06.02.2026

Policy Brief: The vicious cycle of far-right success in Europe

The recent successes of far-right parties across Europe leave many progressive actors puzzled. Democratic parties are struggling to win back voters - and even contribute to further losses, as Tarik Abou-Chadi in his Brussels Democracy Paper.

Far-right parties are advancing across Europe. Their electoral successes have sparked extensive debate among progressive actors, since the speed and nature of their gains seem unprecedented. Explanations are often sought in public discontent with immigration, social status anxiety, and perceptions of cultural threat

Tarik Abou-Chadi argues that this is only one side of the coin, however. Instead, greater attention must be paid to the response of established parties, who, inadvertently, feed a vicious cycle that accelerates the advance of the radical right:

  1. Mainstream parties react to the success of far-right parties by shifting rightward on immigration;
  2. this strategic shift fails to win back voters in any meaningful way;
  3. the new positions influence public opinion and normalise radical-right views;
  4. observing this shift in public opinion, parties move even further right.

Read our new FES Brussels Democracy Paper to learn more about each step and, most importantly, how to break this pattern.


Abou-Chadi, Tarik

The vicious cycle of far-right success in Europe

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About the Brussels Democracy Dialogue

The Brussels Democracy Dialogue (BDD) is a high-level platform for the exchange of progressive ideas and proposals for addressing the abovementioned challenges to democracies organised by the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung EU Office in Brussels and the FES Democracy of the Future Office in Vienna. Around 100 progressive democracy experts from politics, academia, trade unions and civil society from Europe and beyond participate each year.

The aim of the BDD is to question our established explanations and to offer new and innovative solutions that can help progressive actors successfully to confront the recent global trend of democratic backsliding. There is a particular focus on how social democracy can be defended and how it should respond to the current challenges.

To read further, explore the Brussels Democracy Papers, a series of policy briefs developed from previous events.


Contact

Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung European Union & Global Dialogue | Brussels Office

Rue du Taciturne 38
1000 Brussels
Belgium

+32 22 34 62 90
brussels(at)fes.de

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