Liberals Are Fretting About the Trump-Orbán Meeting
The former U.S. President and the Hungarian Prime Minister are the two symbols on either side of the Atlantic of a reemerging anti-globalist, anti-woke, conservative alliance.
The former U.S. President and the Hungarian Prime Minister are the two symbols on either side of the Atlantic of a reemerging anti-globalist, anti-woke, conservative alliance.
Hosted by Salvini’s Lega party, the ID Group’s convention gathered a thousand members from 14 conservative parties in Florence—an ideal place to kickstart Europe’s new right-wing Renaissance.
The Bulgarian Socialist Party’s ‘patriotic turn’ appears to be inspired by Robert Fico’s SMER party’s recent success.
Speakers and demonstrators expressed opposition to the sitting government, NATO, the EU, the Green Deal, cultural and political globalism, and Washington’s meddling in European affairs.
“It is no more a fight between the Left and the Right. That was before. It is now a fight between the nationalist and the globalist.”
The summit, the third of its kind, saw conservative youth leaders from parties on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean zero in on key topics like the importance of cooperation between Rightist forces across the globe, the pressing need to retake key institutions controlled by the globalist liberal-left, immigration, and national sovereignty.
The political winds have changed. In the wake of President Macron raising the retirement age from 62 to 64, his already dismal approval ratings and popularity have sunk even lower, as two recent surveys reveal.
Together, Bannon, Orbán, and Trump, perhaps more than any other conservative political figures, have consistently been the subjects of vicious attacks from globalist forces.
Following an outpouring of prayers and well-wishes from supporters, Bannon said: “Don’t pray for me. Pray for my enemies. They’re the ones who’ll need it.”
If the FPÖ manages to win over voters from the anti-lockdown, vaccine-critical MFG Österreich party, it could potentially see them surge past the leftist-globalist SPÖ as the country’s most popular party.
To submit a pitch for consideration:
submissions@
For subscription inquiries:
subscriptions@