Trump’s
backing splits European far right
The
Alternative for Germany party wants legitimacy from Trump to end its isolation,
while France’s National Rally sees him as a liability.
December
10, 2025 4:01 am CET
By Nette
Nöstlinger and Victor Goury-Laffont
https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-europe-far-right-afd-germany-national-rally-france/
BERLIN —
U.S. President Donald Trump’s overt embrace of Europe’s nationalists is
exposing a rift among its biggest far-right parties.
While
Germany’s far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has welcomed Trump’s
moral support, viewing it as a way to win domestic legitimacy and end its
political ostracization, France’s National Rally has kept its distance —
viewing direct American backing as a potential liability.
The
parties, which lead the polls in the EU’s two biggest economies, have long had
their differences — not least over some of the German party’s comments related
to World War II. But their divergent reactions to Trump stem less from varying
ideologies than from distinct domestic political calculations.
AfD
leaders in Germany celebrated the Trump administration’s recent attacks on
Europe’s mainstream political leaders and approval of “patriotic European
parties” that seek to fight Europe’s so-called “civilizational erasure.”
Europe’s centrists particularly fear America’s new goal of “cultivating
resistance” to boost the nationalist tide.
“This is
direct recognition of our work,” AfD MEP Petr Bystron said in a statement after
the Trump administration released its National Security Strategy — which, in
parts, sounds like it could have been a manifesto of a far-right European party
— warning that Europe may be “unrecognizable” in two decades due to migration
and a loss of national identities.
“The AfD
has always fought for sovereignty, remigration, and peace — precisely the
priorities that Trump is now implementing,” added Bystron, who will be among a
group of politicians in his party traveling to Washington this week to meet
with MAGA Republicans.
One of
the AfD’s national leaders, Alice Weidel, also celebrated Trump’s security
strategy.
“That’s
why we need the AfD!” Weidel said in a post after the document was released.
By
contrast, the National Rally in France is much warier of alignment with Trump,
who is very unpopular among the French electorate.
National
Rally President Jordan Bardella gave interviews to British media this week in
which he broadly agreed with Trump’s anti-migrant program, but pushed back
against the idea of a role for the U.S. president in steering French politics.
“I’m
French, so I’m not happy with vassalage, and I don’t need a big brother like
Trump to consider the fate of my country,” he said in an interview with The
Telegraph published Tuesday.
Thierry
Mariani, a member of the party’s national board, explained Trump hardly seemed
like an ideal ally.
“Trump
treats us like a colony — with his rhetoric, which isn’t a big deal, but
especially economically and politically,” he told POLITICO. The party’s
national leaders, Mariani added, see “the risk of this attitude from someone
who now has nothing to fear, since he cannot be re-elected, and who is always
excessive and at times ridiculous.”
AfD’s
American dream
It’s no
coincidence that Bystron is part of a delegation of AfD politicians set to meet
members of Trump’s MAGA camp in Washington this week. Bystron has been among
the AfD politicians increasingly looking to build ties to the Trump
administration to win support for what they frame as a struggle against
political persecution and censorship at home.
This is
an argument members of the Trump administration clearly sympathize with. When
Germany’s domestic intelligence agency declared the AfD to be extremist earlier
this year, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio called the move “tyranny in
disguise.” During the Munich Security Conference, U.S. Vice President JD Vance
urged mainstream politicians in Europe to knock down the “firewalls” that shut
out far-right parties from government.
AfD
leaders have therefore made a simple calculation: Trump’s support may lend the
party a sheen of acceptability that will help it appeal to more voters while,
at the same time, making it politically harder for German Chancellor Friedrich
Merz’s conservatives to refuse to govern in coalition with their party.
This
explains why AfD polticians will be in the U.S. this week seeking political
legitimacy. On Friday evening, Markus Frohnmaier, deputy leader of the AfD
parlimentary group, will be an “honored guest” at a New York Young Republican
Club gala, which has called for a “new civic order” in Germany.
National
Rally sees ‘nothing to gain’
In
France, Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally has distanced itself from the
AfD and Trump as part of a wider effort to present itself as more palatable to
mainstream voters ahead of a presidential election in 2027 the party believes
it has a good chance of winning.
As part
of the effort to clean up its image, Le Pen pushed for the AfD to be ejected
from the Identity and Democracy group in the European Parliament last year
following a series of scandals that made it something of a pariah.
At the
same time, National Rally leaders have calculated that Trump can’t help them at
home because he is deeply unpopular nationally. Even the party’s supporters
view the American president negatively.
An Odoxa
poll released after the 2024 American presidential election found that 56
percent of National Rally voters held a negative view of Trump. In the same
survey, 85 percent of voters from all parties described Trump as “aggressive,”
and 78 percent as “racist.”
Jean-Yves
Camus, a political scientist and leading expert on French and international
far-right movements, highlighted the ideological gaps separating Le Pen from
Trump — notably her support for a welfare state and social safety nets, as well
as her limited interest in social conservatism and religion.
“Trumpism
is a distinctly American phenomenon that cannot be transplanted to France,”
Camus said. “Marine Le Pen, who is working on normalization, has no interest in
being linked with Trump. And since she is often accused of serving foreign
powers — mostly Russia — she has nothing to gain from being branded ‘Trump’s
agent in France.’”
This
story has been updated.


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