One in Four Europeans Back Parties Labelled “Far Right”
12 Articles
12 Articles
A quarter of European voters are currently voting extreme right-wing parties, according to an analysis by more than 150 politicians from 31 countries. The study shows that support for these groups has increased almost five times compared to the mid-1990s, while almost 30% of Europeans are currently voting populist parties, a record level.
The far-right is now supported by almost a quarter of European voters, according to research for the PopuList initiative, which involved more than 150 political scientists from 31 different countries. The number of European supporters of the far-right has thus almost fivefold increased over the past thirty years. They have increased particularly in the last three years.
One in Four Europeans Back Parties Labelled “Far Right”
Almost one quarter of European voters now back parties labelled “far-right” by a partisan research network that has repeatedly been criticised for weaponising the term. According to a new report tracking election results across Europe, the share of voters supporting national conservative parties has increased nearly fivefold since the mid-1990s, with particularly rapid growth over the past three years. The findings were enthusiastically reported…
Twenty-three per cent of voters in Europe now vote for extreme right-wing parties, a proportion that has nearly doubled since the mid-1990s and has increased particularly sharply over the past three years.This was reported by an analysis by more than 150 political scientists in 31 countries - for the populist poll published for The Guardian - which revealed that a decade ago 10 per cent of voters gave their preference to one of those communities…
Almost a quarter of voters in Europe have voted for far-right parties in recent years, according to a new survey. This share has increased almost fivefold since the mid-1990s and has risen particularly sharply in the past three years.
More than 23 percent of European voters in 31 countries recently voted for a far-right party, according to research by European political scientists. The far left is increasingly receding to the margins. "In the most extreme case, France gets a far-right president, Nigel Farage becomes the largest party in the UK, and the AfD becomes the largest party in Germany."
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- 50% of the sources lean Left
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