Snippets
In Greece, while the ruling center-right New Democracy Party won a landslide victory, with 40.5% of the vote, its triumph was overshadowed by the success of the Spartans, a recently formed far-right nativist group that gained 12 seats in Greece’s 300-seat Parliament.
The Brothers of Italy last year became the first far-right party to win an Italian election since World War I.
Earlier this month, the anti-immigration Finns Party entered a four-party coalition to rule in Finland.
In September 2022 Sweden saw the hard-right populist Sweden Democrats win more than 20% of the vote to become the country’s second-biggest party.
The far-right Vox Party in Spain is expected to do well in national elections next month, hovering around 14% in opinion polls. In 2019, the party won 15% of the vote and 52 lawmakers.
The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) can count on the support of about 20% of the German public, according to opinion polls; on Sunday, it won an important regional election in the eastern state of Thuringia.
Last year Marine Le Pen, the then-leader of the National Assembly, came closer than ever to becoming France’s first far-right president.
This is literally the opposite of what is happening only there are no far left groups.