Trump
spent a decade making friends in Europe. Now they’re turning away.
From
Italy to France, nationalist leaders are reassessing their ties with the U.S.
president as his brand sours across the EU.
June 23,
2026 4:02 am CET
By Marion
Solletty
https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-giorgia-meloni-jordan-bardella-europe-turning-away/
PARIS —
For Europe’s populist right, U.S. President Donald Trump’s embrace was once
seen as a political asset. Not anymore.
For
years, nationalist leaders across the continent treated the American
president’s support as proof that their politics had gone global. But with
major elections looming in 2027, including in Italy, France and Poland, many
are rethinking the value of that transatlantic backing.
Trump’s
brand in Europe has soured — curdled by his tariff wars, threats against
Greenland and a war on Iran that increased energy prices. His interventions,
once welcomed by his ideological allies, are now seen as political explosives:
liable to alienate moderate voters, split nationalist electorates and hand
ammunition to their opponents.
A case in
point is Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, once seen as the U.S.
president’s most prominent ally in Europe. After Trump claimed she had “begged”
for a photo with him at the G7 summit last week, Meloni gave voice to what
polls have been saying for months.
Brushing
off a social media post in which Trump said she was “doing poorly in Italy with
her level of popularity,” the prime minister retorted: “Being your friend
certainly has not helped it.”
“In any
case, my popularity is none of your concern,” she added. “I suggest you focus
on yours.”
In
France, Jordan Bardella — head of the far-right National Rally party and a
presidential front-runner — is making the same calculation. In an interview
with POLITICO last week, he firmly rejected Trump’s backing and described the
U.S. president’s behavior as “erratic.”
Even as
the Trump administration’s leading figures have thrown their weight behind
Europe’s nationalist parties, the U.S. president’s embrace has become a
“poisoned gift,” said Jean-Yves Dormagen, president of the Cluster17 polling
institute.
“Trump is
really creating a problem for these leaders,” he stated. While their
electorates are divided over Trump, they increasingly see him as a threat, he
added.
A January
survey conducted by Cluster17 in seven EU countries showed that while
right-wing voters had a higher opinion of Trump than the general population,
only a minority of them saw him as “a friend of Europe” — 18 percent among
Bardella’s National Rally voters, 23 percent among Meloni’s Brothers of Italy
voters and 25 percent among supporters of the far-right Alternative for Germany
(AfD).
In a
POLITICO poll conducted by Public First in June, only 31 percent of AfD voters
and 36 percent of National Rally voters agreed that the U.S. is “a reliable
ally.”
In the
U.K., Trump has become a liability for Nigel Farage’s right-wing populist
Reform UK party, especially among swing voters. That is also true in France,
where the U.S. president is unpopular among the center-right voters the
National Rally is trying to win over, said Dormagen.
What
makes the backlash especially awkward for Washington is that the politicians
edging away from Trump are precisely the ones his administration has been
seeking to court.
In its
National Security Strategy published last year, the White House applauded “the
growing influence of patriotic European parties.”
In the
months that followed, the administration backed that rhetoric with high-profile
public endorsements and behind-the-scenes outreach to the very movements now
calculating that Trump might cost them votes.
In one of
the most high-profile examples, U.S. Vice President JD Vance traveled to
Hungary to support former Prime Minister Viktor Orbán in his reelection bid in
April, saying this was “the right thing to do.”
But after
the Hungarian leader’s 16-year rule ended in a crushing defeat, most far-right
leaders eyeing next year’s top political prizes are either reconsidering their
stance on Trump or fully reversing it.
In a
response to a request for comment, a White House official pointed to a passage
in the National Security, which says that “America encourages its political
allies in Europe” who stand for “unapologetic celebrations of European nations’
individual character and history.”
End of a
political romance
The shift
is especially notable in Italy and Germany, where the far-right has
historically been very welcoming to the U.S. president.
Meloni
was one of the first European leaders to congratulate Trump on his 2024
reelection. And when he kicked off a transatlantic trade war, she was quick to
cast herself as a potential bridge between a terrified Europe and the
guns-blazing president.
Their
relationship was initially full of spark. At a White House meeting last April,
Trump called her a “very special person” and accepted an invitation to Rome (he
never went). Fast-forward to today, and the two are now publicly trading barbs
after Meloni refused to let U.S. warplanes taking part in the Iran war use
Italy’s military bases.
Meanwhile,
in Germany, the Iran war has aggravated a crisis of confidence between Trump
and the far right, which had already been building before the conflict. This
spring, AfD leaders urged party officials to scale back trips to the U.S. ahead
of key regional elections.
Still,
not all of Europe’s right-wing leaders are publicly rethinking the
relationship.
Poland’s
right-wing populist Law and Justice party is still cultivating ties with Trump.
Warsaw, which is headed for a parliamentary election next year, is a close
political and military ally for the U.S., and it’s one of Europe’s largest
buyers of American weapons for its fast-growing armed forces.
President
Karol Nawrocki, who is backed by Law and Justice, is seeking to leverage his
connections with Trump as he battles Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who holds the
country’s most powerful office.
For Law
and Justice, it is “more beneficial than risky to be on very good terms with
Donald Trump for many reasons,” said Wojciech Szacki, head of the political
desk at the Polityka Insight think tank. “It gives them some leverage in
internal politics because the president of Poland is the only person who has
access to the White House right now.”
At a
press conference in Warsaw on Friday, Law and Justice leader Jarosław Kaczyński
praised Nawrocki’s “excellent relations with the American president” and hailed
the alleged “success” of a Polish bid to get a permanent U.S. military base.
“A
majority of Poles still think that what makes us safe is the presence of
American soldiers in Poland,” said Szacki.
In the
Cluster17 poll, 17 percent of all Polish respondents said Trump was “a friend
of Europe” — the highest percentage among the seven EU countries polled.
NOTE: The
Public First poll was conducted from Jun. 14 to Jun. 17, surveying more than
2,000 respondents each from U.S., Canada, U.K., France, Spain and Germany, and
has an overall margin of error of ±2 percentage points. Smaller subgroups have
higher margins of error.
UPDATE:
This article was updated on June 23 with comments from the White House.


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