Epstein
files shed more light on Steve Bannon’s efforts to influence European politics
Donald
Trump’s former adviser told Epstein in 2019 that he was ‘focused on raising
money for Le Pen and Salvini’ before European elections
Angela
Giuffrida in Rome, Deborah Cole in Berlin and Angelique Chrisafis in Paris
Thu 5 Feb
2026 17.43 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/05/jeffrey-epstein-files-steve-bannon-european-politics
Dozens of
messages contained in the latest tranche of Epstein files lay bare the attempts
by Donald Trump’s former chief strategist Steve Bannon to tap Jeffrey Epstein
for support and funding to bolster European far-right parties.
The
messages mostly date to 2018 and 2019, when Bannon, after being sacked by
Trump, regularly visited Europe in his quest to forge a movement in the
European parliament uniting ultra-rightwing and Eurosceptic forces from several
countries including Italy, Germany, France, Hungary, Poland, Sweden and
Austria.
Bannon
especially set his sights on Matteo Salvini, the Italian deputy prime minister
and leader of the far-right League, who at the time was at the height of his
political power. Italian opposition parties this week urged Salvini to clarify
whether Epstein influenced the rise of the League after Salvini’s name was
cited several times in messages exchanged between Bannon and Epstein.
In
France, the leftwing party La France Insoumise also called for a cross-party
parliament inquiry after several French figures including Jack Lang, a former
culture minister, and his daughter appeared in the latest Epstein release, as
did exchanges between Epstein and Bannon in which Bannon spoke of his desire to
raise money for the far-right leader Marine Le Pen.
In
Germany, the files revealed exchanges between Epstein and Bannon promoting
Alternative für Deutschland while denigrating the then German chancellor,
Angela Merkel.
In texts
from 2018, Bannon bragged about his influence as an “adviser” to the new
rightwing populists and saw the parties’ gains in Europe as a chance to use
them to his and Epstein’s benefit.
There is
no evidence of any direct relations between Salvini and Epstein, nor any
suggestion that Salvini was involved in Epstein’s sex-trafficking network. But
what the messages do reveal is Epstein’s interest in European nationalists.
In a
message contained in one of the files and dated 5 March 2019, a couple of
months before the European parliamentary elections, Bannon writes that he is
“focused on raising money for Le Pen and Salvini so they can actually run full
slates”.
Others
messages detail Bannon’s travels in Europe at the time and his ambition for
increased nationalist power in Brussels, as highlighted in a flurry of
exchanges between the pair at the time of the European parliament ballot in
late May 2019.
The
messages also refer to Bannon’s meeting with Salvini in Milan in March 2018,
just a few days after Italian general elections that culminated in the League
forming a government with the populist Five Star Movement.
Bannon
met Salvini again in Italy in September that year when the League joined his
anti-EU organisation, the Movement. By the following summer, Salvini was in
opposition after collapsing the League’s coalition with the Five Star Movement
in a failed attempt to trigger early elections.
There is
no evidence that Epstein financed the League, which returned to government in
2022 as an ally in Giorgia Meloni’s ruling coalition, and other European
far-right parties. However, it appears that Bannon tried to tap him for funds.
Andrea
Casu, a politician with the centre-left Democratic party who raised questions
about the subject of funding in the Italian parliament on Tuesday, said: “We
are asking the government – not just Salvini – for clarity and transparency …
we must first understand if there is a link, not only with Bannon, but with
those who today play a political game with these rightwing forces at the
European level.”
Riccardo
Magi, president of the leftwing party Più Europa (More Europe), claimed the
Epstein files “implicate Matteo Salvini in alleged funding that Bannon had
promised to provide for his election campaign”, an allegation that “raises
concerns about potential external influence affecting the second-largest party
in the current majority”.
Bannon
has declined to comment to US media about the exchanges in the latest Epstein
files. Salvini’s League party dismissed speculation that Epstein might have
contributed funds as “unfounded” and “serious exaggerations”. It added that the
party has “never requested or received funding” and would defend itself and
Salvini “in every way possible in the event of insinuations or associations
with disgusting figures”.
In
France, Lang, who heads the Institut du Monde Arabe, a cultural organisation,
features in emails discussing meetings and holidays. He admitted knowing
Epstein, saying it was “at a time when nothing suggested Jeffrey Epstein was at
the heart of a network of criminality”.
His
daughter Caroline, a film producer, resigned this week from France’s Union of
Independent Producers after the emails showed she had founded an offshore
company with Epstein in 2016 to invest in the work of young artists. There was
no suggestion of illegality. She said she had resigned from the company when
Epstein’s criminal acts were revealed.
The
emails also showed extensive communications between Epstein and Olivier Colom,
a former diplomatic adviser to the former rightwing president Nicolas Sarkozy.
One email exchange with Colom in 2018 suggested that the former finance
minister Bruno Le Maire had gone to Epstein’s house in New York at an
unspecified date. A person close to Le Maire told Politico that Le Maire had
not known whose house he was visiting in September 2013, before he was finance
minister, and quickly left when he saw Epstein at the residence, never seeing
him again.
Casu said
the issue was not Epstein’s files per se but the questions the messages raise
about powerful foreign influences and the networks aimed at weakening Europe.
“These
files are getting a lot of attention in the US, as is obvious,” he said. “But
in my opinion, they should be given just as much attention for what they
represent for Europe today, and for the political situation in which we are
in.”

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