Nearly a quarter of voters in Europe now back
far-right parties
Nearly
every fourth voter in Europe today supports far-right parties, marking a dramatic historical shift
where the far-right's voter share has almost quintupled since 1995. According
to a major 2026 study published by The Guardian and compiled by more than 150
political scientists across 31 countries, far-right support in the most recent
national elections surpassed 23 percent. This is a massive increase
compared to roughly 10 percent a decade ago and just 5 percent in 1995.
Key
Findings from the PopuList Study
The
extensive analysis was conducted for the political database PopuList, a research project tracking populism in Europe
led by Matthijs Rooduijn at the University of Amsterdam.
- Anti-Establishment Wave: Beyond the far-right, nearly 30
percent of European voters now cast their ballots for anti-establishment
parties across the political spectrum, setting another historic record.
- Shift in Populism: When the PopuList project
launched in 2018, researchers found that one in four Europeans voted for
populist parties split between the far-left and far-right. Today, that
same "one in four" metric is occupied almost entirely by the
far-right alone.
Drivers
of the Political Shift
Data from
regional researchers—including the University of Luxembourg and political
analysts across Europe—point to several compounding social and structural
factors fueling this trend:
- Cultural vs. Economic Shift: Voter preferences have
increasingly pivoted from purely economic issues to cultural anxieties
surrounding identity, globalization, and national sovereignty.
- Immigration Dissatisfaction: Stricter rules on external
arrivals and borders remain a primary rallying point for parties targeting
voter dissatisfaction with mainstream migration policies.
- Demographic Disparity: Support for right-wing populist
parties is notably higher in aging regions or areas feeling left behind by
modern urbanization, driven by regional uncertainty.
- Social Media & Echo
Chambers: The
tactical use of social media platforms by populist politicians has
reinforced single-opinion filter bubbles, making right-wing messaging
highly accessible to a broader demographic, including younger voters.
Broader
Impact on European Politics
The
consolidation of far-right voters is reshaping how Europe is governed.
Mainstream center-right coalitions, such as the European People's Party (EPP)
in the European Parliament, are increasingly entering tactical alliances of
convenience with far-right groups to pass legislation. This shift is directly
stalling climate policies amid cost-of-living concerns, triggering strict new
immigration frameworks, and rewriting traditional democratic and judicial
checks and balances across the continent

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