tomis42
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Post by tomis42 on Feb 15, 2024 8:01:05 GMT
Recently, we have seen an increase in the popularity of radical parties in Europe. Finally, polls suggest that the far-right Alternative for Germany will come second behind the conservative CSU in the country's largest state of Bavaria. Next year, meanwhile, three East German states will hold parliamentary elections, in which the AfD currently looks set to win a majority of the vote. While in Poland Kaczynski's Justice and Law party has been in power since 2015, Viktor Orban has been prime minister since 2010, while his Fidesz party has also taken over a good portion of Jobbik voters who were once positioned more to the right of the spectrum. political but now it seems moderate in relation to the positions of Fidesz. Meanwhile in Finland, the Party Armenia Phone Number List of Finns is part of the governing coalition. In Sweden, the staunchly anti-immigration, anti-multiculturalism Sweden Democrats are the second largest party in parliament, supporting the right-wing coalition government there. Even in France, Le Pen's National Front continues to enjoy considerable electoral success and potentially one of the two main political forces. In Greece, three far-right parties won enough seats to enter parliament, while in Spain, the controversial nationalist Vox Party – the first successful far-right party in Spain since the death of fascist dictator Francisco Franco in 1975 – exceeded all expectations in the last regional elections. So it seems that the parties with positions far from the classical center-right have gained more political ground. In some cases, coming to power has rationalized the position by moving towards the center right in fiscal policies but also foreign policy positions, as in the case of Meloni in Italy. While the latter has created macroeconomic stability and calmed the markets, it has come closer to NATO and Brussels, suspending participation in China's Belt and Road project and using harsh language towards the Kremlin, although in alliance with it except the center-right party Forza Italia is also Salvini's radical right.
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