Explaining the strength of European populism

Why does right-wing populism appear so strong in Europe?

In a recent sign of its success, a populist party led by billionaire businessman Andrej Babis won parliamentary elections in the Czech Republic in October. Other European Union (EU) countries Hungary and Italy also have populist leaders.

In France, the government of centrist president Emmanuel Macron narrowly survived a no-confidence vote. The government has been flip-flopping after Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu resigned after 26 days, only to return four days later. Macron faces a challenge in the polls from the far-right National Rally, led by Marine Le Pen.

The populist Reform UK is also doing strongly in opinion polls, while Germany’s right-wing AfD party has won state elections in the past year.

The rise of European populism is hard to counteract, because of the continent’s economic performance. Europe is lagging in both technology and  manufacturing, says Ronen Palan, professor of international politics at City St George’s, University of London.

“The fundamental problem that Europe faces is that the fourth industrial revolution skipped it,” Palan told Yuvoice in an interview.

“You have the American companies,  the Magnificent Seven – Meta, Apple etc. There is nothing in Europe remotely like that. Manufacturing excellence is now in China – China is far advanced. Europe is squeezed in between. Without a solution to that problem, we are talking about economic stagnation – Europe becomes a tourist attraction.”

The first industrial revolution started in Britain in the eighteenth century with inventions such as the steam engine.  The second industrial revolution of the late nineteenth century got a boost from the expansion of electricity, while computers led the third industrial wave of the late twentieth century.

The Magnificent Seven U.S. tech companies have stormed ahead in the U.S. stock market in recent years, helped by their role in the development of artificial intelligence.

Populist parties are offering little practical to address these economic concerns, but are playing on people’s sense of the precariousness of their lives, according to Palan.

Laggardness in Europe is also nothing new, he adds.

“Similar events took place in the 1970s. The European car industry was buffeted by the Japanese, the Americans were pulling ahead, the Americans and the Japanese were competing with one another. The answer was the common market and the single market, the creation of European champions, European competitors – we are in the same situation now.”

It has become harder for Europe to pull together as one force since one of its biggest economies, Britain, left the European Union following the Brexit vote, although Britain and Europe continue to collaborate on geopolitical issues, Palan says.

“Brexit created an institutional gap. The fact that Britain is out weakened Europe and weakens Britain,” he said, though he added that: “it doesn’t mean that if Britain were part of Europe, they would find a solution.”

The mood is not all going one way. A pro-European Union party won elections in September in the eastern European country of Moldova. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni faced a general strike and major protests in September and October following her refusal to recognise the state of Palestine, in contrast to other EU countries such as France and Spain. Left-wing as well as right-wing parties are also popular in France.

However, Palan points out that the rhetoric of both left-wing and right-wing parties is often similar, as right-wing parties such as France’s National Rally and Reform UK also promote strong intervention by the state. British think tank Chatham House said in an October report, that the National Rally’s economic policies were “closer in tone to French Socialist icon Jean Jaurès than to the Iron Lady (former Conservative British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher)”.

These right-wing populist groups are taking their lead from U.S. President Donald Trump, whose language comes straight from the Marxist playbook, according to Palan.

“The Deep State is a Marxist concept, the idea that there is a small cabal of people – the bourgeoisie – controlling the state, and that Trump represents the working class against the entrenched state,” said Palan, adding that Reform UK leader Nigel Farage “is also adopting Marxist language – it’s very confusing.”

Francesco Rigoli, a political psychologist at City St George’s, University of London, says Europe’s biggest economies, Britain, France and Germany, could all have populist parties in government in a few years.

“The level of polarisation remains extreme,” he told Yuvoice. “There’s a feeling that the traditional parties have disappointed, that they have not fulfilled expectations. There’s a feeling that Europe is in crisis.”

Denise and More, Still Nel Cuore!

Three-year-old Denise Pipitone was abducted from Mazara del Vallo, Italy on September 1, 2004, and has never been found. At the time, I was a prosecutor in Marsala, Sicily.

I was on holiday and could only follow the case on television. I did not know at the time that this very sad case would transform my life, forcing me to never give up, and to have much more courage, inventiveness, and patience than I ever thought possible.

The story of Denise’s disappearance also helped me rarely to accept any compromise, never to go down paths that would have led me to betray myself, and to seek my own happiness and that of my family members beyond all ties and conventions.

Because any hypocrisy and any surrender to my dreams as a child would have made my battle impossible: the battle for the truth, always, and at any cost,. But especially for finding the tangled path to Denise.

Image courtesy of David Werbrouck via Unsplash

Tragically, so many children  go missing every day all over the world. Sometimes it is their families who are responsible for these crimes. Sometimes it is someone with mental illness or a serial killer that must be found. Sometimes it is chance and misfortune that takes them away.

Denise’s case is a symbol; my commitment and that of all those who are looking for her and will always continue to look for her want it to also be a warning so that such crimes are not repeated, and so that all missing persons are searched for until a trace is found.

Just as the Good Shepherd searched for his lost sheep, we must not give up and must continue to put in place every useful initiative to reach the goal.

The only suspect in the kidnapping to date, Jessica Pulizzi — Denise’s half sister — has been definitively acquitted by the Italian courts.

On the other hand, serious procedural errors were also committed during the investigation. Jessica was heard several times in summary information without a lawyer, before being entered in the register of suspects. It was already clear that she was suspected of having taken the child. That trial went cold. 

In 2024 — thanks to the work of private investigator Giuseppe Asaro and criminologists Antonella Delfino Pesce and Katia Sartori — Denise’s father, Tony Pipitone, filed an application with the Marsala Public Prosecutor’s Office to reopen the investigation into his daughter’s abduction.

Tony, together with some friends, founded a nonprofit association last year,  The Missing Children in the Heart L’associazione I bimbi scomparsi nel cuore  — to help all families who are looking and longing.

I, too, am a member of this association, which for one thing is supporting a constitutional petition for the establishment of a parliamentary commission of enquiry into the case of Denise Pipitone’s kidnapping. The petition has already garnered more than 3,000 signatures.

Our association and the one founded by Piera Maggio, the little girl’s mother, are constantly sharing posters of Denise, with age progressions and useful information and contacts, all over the world. We are very confident that we will all manage together to break through the fog and find the thread that will lead us to Denise.

You readers, too, can help us by sharing this story. For more information or if you have any leads about Denise’s disappearance or on other missing children, please get in touch with our association.