Outside, right -wing parties have gained strength in research for the next elections. In countries such as France, United Kingdom and Germany, growing discontent with years of high immigration, high inflation and public policies seen as distant from the needs of the population have reflected in voting intentions – favoring the leadership of conservative groups.
According to analysis published by The Wall Street Journal, the tendency is that if progressive parties do not respond to these concerns so that voters consider effective, the strengthening of the right will be consolidated, and may alter governability and political priorities in both Europe and the Americas in the coming years.
The report of the US newspaper concludes that the right has increasingly capitalized with more unhappy voters with mass immigration and migration policies considered permissive; inflation and economic stagnation, which especially affect the middle class and workers; Crisis of traditional values, perception of insecurity and increased crime in urban areas.
The phenomenon is not restricted to Europe. In the United States, conservative leaders have obtained increasing support, especially in regions affected by economic crises or insecurity. In Latin America, governments and right -wing parties advance in countries such as Chile, where the electorate has sought alternatives to economic instability, insecurity, crime and dissatisfaction with progressive policies.
In addition to Chile, other Latin American countries register growth in support for right-wing parties and governments. The WSJ mentions Brazil, recognizing the right -wing political force and its influence on the significant part of the electorate, while in Colombia and Peru conservatism has been strengthened amid safety crises and corruption scandals. In Mexico, although the current government is from the left, conservative regional movements have gained space, especially in security and economy issues.
In France, the National Regrouping (RN), led by Marine Le Pen and young Jordan Bardella, appears consistently ahead in the polls. The party recently announced that it will vote against the government at the next confidence session of the National Assembly, pressuring the country’s current president Emmanuel Macron to consider new parliamentary elections. The strategy highlights the force of the right among voters concerned with safety, immigration and preservation of national identity.
In the United Kingdom, Nigel Farage’s Reform UK Party recorded significant growth, overcoming both the labor party and conservatives in voting intentions. Increasing legal and illegal immigration, added to protests on the use of hotels to house migrants, drives support for the party, which advocates more rigorous control of firmer borders and security policies.
In Germany, the alternative to Germany (AFD) recently exceeded the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in research, despite the recent decrease in immigration. The party capitalizes dissatisfaction with economic recession, the perception of ineffective public policies and discontent with restrictions on economic freedom. Among its proposals are greater autonomy compared to the European Union and deportations of irregular immigrants.