sidelines to the front of a political revolution carries
lessons well beyond Britain’s borders. Europeans raised in the old school of
mainstream politics fear that the traditional centerground — their home turf —
will not hold.
‘Durably
unstable’
Macron,
for his part, tried to counter the rise of the hard right by calling a snap
election for the French National Assembly last year. The gamble backfired,
delivering a hung parliament that has been unable to agree on key economic
policies ever since. Macron is now historically unpopular.
French
lawmakers’ clashes over the budget have toppled three of Macron’s picks as
prime minister since the summer of 2024. A backlash against his plan to raise
the pension age has forced ratings agencies to mull a damaging downgrade.
Macron, who himself became president by launching a new centrist movement to
rival the political establishment, now has no traditional party machinery to
help bolster his position. “He’ll leave a political landscape that is perhaps
durably unstable. It’s unforgivable,” said Alain Minc, an influential adviser
and former mentor to the French president.
The chaos
gives populists their chance. The main politicians making any running in
conversations about the next presidential election belong to the far-right
National Rally of Marine Le Pen and its youthful party president Jordan
Bardella, who are riding high in the polls at 34 percent.
In
Germany, too, the center ground is steadily eroding.
Though
Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s conservatives won a snap election in February, his
ideologically uneasy coalition, which consists of his own conservative bloc and
the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD), holds one of the slimmest
parliamentary majorities for a government since 1945, with just 52 percent of
seats. That leaves the Merz coalition vulnerable to small defections within the
ranks and makes it hard for him to achieve anything ambitious in government.
The far-left Die Linke party and the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD)
both surged at the last election, too, with AfD winning the best result in a
national election for any far-right party since World War II.
Merz’s
attempt to defang the AfD by moving his conservatives sharply to the right on
the issue of migration seems to have backfired. The AfD has only continued its
rise, surpassing Merz’s conservatives in many polls.
The rise
of the far-right is a cultural shock to many centrist Germans, given the
country’s deeply entrenched desire to avoid repeating its past. “For a long
time in Germany we thought with our history, and the way we teach in our
schools, we would be a bit more immune to that,” one concerned German official
said. “It turned out we are not.”
Even in
the Netherlands, where centrist Rob Jetten won a famous but narrow victory over
the far-right firebrand Geert Wilders in October, there are reasons for
mainstream politicians to worry. Wilders’ Freedom Party is still one of the
biggest forces in the land, winning the same number of seats as Jetten’s D66.
He could well return next time, just as Trump did in the U.S.
Where did
all the voters go?
According
to polling firm Ipsos, a large proportion of voters in many Western democracies
now have little faith in the political process. While they still believe in
democratic values, they are dissatisfied with the way democracy is working for
them.
A large
survey questioning around 10,000 voters across nine countries found 45 percent
were dissatisfied, fueling support for the extremes. Among voters on the far
left (57 percent) and the far right (54 percent), levels of dissatisfaction
were highest of all.
The
countries with the highest rates of dissatisfaction in the Ipsos study were
France and the Netherlands, where political upheaval has taken its toll on
faith in the system.
Alongside
the coronavirus pandemic and the aftermath of lockdowns, the biggest drivers of
dissatisfaction were the cost of living, immigration and crime, according to
Gideon Skinner from Ipsos. Trust in politics fell in the 90s and took another
hit in the late 2000s at the time of the financial crash, he said.
“There
may be specific things that have made it worse over the last couple of years
but it’s also a long-term condition,” Skinner told POLITICO. “It’s something we
do need to worry about and there is not a silver bullet that can fix it all.”
Perhaps
the greatest problem for incumbent centrists is that in most cases their
economies are so moribund that they lack the fiscal firepower to spend money
addressing the issues disillusioned voters care about most — like high living
costs, ailing public services and migration.
The
inequality emergency
The
financial crisis of 2008 and the coronavirus lockdowns of 2020-21 left many
governments strapped for cash. In the U.K., for example, the economy was 16
percent smaller than it should have been a decade after the 2008 crash if prior
growth trends had continued, according to Anand Menon, professor of European
politics at King’s College London.
“Crucially,
the impact of the financial crisis, like the impact of so much else in our
politics, was massively unequal,” Menon said. “Prosperous places with high
productivity, with well-educated workforces suffered far, far less than poorer
parts of the country.”
Nobel
Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz submitted a study to the G20 in
November warning that the world was facing an “inequality emergency.” Fueled by
war, pandemic and trade disruptions, the crisis risks preparing the ground for
more authoritarian leaders, his report said.
In many
Western countries, the centerground is more than just a metaphor. It is in
capital cities like London, Paris and Washington that power and money
accumulate and the economic and political elites seek to maintain their grip on
the status quo.
The
further you travel from these centers out to areas in decline, the more likely
you are to find support for radical politics.
As Menon
notes, Britain’s 2016 revolution — the referendum vote to leave the European
Union after almost half a century of membership — can be mapped onto the
culinary geography of the country.
“Pret a
Manger” is a smart national chain of sandwich and coffee shops, catering for
hungry commuters and office workers in wealthy, successful British cities.
“Places that had a Pret voted Remain,” Menon said. Parts of the U.K. where
median wages were lower were disproportionately likely to vote to leave the
EU.
Immigration,
immigration, immigration
After the
Brexit vote in 2016, immigration slid from the top of the priority list for
British voters and Farage himself took a step back. Both have now returned, as
Farage rides a wave of headlines about irregular migrants landing in small
boats from France.
From
January to May this year, there were a record 14,800 small boat crossings, 42
percent more than in the same period in the previous year, according to Oxford
University’s Migration Observatory.
For
Laurence, in the Never Say Die pub, the small boats represent the biggest issue
of all. “What’s going to happen in 10 years’ time? What’s going to happen in 20
years’ time when the boat people are still coming over?” he asked.
A decade
ago, German Chancellor Angela Merkel opened the doors to hundreds of thousands
of refugees arriving into Europe from Syria, as well as Afghanistan and Iraq.
The AfD surged in the months that followed, permanently changing German
politics. At February’s election, the AfD won a record 21 percent of the vote,
finishing in second place behind Merz’s conservative bloc.
“The
fundamental failure that is common to the whole [centrist] transatlantic
community is on immigration,” said Marshall from the Progressive Policy
Institute. “All of the far-right movements have made it their top issue.”
It is the
perceived threat that waves of migration pose to traditional national cultures
which drives much of the support for the far right. Trump’s White House is now
primed to join the European nationalists’ fight.
According
to a new U.S. National Security Strategy document released in December, Europe
is facing “civilisational erasure” from unrestricted immigration, as well as
falling birthrates. The analysis draws on the so-called great replacement
theory, a racist conspiracy theory. Free speech — in the MAGA definition, at
least — is another casualty of conventional centrist rule in Europe, as
political correctness veers into “censorship,” the U.S. document said.
In his
interview with POLITICO earlier this week, Trump aligned himself fully with the
strategy paper. European nations are “decaying” and their “weak” leaders can
expect to be challenged by rivals with American support, he said. “I’d
endorse,” he added.
In
Brussels, the double-punch of the president’s interview and the strategy
document left diplomats and officials feeling bruised and alarmed all over
again, after a period in which they allowed themselves to hope that the
transatlantic alliance wasn’t dying. One EU diplomat was blunt in assessing
Trump’s new method: “It’s autocracy.”
The
stolen jewels
Sometimes,
it takes a random news event — ostensibly unconnected to politics — to
crystalize the national mood. In Paris, the theft of France’s priceless crown
jewels from the Louvre provided just such an opportunity, morphing into an
indictment of an establishment that can’t get the job done, even when the job
simply involves thoroughly locking the windows at the world’s most famous
museum. National Rally leader Jordan Bardella called the incident a
“humiliation” before asking: “How far will the breakdown of the state go?”
In
Britain, just a month after Starmer’s victory last year, riots broke out across
the country, fueled by far-right extremists. The catalyst was the murder of
three young girls aged 6, 7 and 9, in Southport, northwest England, by a Black
teenager wrongly identified at the time on social media — in posts amplified by
the far-right — as a Muslim.
At the
time, Farage suggested the police were withholding the truth about the suspect,
earning him the fury of mainstream politicians. While stressing he did not
support violence, Farage railed against what he called “two-tier policing,” a
phrase popular among far-right commentators who claim police treat right-wing
protesters more harshly than those on the left.
It’s an
opinion that resonates in Jaywick. Chennelle Rutland, 56, is walking her two
dogs along the beachfront, admiring the view as the sun sets, flaring the sky
orange, then purple. The colors catch the surface of the flat sea. “It’s one
rule for one and one rule for the other,” she says. “The whites have got to
shut up because if you do say anything, you’re ‘racist’ and ‘far right.’”
It would
be wrong to characterise residents of Jaywick as simply ignorant or full of
rage. Many who spoke to POLITICO there were cheerful, happy with their
community and up to speed with the news. But, just as they’d soured on their
country’s centrist establishment, they were also tuning out its favored news
sources.
In
Jaywick, some of Farage’s voters prefer GB News, Britain’s answer to Fox News,
which launched in 2021, or learn about current affairs from YouTube and other
social media. The BBC — for decades the mainstay of the British media landscape
— has lost a portion of its audience here. Right-wing commentators and
politicians attack it as biased. Trump has lately joined in, threatening to sue
over a BBC edit that he said deceptively made it look as if he was explicitly
inciting violence. The BBC’s director general and head of news both resigned.
In the process, another piece of Britain’s onetime centerground was giving
way.
What
next?
There are
reasons for centrists to hope. In Rome, Giorgia Meloni’s hard-right Brothers of
Italy party has become less extreme in power, and the worst fears of moderates
about a group with its historic roots in neo-fascism have not come to pass. She
remains popular, and while pushing a culture war at home, she has avoided the
wrath of the EU leadership and kept Trump onside.
Populists
and nationalists don’t always win. Trump lost in 2020. In the Netherlands,
Wilders lost in October this year, though only by a whisker. Romania’s Nicușor
Dan won the presidency as a centrist in May, but again only narrowly defeating
his far-right opponent.
Structural
obstacles may also slow the radicals’ progress. The U.K.’s first-past-the-post
voting system makes it hard for new parties to do well. The two-round French
system has so far stopped Le Pen’s National Rally from gaining power as
centrists combine to back moderates. In Germany, a similar “firewall” exists
under which center parties keep the far-right out.
Even as
he enjoys a sustained lead in the polls and wins local elections in the U.K.,
Farage has not convinced voters that Reform would do a good job. Even some of
his supporters worry he will be out of his depth in government.
The
problem, for the centrists who are in power, is that a lot of voters seem to
think they, too, are out of their depth. And, whether that involves dealing
with migration, combatting inequality, or just boosting the security around the
Mona Lisa, it’s a reputation they’ll need to fix in order to survive — no easy
task given the intractability of the challenges facing the rich world.
The next
year will see more elections at which the centrists — and their populists
rivals — will be tested. In Hungary Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, long seen as
the far-right bad boy of EU politics, is fighting to keep power at an election
expected in April. There are regional votes in Germany where the AfD is on
track to prosper. France may require yet another snap election to end its
political paralysis. Trump’s diplomats and officials will be ready to
intervene.
Farage’s
party, too, will be on the ballot in 2026: It is expected to make gains in
Wales, Scotland and local votes elsewhere next spring. After that, his sights
will be on the U.K. general election expected in 2029, by which time European
politics may look very different.
“Of
course I know Mr. Orban and of course I know Giorgia Meloni, of course I know
these people,” Farage told POLITICO at a recent Reform rally. “I suspect that
after the next election cycle in Europe there will be even more that I know.”
Natalie
Fertig in Washington, Clea Caulcutt in Paris and James Angelos in Berlin
contributed to this report.


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