Watch out
Europe, Trump is coming for your elections next
MAGA’s
mission to meddle in European politics should terrify Starmer, Macron and Merz.
Will any of them fight back?
ANALYSIS
December
6, 2025 4:01 am CET
By Tim
Ross
https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-european-elections/
LONDON —
Donald Trump has launched a crusade to convert European politics to his cause,
mobilizing the full force of American diplomacy to promote “patriotic” parties,
stamp on migration, destroy “censorship” and save “civilization” from decay.
The
question is whether Europe’s embattled centrists have the power, or the will,
to stop him.
In its
newly released National Security Strategy document, the White House set out for
the first time in a comprehensive form its approach to the geopolitical
challenges facing the U.S. and the world.
While
bringing peace to Ukraine gets a mention, when it comes to Europe, America’s
official stance is now that its security depends on shifting the continent’s
politics decisively to the right.
Over the
course of three pages, the document blames the European Union, among others,
for raising the risk of “civilizational erasure,” due to a surge in immigrants,
slumping birth rates and the purported erosion of democratic freedoms.
“Should
present trends continue, the continent will be unrecognizable in 20 years or
less,” it says. “As such, it is far from obvious whether certain European
countries will have economies and militaries strong enough to remain reliable
allies.”
With its
talk of birth rates declining and immigration rising, the racial dimension to
the White House rhetoric is hard to ignore. It will be familiar to voters in
Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands and Germany, where far-right politicians have
articulated the so-called “great replacement theory,” a racist conspiracy
theory falsely asserting that elites are part of a plot to dilute the white
population and diminish its influence. “We want Europe to remain European,” the
document says.
“Over the
long term, it is more than plausible that within a few decades at the latest,
certain NATO members will become majority non-European,” the document reads —
making it “an open question” whether such countries will continue to view an
alliance with the U.S. as desirable.
The
policy prescription that follows is, in essence, regime change. “Our goal
should be to help Europe correct its current trajectory,” the strategy document
says. That will involve “cultivating resistance” within European nations. In
case there is any doubt about the political nature of the message, the White
House paper celebrates “the growing influence of patriotic European parties” as
a cause for American optimism.
In other
words: Back the far right to make Europe great again.
Fighting
shy
Since
Trump returned to the White House in January, European leaders have kept up a
remarkable performance of remaining calm amid his provocations, so far avoiding
an open conflict that would sever transatlantic relations entirely.
But for
centrist leaders currently in power — like Emmanuel Macron in Paris, Keir
Starmer in London and Germany’s Friedrich Merz — the new Trump doctrine poses a
challenge so existential that they may be forced to confront it head-on.
That
confrontation could come sooner rather than later, with high-stakes elections
in parts of Britain and Germany next year and the possibility of a snap
national vote ever-present in France. In each case, MAGA-aligned parties —
Reform U.K., the Alternative for Germany and the National Rally — are poised to
make gains at the expense of establishment centrists currently in power.
America, it is now clear, may well intervene to help.
On
current evidence, European officials whose job it is to protect their elections
from foreign interference have little appetite for a fight with Trump.
The
European Commission recently unveiled its plans for a “democracy shield” to
protect elections from disinformation and foreign interference. Michael
McGrath, the commissioner responsible for the policy, told POLITICO recently
that the shield should be drawn widely as Russia is “not the only actor” that
may have “a vested interest” in influencing elections. “There are many actors
who would like to damage the fabric of the EU, and ultimately undermine trust
in its institutions,” he said.
In light
of the new National Security Strategy, Trump’s America must now surely count
among them.
But
McGrath played the diplomat when asked, before the strategy was published, if
he would rather U.S. leaders stopped campaigning in European elections and
criticizing European democracy.
“They’re
entitled to their views, but we have our own standards and we seek to apply our
own values and the European approach to international affairs and international
diplomacy,” McGrath replied. “We don’t comment or interfere on the domestic
matters of a close partner like the United States.”
Pathetic
freeloaders
Even
before the strategy was published, Trump administration figures had already
provided ample evidence of its disdain for Europe’s political center ground. So
far this year, Vice President JD Vance launched a broadside against Europe over
free speech and democracy; Elon Musk intervened in the German election to back
the far-right Alternative for Germany; and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth
privately savaged “pathetic” Europeans for “freeloading” on security.
The
difference this time is that Trump’s National Security Strategy is official.
“It was one thing for them to think it and say it to each other (or in a speech
in Munich),” said one EU diplomat, granted anonymity to speak candidly. “It’s
something else to put it into a policy document.”
What is
worse for leaders like Macron, Merz and Starmer is that the Trumpian analysis —
that a critical mass of voters want their own European MAGA — may, ultimately,
be right.
These
leaders are all under immense pressure from the populist right in their own
backyards. In Britain, Nigel Farage’s Reform U.K. is on track to make major
gains at next year’s regional and local elections, potentially triggering a
leadership challenge in the governing Labour Party that could force Starmer
out.
In Paris,
Marine Le Pen’s National Rally tortures Macron’s struggling administrators in
parliament, while the Alternative for Germany breathes down Merz’s neck in
Berlin and pushes him to take ever harder positions on migration.
The
British prime minister disclosed in an interview with The Economist this week
that he spoke to Merz and Macron at a recent private dinner in Berlin about the
shared threat they all face from the right. “We are facing the same challenges,
or versions of the same challenges, and we do talk about it,” Starmer said.
If
America makes good on Trump’s new strategy, private dinner party chats among
friends may not be enough.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário