‘It Cannot Go On Like This’: Voices From Europe’s Swing to the Right

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By Krista Mahr and Daniel J. Wakin

Mrs. Mahr is the opinion editor. Mr. Wakin is an assistant editor.

Millions of Europeans will go to the surveys this year in a control of the right -wing movements that arose in the historical elections of 2024, and the liberal order to which many other dissatisfied people with Europeans have resorted.

Voters in Germany, Austria, France and the Netherlands have demonstrated the strength of this new populist wave. What is behind your remarkable change? We ask them. In more than two dozen interviews throughout the continent, the Europeans who voted for the extreme right parties talked about voting in fury, frustration, protest and perhaps the most important thing to achieve adjustments to a formula that they have not fulfilled the contract between His contract between his democratically chosen governments and the people.

They talked blatantly about nationalism, immigration, stagnant economies, life position, housing scarcity, anger towards the elite and its perceived country of what many politically correct opinions.

Their voices offer a window to the possible options that Europeans would possibly make in the next year. The main occasion will be a federal SNAP election on February 23 after the Cave of the ruling coalition in Germany, where the far -right alternative for Germany, or AFD, has achieved super profits. Voters in Italy, Poland, Norway, Ireland, Romania and the Czech Republic, all countries where populist movements are well established or increasing, are also expected that leaders at local or national level.

Europe is changing. It is some of the electorates who are driving this change. The excesses of their translated interviews have been condensed and edited for clarity.

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