How the
far right stole Christmas
Seasonal
traditions and good cheer are being repurposed to serve political ends.
In Italy,
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has made the defense of Christmas traditions
central to her political identity. |
December
24, 2025 4:00 am CET
By Hannah
Roberts
https://www.politico.eu/article/how-far-right-stole-christmas-culture-war-christian-civilization/
ROME —
Christmas is becoming a new front line in Europe’s culture wars.
Far-right
parties are claiming the festive season as their own, recasting Christmas as a
marker of Christian civilization that is under threat and positioning
themselves as its last line of defense against a supposedly hostile, secular
left.
The trope
echoes a familiar refrain across the Atlantic that was first propagated by Fox
News, where hosts have inveighed against a purported “War on Christmas” for
years. U.S. President Donald Trump claims to have “brought back” the phrase
“Merry Christmas” in the United States, framing it as defiance against
political correctness. Now, European far-right parties more usually focused on
immigration or law-and-order concerns have adopted similar language, recasting
Christmas as the latest battleground in a broader struggle over culture.
In Italy,
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has made the defense of Christmas traditions
central to her political identity. She has repeatedly framed the holiday as
part of the nation’s endangered heritage, railing against what she calls
“ideological” attempts to dilute it.
“How can
my culture offend you?” Meloni has asked in the past, defending nativity scenes
in public spaces. She has argued that children should learn the values of the
Nativity — rather than just associating Christmas with food and presents — and
rejected the idea that long-standing traditions should be altered. This year,
Meloni said she was abstaining from alcohol until Christmas, portraying herself
as a practitioner of spirituality and tradition.
France’s
National Rally and Spain’s Vox have similarly opposed secularist or “woke”
efforts to replace religious imagery with neutral seasonal language, and
advocated for nativity scenes in town halls. In Germany, the Alternative for
Germany (AfD) has warned that Christmas markets are losing their “German
character,” amplifying disinformation about Muslim traditions edging out
Christian ones.
Christmas
spectacle
But
Meloni’s party, Brothers of Italy, has turned the message into spectacle. Each
December it hosts a Christmas-themed political festival — complete with Santa,
ice-skating, and a towering Christmas tree lit in the colors of the Italian
tricolor.
Once held
quietly in late summer, the event, named Atreyu — after a character in the
fantasy film The NeverEnding Story — has since moved to the prestigious Castel
Sant’Angelo, drawing families, tourists and the politically curious. Brothers
of Italy said on their Whatsapp Channel that the festival had been “a success
without precedent. Record numbers, real participation and a community that
grows from year to year, demonstrating how it has become strong, like Italy.”
Daniel, a
26-year-old tourist from Mallorca, who declined to give his last name because
he did not want to be associated with a far right political event, said he and
a friend wandered in after spotting the lights and music. “Then we realized it
was about politics,” he said, laughing.
Cultural
Christianity
For party
figures, the symbolism is explicit. “For us, traditions represent our roots,
who we are, who we have been, and the history that made us what we are today,”
said Marta Schifone, a Brothers of Italy MP. “Those roots must be celebrated
and absolutely defended.”
That
message resonates with younger supporters too. Alessandro Meriggi, a student
and leader in Azione Universitaria, the party’s youth wing, said Italy is
founded on specific values that newcomers should respect. “In a country like
Italy, you can’t ask schools to remove the crucifix,” he said. “It represents
our values.”
Religion,
however, often feels almost beside the point. Many of the politicians leading
these campaigns are not especially devout, and only a minority of their voters
are practicing Christians. What matters is Christianity as culture, a
civilizational shorthand that draws a boundary between “us” and “them.”
“In the
1980s and 1990s, the radical right largely kept its distance from the church,”
said Daniele Albertazzi, a professor at the University of Surrey who researches
populism. “That changed between 2010–15, following Islamic terrorist attacks in
Europe, which were framed as a clash of civilizations. Christianity became a
cultural marker, a way to portray themselves as defenders of traditional
family, tradition and identity.”
Hosting a
Christmas festival is a “very intelligent” move by Meloni’s party, he said.
“They have tried to reverse the stigma of their past [on the far right] by
becoming a broad-church modern conservative party, and this is part of the
repackaging.”
That
strategy benefits from the left’s discomfort with religion in public life.
Progressive parties and institutions, including the EU, have tried to emphasize
inclusivity by using neutral phrases like “holiday season,” which for the far
right amounts to cultural self-loathing. In Italy this year, the League and
Brothers of Italy have attacked several schools that removed religious
references from Christmas songs. In Genoa, right-wing parties accused the
city’s left-wing mayor of delivering a “slap in the face to tradition” after
she chose not to display a nativity scene in her offices.
“We’re
not embarrassed to say ‘Merry Christmas,’” said Lucio Malan, a Brothers of
Italy senator, at Meloni’s festival. “I have always promoted religious freedom
and know not everyone is Christian. But Christmas is the holiday people care
about most. Let’s not forget its origins.”
The
irony, critics note, is that many Christmas traditions are relatively modern,
shaped as much by commerce as by religion. Yet Christmas remains politically
potent precisely because it is emotive, tied to family rituals, childhood
memories and local identity.
For
Meloni’s government, taking ownership of Christmas fits a broader project to
reclaim control over cultural institutions from public broadcasting to museums
and opera, after what it sees as decades of left-wing dominance. The narrative
of the far right as the defenders of Christmas presents a challenge for
mainstream parties who have struggled to find a compelling counter-argument to
convincingly defend secularism.
And
nowhere is that clearer than at the Brothers of Italy’s Christmas festival
itself. As dusk falls over Castel Sant’Angelo, families skate to a soundtrack
of Christmas pop, children pose for photos with Santa, and tourists wander in,
drawn by lights and music rather than ideology. Politics is present, but
softened, wrapped in nostalgia, tradition and seasonal cheer.

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