Summary

European far-right leaders celebrated Donald Trump’s election victory, seeing him as an ally who shares their anti-immigration and authoritarian views.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, a close Trump associate, promised “big plans” in partnership with the U.S. leader, likely involving hardline stances on immigration and cultural issues.

Leaders like Italy’s Giorgia Meloni and Germany’s AfD also voiced support, aligning with Trump’s opposition to “woke” and progressive values.

Experts warn this alliance could embolden right-wing policies across Europe, with Orbán potentially acting as a key link between Trump and Europe’s far-right bloc.

  • @Solumbran
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    1011 hours ago

    Well let’s send all of the far right from Europe to America, and all the “woke” from America to Europe. This way when the country bursts into flames it won’t bring the rest of the world with it.

    Or would Americans be racist against fellow, but foreign far right extremist?

    • @[email protected]
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      810 hours ago

      I don’t think putting a unified fascist populace behind the strongest military in the world is a great idea.

      • @InverseParallax
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        3 hours ago

        It’s fine, most of the good stuff needs basic literacy to operate.

        Source: worked on some of the good stuff. Also mostly moved to Europe.

  • @[email protected]
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    9 hours ago

    Thankfully genocide joe spent the last 4 years fighting against fascism instead of murdering children in a genocide. \s

  • @Siegfried
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    142 minutes ago

    Because now they are the center again /s