Nearly a
quarter of voters in Europe now back far-right parties
Analysis
by more than 150 political scientists finds proportion who back such parties
has increased nearly fivefold since 1995
Jon
Henley Europe correspondent
Wed 24
Jun 2026 13.34 CEST
Almost
one in four voters in Europe now cast their ballot for far-right parties,
research shows, a proportion that has grown nearly fivefold since the mid-1990s
and climbed particularly steeply over the past three years.
Analysis
by more than 150 political scientists in 31 countries found the proportion of
Europeans voting for a far-right party in their country’s most recent national
elections had risen to more than 23%, from about 10% a decade ago and roughly
5% in 1995.
The
research, led by Matthijs Rooduijn, a political scientist at the University of
Amsterdam, for the PopuList survey of European far-left, far-right and populist
parties, also found that almost 30% of Europeans now voted for
anti-establishment parties, another record.
“When we
started the PopuList project in 2018, the key finding was that one in four
Europeans were voting for populist parties, mostly far-left and far-right,”
Rooduijn said. “Now one in four are voting for far-right parties, mostly
populist. It’s a big shift.”
The surge
in far-right support was particularly marked between 2023 and 2025, the
research found, with far-right parties making often historic gains in national
elections in big countries such as France and the UK in 2024, and then in
Germany the following year.
Austria’s
far-right Freedom party (FPÖ) advanced from 16% to 29% in elections in 2024,
while France’s National Rally (RN) surged from 19% to 37% to become the largest
single party in the French parliament, and Chega in Portugal rose from 7% to
18%.
In
Britain, Reform UK boosted its vote share from 2% in 2019 (as the Brexit party)
to 14% in 2024, the research said. Reform has previously insisted it is not
far-right. It did not respond to a request for comment by the Guardian.
In
Germany’s 2025 vote, the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) doubled
its score from 10% to 21%, finishing as the country’s second-largest party for
the first time.
Far-right
populist parties are now in government as part of ruling coalitions in Croatia,
Czechia, Italy and Finland, propping up a rightwing minority government in
Sweden, and, the analysis finds, leading in the polls in Austria, Belgium,
France, Germany and the UK.
Such
parties have also suffered recent defeats, including in the Netherlands, where
Geert Wilders’ Freedom party (PVV) lost nearly a third of its seats to finish
second last year, and Hungary, where Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz was comprehensively
beaten by his centre-right rival in April.
Despite
these setbacks, however, the share of European voters casting their ballots for
far-right parties has continued to rise. “It’s important to emphasise this
isn’t a sudden thing,” Rooduijn said. “It’s been under way for decades, and
accelerating recently.”
A range
of factors lie behind the trend, according to the experts working on the
PopuList, which includes political parties that have won at least one
parliamentary seat, or 2% of the popular vote, in national legislative
elections since 1989.
First,
Rooduijn said, research suggested voter attitudes towards core far-right
themes, such as immigration, had not changed significantly over time, but had
become far more significant in the decisions people made about which party to
vote for.
Second,
far-right parties had become normalised – a self-reinforcing process. “The
bigger and more successful they get, the more ‘normal’ they become,” Rooduijn
said. “That’s helped by the media, and by mainstream parties embracing their
ideas.”
Lastly,
far-right parties were “just really, really good storytellers”, he said. “They
know how to frame their message, which ultimately is always about an in-group
and an out-group – the nation versus immigrants, judges, ‘woke elites’,
whoever.”
That
produced a “heroes versus villains” narrative, tied to an idealised past in
which everything was better, he said. “And they’ve got way better at
articulating that, at stirring emotions: anger, contempt, also pride and hope.
They’ve professionalised.”
In
Germany’s 2025 vote, Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), co-led by Alice Weidel,
doubled its score from 10% to 21%. Photograph: Tobias Steinmaurer/APA/AFP/Getty
Images
The
PopuList was launched eight years ago in partnership with the Guardian. In line
with widely accepted practice among political scientists, it defines far-right
parties as those that espouse two core ideologies: “nativism” and
“authoritarianism”.
Nativism
is the belief that a country should be inhabited solely by members of its
native group. Nativists are therefore generally hostile to immigrants and
non-natives, portraying them as a threat to the culture and interests of the
native population.
It is
also a major form of “exclusionism”: far-right parties are typically also
exclusionist towards other perceived “out-groups”, such as people of different
religions or sexual orientation, or establishment elites.
Authoritarians
believe societies should be well ordered and all transgressions against
authority should be punished severely. They see a strict approach to law and
order as one of the key prerequisites for a stable society and healthy
nation-state.
Many
political scientists divide far-right parties into “extreme right” parties,
which aim to overthrow the existing order, including through violence, and
“radical right” parties, which broadly operate – or purport to – within the
democratic framework.
However,
because it can sometimes be unclear whether a party is “radical” or “extreme”
right – its messaging may be inconsistent, some members may be more extreme
than others, and its position may change – “far right” is used to refer to
both.
Some
far-right parties in Europe have tried to stop the term being applied to them.
In Germany, AfD’s designation as “suspected right-wing extremist” by the
domestic intelligence agency has been upheld by the courts, but the party may
not be described as “confirmed” rightwing extremist until a court review is
complete.
France’s
top court rejected a 2024 objection by the RN to its interior ministry label of
“far right” (extrême droite), saying the party’s core ideology, specific
rhetoric and longstanding political platform justified the classification.
In
Belgium, Vlaams Blok rebranded as Vlaams Belang as long ago as 2004, after the
high court dismissed its argument that a lower court verdict upholding a
description of the party as “racist” was an unconstitutional attempt to stifle
an elected rival.
In
general, courts have found that classification is a matter of political science
and that, despite far-right parties’ efforts to detoxify, the media, state
authorities and opponents are free to call them such based on their
foundational ideology.
Usually
combined with a rightwing or leftwing “host ideology”, populism divides society
into two homogenous and opposing groups, a “pure people” versus a “corrupt
elite”, and argues that all politics should be an expression of the “will of
the people”.
Its
supporters say it is a democratic corrective, privileging the ordinary person
against the establishment. Critics say populists in power often subvert
democratic norms, for example by undermining the judiciary and media or
restricting minority rights.
“They
express citizen discontent,” Rooduijn said. “So that’s good for democracy. But
their ideas are not always compatible with liberal democracy’s core principles.
That is especially true of populist parties on the far right.
“And that
matters. The experience of countries such as Hungary, Poland and the US shows
that when far-right populists gain power, democracy itself can come under
pressure.”

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