Far-Right
Leaders Rally in Spain to ‘Make Europe Great Again’
At a
gathering in Madrid, members of Europe’s far-right parties set aside any
trepidation they might have about President Trump’s threats, and instead
focused on a common enemy — the European Union.
Emma Bubola
By Emma
Bubola
Feb. 8, 2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/08/world/europe/far-right-spain-rally.html
Since taking
office, President Trump has threatened European countries’ security and
economies, angled to take control of Greenland, and promised to “definitely”
slap the nations with tariffs. Even parties that would seem to be his natural
allies are nervous. Some have quietly tiptoed back from the American president.
But Saturday
was not the day for disputes. Leaders of far-right parties in Europe came to
Madrid for what, on the surface at least, amounted to a boldface names booster
rally for a new Trump era.
There was
Marine Le Pen of France’s far-right National Rally; the Netherland’s populist,
Geert Wilders; the leader of Italy’s League party, Matteo Salvini. All made
clear that they shared Mr. Trump’s charge against what they see as “wokeism,”
“gender theory,” and overweening environmentalism.
For them,
the American president had blown through the last barriers that had confined
their parties to the political margins. The taboos had been toppled.
“Trump’s
tornado has changed the world in just a couple of weeks,” Prime Minister Viktor
Orban of Hungary told his allies from the stage of the summit whose slogan was,
“Make Europe Great Again.”
“Yesterday
we were the heretics,” he said. “Now we are the mainstream.”
In addition
to the recurring themes of the European far right — labeling the media
“parasites,” bashing liberal elites, and decrying an “invasion” of Muslim
immigrants — the attendees quickly turned their sights on Mr. Trump’s most
recent targets.
For example,
Mr. Salvini criticized the World Health Organization and the International
Criminal Court; Mr. Trump moved to withdraw the United States from the W.H.O.,
and issued an executive order imposing sanctions on the I.C.C.
Mr. Wilders
seemed to mimic Mr. Trump’s language as he said voters were asking them to
“expel illegal aliens and criminals.”
Mr. Trump’s
election represents “the Western world’s final opportunity,” said Afroditi
Latinopoulou, a lawmaker with the Greek far-right party Voice of Reason.
Ms.
Latinopoulou’s party has no representation in the Greek Parliament, but some
leaders at the rally, including Mr. Salvini’s League and Mr. Wilders’ Freedom
Party in the Netherlands, are already governing as part of coalitions.
Other
parties, like Ms. Le Pen’s National Party and the Spanish Vox party, which
hosted the event, have risen in recent years, but were still out of power,
often kept out by an alliance of mainstream parties.
Many of
these parties are still considered pariahs in the European Parliament in
Brussels, and right-wing leaders like Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni of Italy
did not join the event organized by the group, which calls itself the Patriots
for Europe in that legislative body.
In elections
last summer for the European Parliament, what many had anticipated would be a
wave of support for far-right parties did not fully materialize. But many of
these parties are popular among young voters, and stand a chance to enter
governments in coming elections. They think Mr. Trump’s victory has put wind in
their sails.
Mr. Trump’s
victory “brought a political earthquake to the world,” Mr. Wilders said. “He
brings a message of hope.”
They
skewered the “liberal fascists” who they said had replaced Christian
civilization with “a sick Satanic utopia,” the “creeps” who “want to turn our
children into trans-freaks,” and the supposed ethnic replacement of native-born
Europeans by immigrants. They borrowed liberally from conspiracy theories.
And along
with Mr. Trump they shared a distaste for the European Union — even though many
of their countries benefit from E.U. funds and nearly all the parties have
disavowed cries to leave the bloc since Brexit has proved to be a drag on
Britain’s economy.
Nonetheless
it was clear that their idea of making “Europe Great Again” was to tear down
the European Union as it now stands. “Less Europe, more freedom,” Mr. Salvini
said.
Some of
those attending questioned the very slogan of the event. “They say they want to
make Europe great but what do I care about defending Europe?” said Jesus
Castañón, 79, a retired architect who sat in the crowd. “It does not deserve
it.”
At the
gathering, the European Union was uniformly loathed as a group of unelected
bureaucrats sealed in glass palaces and intent on infringing upon nations with
excessive regulation and sabotaging their economies with climate policies.
Since
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, most of Europe’s mainstream parties have come to
accept the need to spend more money on defense, and they talk of unity to
confront potential trade disputes with Mr. Trump.
But few at
the rally spoke of needing to increase cooperation among E.U. countries. “The
European Union is a pump that works in reverse,” Ms. Le Pen said. “It sucks up
the sovereignty from our states to institutionalize powerlessness.”
When people
at the event talked of making Europe great again, most talked about making
Europe a beacon for Christianity, elevating individual nations and restoring
their pride and identity.
Instead of
supporting the European Union, one member of the crowd said he preferred the
re-establishment of the Spanish colonial empire encompassing Spain and Latin
America.
“I have
little in common with a Belgian or a northern Italian,” said Gonzalo Ruiz, 64,
a retired meteorologist. “Reunification with South America is the dream.”
Some
divisions could not be disguised. Some leaders praised free-market economics,
while others supported protectionism.
Mr. Orban,
who has long stood out even among the far right for his closeness to President
Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, has criticized support for Ukraine. “Because of
Brussels we are giving our money to Ukraine in a hopeless war,” he said on
Saturday.
Emma Bubola
is a Times reporter based in Rome. More about Emma Bubola


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