Radical right (Europe)
In political science, the terms radical right, populist right, and populist radical right have been used to refer to the range of nationalist, right-wing, and far-right political parties that have grown in support in Europe since the late 1970s. Populist right groups have shared a number of causes, which typically include opposition to globalisation and immigration, criticism of multiculturalism, and opposition to the European Union, with some opposing liberal democracy or rejecting democracy altogether in favor of "Illiberal democracy" or outright authoritarian dictatorship.
The ideological spectrum of the radical right extends from staunchly national conservatism and right-wing populism, to far-right Third Positionism and other neo-fascist ideologies.
Terminology
The Friedrich Ebert Foundation, in a 2011 book, categorised radical right as being either "right-wing extremist" or "right-wing populist". By 2025, the academics Bale, Mudde, Bennie, Widfeldt, and Hayton described radical right as belonging to a subset of far-right politics, distinguished from the extreme right.In 1996, the Dutch political scientist Cas Mudde noted that in most European countries, the terms "radical right" and "extreme right" were used interchangeably. He cited Germany as an exception, noting that among political scientists in that nation, the term "radical right" was used in reference to those right-wing groups which were outside the political mainstream but which did not threaten "the free democratic order"; the term was thus used in contrast to the "extreme right", which referred to groups which did threaten the constitutionality of the state and could therefore be banned under German law. According to the German scientist "the radical right can be scaled by using different degrees of militancy and aggressiveness from right-wing populism to racism, terrorism, and totalitarianism".
The term "radical right" originated in U.S. political discourse, where it was applied to various anti-communist groups which were active in the 1950s era of McCarthyism. The term and accompanying concept then entered Western Europe through the social sciences. Conversely, the term "right-wing extremism" developed among European scholars, particularly those in Germany, to describe right-wing groups that developed in the decades following the Second World War, such as the West German National Democratic Party and the French Poujadists. This term then came to be adopted by some scholars in the U.S.
Europe's populist right
In his study of the movement in Europe, David Art defined the term "radical right" as referring to "a specific type of far right party that began to emerge in the late 1970s"; as Art used it, "far right" was "an umbrella term for any political party, voluntary association, or extra-parliamentary movement that differentiates itself from the mainstream right". Most commentators have agreed that these varied radical right parties have a number of common characteristics. Givens stated that the two characteristics shared by these radical rights groups were:- "They take an anti-immigrant stance by proposing stronger immigrant controls and the repatriation of unemployed immigrants, and they call for a national preference in social benefits and employment.
- "In contrast to earlier extreme right or fascist parties, they work within a country's political and electoral system. Although they do not have the goal of tearing down the current political system, they are anti-establishment. They consider themselves "outsiders" in the party system, and therefore not tainted by government or mainstream parties' scandals."
Journalist Nick Robins-Early characterised the European radical right as focusing on "sometimes vitriolic anti-Euro, anti-immigrant sentiment, as well as renewed security fears" within European nations. According to political scientist Andrej Zaslove, populist radical right parties "employ an anti‐state, anti‐bureaucratic, anti‐elite, anti‐European Union political message."
Base of support
The 2005 paper in the European Journal of Political Research argues that the two groups most likely to vote for populist right parties are "blue-collar workers – who support extensive state intervention in the economy – and owners of small businesses – who are against such state intervention".A 2014 article by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation argued that economic inequality is growing the gap "between the winners of globalisation and its losers. The first group live in urban areas, have relatively stable jobs and access to modern communications and transport, but fears nevertheless that it will soon share the fate of the second group. The second group, meanwhile, are threatened by unemployment or stuck in poorly paid and precarious jobs. They belong to the working class or consider themselves part of the lower middle class and fear – for themselves or their children – social decline. Such people live in de-industrialised areas, or rural or semi-urban areas, on the periphery of globalised metropolises to which they have no access."
Scholars have argued that neoliberalism has led to European "social and economic insecurity" in the working and middle classes, leading to the growth of right wing populism.
Minkenberg termed the supporters of the radical right "modernization losers", in that they are from the sectors of society whose "social and cultural capital is shrinking and they are intent on defending it against encroachments on their traditional entitlements." He described this base as those who exhibit "unease, rigid thinking, authoritarian attitudes and traditional values – all of which reinforce each other."
Association by country
Political scientist stressed that the radical right was "a modern phenomenon", stating that it is only "vaguely connected" to previous right-wing movements because it has "undergone a phase of renewal, as a result of social and cultural modernisation shifts in post-war Europe." As such he opined that describing it using terms such as "fascism" or "neo-fascism", which were closely linked the right-wing movements of the early 20th century, was an "increasingly obsolete" approach.Minkenberg argued that the radical right groups in Eastern Europe, including in Eastern Germany, were distinct from their counterparts in Western Europe. He added that "the East European radical right is more reverse-oriented than its Western counterpart, i.e. more antidemocratic and more militant" and that because of the relatively new establishment of liberal democracy in Eastern Europe, violence still could be used as a political tool by the Eastern radical right.
Jeffrey Kaplan and Leonard Weinberg's 1998 book The Emergence of a Euro-American Radical Right says that populist right wing movements are supported by extra-parliamentary groups with electorally unpalatable views, such as Christian Identity movements, anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, the promotion of scientific racism and Holocaust denial, and neo-Nazi economic theories like Strasserism.
United States
In 1998, the political scientists Jeffrey Kaplan and Leonard Weinberg argued that the interaction of right-wingers and the transmission of ideas between right-wing groups in Western Europe and the United States was common, having been aided by the development of the internet. They believed that in the late 20th century, a discernible "Euro-American radical right" that would promote a trans-national form of white identity politics, promoting populist grievance narratives around groups which feel besieged by non-white peoples through multiculturalism. This concept of a unified "white" race was not always explicitly racialist, in many cases, it was conceived of as a bond which was created by "cultural affinity and a sense of common historical experience and a shared ultimate destiny".Kaplan and Weinberg also identified differences in the radical right movements of Europe and North America. They noted that European radical right political parties had been able to achieve electoral successes in a way that their American counterparts had failed to do. Instead, radical right activists in the U.S. had attempted to circumvent the restrictions of the two-party system by joining right-wing trends within the Republican Party. They also noted that legal restrictions on such groups differed in the two continents; in the U.S., the First Amendment protected the free speech of radical right groups, while in most West European nations there were laws prohibiting hate speech and Holocaust denial, thus forcing European radical right groups to present a more moderate image.
The election of President Donald Trump in the United States has drawn praise from the European radical right, and following his election, connections were expanded, with Trump's National Security Advisor Michael Flynn meeting with the Freedom Party of Austria, and former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon founding The Movement, a network intended to advance European radical right causes. However, despite the European radical right's increasing cross-border cooperation in recent years, Bannon's pan-European networking project ultimately failed to materialize. Trump also initially made supportive remarks towards Marine Le Pen's candidacy in the 2017 French presidential election. In February 2025, U.S. Vice President JD Vance gave a speech at the Munich Security Conference condemning the annulment of the 2024 Romanian presidential election after radical right candidate Călin Georgescu won a plurality of the votes, and criticising the German Christian Democratic Union for its cordon sanitaire against the Alternative for Germany party. In April 2025, President Trump spoke out against a court decision banning Marine Le Pen from contesting the 2027 French presidential election. In May 2025, Vance and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio condemned the German Federal Intelligence Service's designation of the Alternative for Germany as extremist, with Republican Senator Tom Cotton calling for limiting intelligence sharing with Germany. Trump's State Department offered public support to Le Pen in May 2025, but the offer was rebuffed by her National Rally party. The State Department also considered a proposal to provide financial assistance to the National Rally.
United Kingdom
In the journal Western European Politics published in 2024, Martin categorises UK radical right parties as including the British National Party, UK Independence Party, and Reform UK, based on "traditional, authoritarian, and nationalist" characteristics. The political scientists Robert Ford and Matthew Goodwin have also characterised UKIP as being on the radical right. Historically, such parties have been minor political parties in UK elections. UKIP first won seats to the EU Parliament in 1999 but won only one seat to the UK Parliament over five elections; the Brexit Party won 29 seats in the 2019 EU election, but the party failed to gain any seats in the 2019 UK election.After winning 14% of the vote and winning five seats in the 2024 UK general election, political scientist Tim Bale described Reform UK party leader Farage as the "British representative of the populist radical right in Europe", as one of the moderate far-right parties in Europe. In Parliamentary Affairs, Bennie & Widfeldt described the party as fitting "into a broader European family of radical right parties working within democratic structures", with radical right as a subset of far-right politics.
In 2025, Hayton wrote in British Politics that with the Conservative Party becoming increasing populist, Reform UK had evolved into a "fully-fledged right-wing populist party" and can most logically be categorised as "populist radical right", having moved beyond the single-issue politics of Brexit while retaining a Eurosceptic legacy. In the French Journal of British Studies, Professor Tournier-Sol described Farage as a major disruptor of British politics and as "moving the tectonic plates of British politics towards the right," resulting in the Conservative Party becoming a radical right party. The professor further wrote of Reform UK adhering to the political positions of Farage's previous parties, that of being populist radical right. In the Policy Studies Journal, Kippin credited Reform UK with their ability to shape media and public opinion to influence the Conservative Party's approach to policy, and considered the relationship between the two parties as "authoritarian mainstreaming", with the Conservatives being "outflanked by a Farage style radical right insurgency".
Russia
Some radical right parties, such as the French National Rally, the Alternative for Germany, the Dutch Forum for Democracy, the Freedom Party of Austria, the Italian Northern League, the Bulgarian Attack and the Hungarian Jobbik have cultivated relations with the Russian government. The Freedom Party of Austria and Northern League have signed cooperation agreements with the ruling party of Russia, United Russia. Russia has also been accused of providing assistance to several radical right parties in Europe.India
In 2019, several radical right parties participated in the only permitted international delegation in Kashmir following the revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir, on the invitation of India's Bharatiya Janata Party government. The parties that participated included the National Rally, the Northern League, the Alternative for Germany, the Spanish Vox, the British Brexit Party, the Polish Law and Justice and the Belgian Vlaams Belang. This was described in Foreign Policy as evidence of growing connections between the radical right in Europe and Right wing supporters in India. The Fidesz government in Hungary has also expressed support for India on Kashmir and the Citizenship Amendment Act protests. The BJP previously established a relationship with the Jobbik party in Hungary. In February 2025, representatives of the Patriots for Europe group visited India to meet BJP officials, which was followed by the Patriots for Europe hosting an address by BJP spokesperson Shazia Ilmi in June 2025.Israel
Many radical right parties, including Vlaams Belang, Attack, the Freedom Party of Austria, the Alliance for the Union of Romanians and the Sweden Democrats, have sought improved ties with Israel and its ruling party, Likud, in an effort to counter accusations of anti-Semitism domestically. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has cultivated these relationships, particularly with the Northern League and Hungary under Fidesz, in order to build international support for Israeli policies. Likud's foreign affairs director endorsed a vote for Vox in the April 2019 Spanish general election on behalf of his party, before backtracking and stating it was only a personal endorsement. Netanyahu's son, Yair Netanyahu, later wished luck to Fidesz leader Viktor Orban, Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage, Northern League leader Matteo Salvini and Dutch Party for Freedom leader Geert Wilders in the 2019 European Parliament election.In 2023, Likud participated in an Identity and Democracy Party conference hosted by Salvini in Rome. In 2024, Likud minister Amichai Chikli addressed a Vox rally, where he met with National Rally leader Marine Le Pen. Chikli later expressed support for Le Pen becoming President of France, and suggested his view was shared by Netanyahu; Chikli also noted his "excellent contact" with the National Rally.
Other countries
Arab states including Egypt, Syria, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia have been described as courting ties with the European radical right in recent years, based on shared concerns towards the rise of Islamism. In the past, radical right parties had also developed relationships with Ba'athist Iraq, the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya and the government of Morocco. In 2011, politicians from the Freedom Party of Austria were involved in arranging clandestine peace talks between Libya's Saif al-Islam Gaddafi and Israel's Ayoob Kara.The Justice and Development Party and Nationalist Movement Party, which together form the ruling government coalition in Turkey, have developed ties with Jobbik, inviting leading Jobbik members to their events. However, most radical right parties in Europe, such as the Northern League, National Rally and Greek Solution, hold strongly anti-Turkish views. The leader of the predecessor of the National Rally, the National Front, Jean-Marie Le Pen, had a friendship with Welfare Party leader Necmettin Erbakan, based on their shared right-wing nationalism and their belief that it was impossible to combine Islamic and Christian civilization.
The former dictator of the Central African Republic, Jean-Bédel Bokassa, received extensive support from the National Front, and let the party use his castle in France as a training facility.
During the presidency of Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, the Brazilian government developed close ties with radical right parties in Hungary, Italy and Poland. In addition, Bolsonaro has developed relations with Vox and with the Portuguese Chega.
Extra-parliamentary right-wing groups
Alongside the radical right political parties, there are also extra-parliamentary groups which - having no need to express views that will be electorally palatable - are able to express a more heterogenous array of right-wing views. These extra-parliamentary rightist groups are often religious in nature, affiliated either with Christian Identity or with Odinism, reflecting a greater racial mysticism than was present in earlier right-wing movements. Such groups often believe that Western governments are under the control of a Zionist Occupation Government, thus expressing explicitly anti-Semitic views. Such groups are also less enthusiastic about capitalism and free markets as the radical right political parties are, instead being influenced by Strasserism and favouring greater state control of the economy.Such extra-parliamentary groups often exhibit ritual or ceremonial practices to commemorate perceived past achievements of the right-wing, for instance by marking Adolf Hitler's birthday or the death date of Rudolf Hess. They are also associated with violent activities, with such violence often being utilised not just for political aims but also as an expressive and enjoyable activity.
There are also more intellectually-oriented radical right organisations which hold conferences and publish journals devoted to the promotion of scientific racism and Holocaust denial. Material promoting Holocaust denial is typically published in the United Kingdom or United States and then smuggled into continental Europe, where the publication of such material is widely illegal.
Examples
A 2015 study on modern populism by Kirk A. Hawkins of Brigham Young University used human coding to rate the level of perceived populist rhetoric in party manifestos and political speeches. Parties with high populism scores included Chega, the British National Party, the Swiss People's Party, the National Democratic Party of Germany, the National Rally, the People's Party, National Democracy, Sweden Democrats, the Party for Freedom, Forum for Democracy, Law and Justice, Vox and United Poland parties.Since the 2010s, multiple radical right parties have formed part of governments in Europe. This has included Fidesz in Hungary, Law and Justice in Poland, the Finns Party in Finland, Lega and Brothers of Italy in Italy, the Party for Freedom in the Netherlands, the Slovak National Party in Slovakia, the Slovenian Democratic Party in Slovenia, the Homeland Movement in Croatia, and the Freedom Party of Austria in Austria.