
by Tamuz Itai
10 July 2025
from
TheEpochTimes Website

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia
Meloni
ahead of
a bilateral meeting with
UK Prime
Minister Keir Starmer
at 10 Downing
Street in London
on March 02,
2025.
Ben Whitley -
WPA Pool/Getty Images
Commentary
Europe's political landscape continues to defy expectations,
leaving analysts and policymakers scrambling to explain
outcomes that, in hindsight, seem foreseeable.
From the UK's Brexit vote to Giorgia
Meloni's rise in Italy, the Alternative für Deutschland
(AfD) surge in Germany, Dutch farmers' revolts, and
Marine Le Pen's ascent in France, each development
triggers a chorus of shocked "No one saw this coming."
Yet millions of Europeans did.
The persistent surprise may stem from a flawed lens -
dominated by English-language media filters, historical
overcorrections, and shrinking on-the-ground reporting -
that distorts our understanding.
As these shifts ripple globally,
misreading Europe poses strategic risks we can no longer
afford to ignore.
The pattern is unmistakable.
Europe has been portrayed as a
stable, liberal bastion - centrist coalitions driving
climate action and European Union unity, embodying a
progressive ideal.
Yet reality diverges:
The UK exited the EU in 2016, Meloni
became Italy's prime minister in 2022, Germany's AfD
polled second nationally in 2025, Dutch farmers blocked
roads over nitrogen policies, and France's center
collapsed in 2024, elevating Le Pen.
Each time, English-language
coverage reacts with shock, missing signals visible
to local populations.
The Media's
Blind Spot
This disconnect begins with a critical media filter.
English-language European outlets, such as
state-funded France 24, Deutsche Welle, Politico
Europe, and center-left publications like Le Monde, cater
to an urban, university-educated, globally minded audience.
These sources are mostly credible and
professional but reflect a narrow slice of society,
under-representing conservative and rural perspectives.
A key disparity amplifies this bias:
While mainstream liberal media regularly
publish English editions, conservative and right-wing outlets
across Europe - such as Germany's Junge Freiheit or
Italy's Il Giornale - rarely do.
This choice stems from several factors:
a lack of perceived demand in
English-speaking markets, suspicion of hostile Anglo-American
coverage, and a strategic focus on local bases.
As a result, English-speaking audiences relying
on European media's English editions get an incomplete picture,
skewed toward liberal narratives and missing the conservative
currents driving political shifts.
Europe's Hidden Currents
Country-specific examples reveal the depth of this gap.
-
In Italy, Meloni's 2022
victory, often labeled "neo-fascist" because of her party's
post-fascist roots, was misread by English outlets.
Yet her platform - lower taxes, stronger
borders, and national pride - reflected frustration with
unelected technocrats and Brussels' fiscal rules.
She formed a coalition with Matteo
Salvini's League and Forza Italia,
securing a parliamentary majority with 44 percent of the
vote, appealing to millions disillusioned by years of
instability, not extremism.
Her government's three-year record (2022
to 2025) has focused on economic recovery.
-
In Germany, AfD's rise to more
than 20 percent in state elections and a mayoral win in 2025
reflect discontent with soaring energy prices post-nuclear
shutdown and immigration strains.
Yet it's
framed as a dangerous anomaly,
ignoring its roots in rural and eastern voter bases.
-
In the Netherlands, the
government's 2019 nitrogen reduction plan, mandating
farm buyouts, sparked tractor blockades by farmers facing
existential threats to generational livelihoods.
The
Farmer-Citizen Movement,
formed in response, became the largest party in the Dutch
Senate by 2023, a democratic revolt misread as a sideshow.
-
In France, President
Emmanuel Macron's 2024
dissolution of the National Assembly followed his party's
European election defeat, paving the way for Le Pen's
National Rally.
Her movement, drawing working-class and
youth voters from disaffected leftist unions, has softened
its rhetoric - shifting from anti-immigrant hardline to
economic populism - normalizing her appeal amid the center's
collapse.
Postwar Shadows
This blind spot is structural, rooted in postwar Europe's "firewall"
logic.
After World War II, institutions like Germany's
Basic Law and France's laďcité were designed to
prevent fascism and nationalism, embedding a cultural consensus
against these ideologies.
The EU, as a moral project to dissolve rivalries,
reinforced this stance.
Over time, this overcorrection stigmatized moderate conservatism -
national flags or religious appeals were red flags, dissent from EU
norms labeled "anti-democratic."
Repressing these voices buried resentment,
fueling unexpected populism.
The UK grooming gang scandals
illustrate a similar pattern:
institutional real fear of fomenting racism
delayed action on abuse, worsening the crisis.
In Europe, suppressing feedback has similarly
driven political surprises.
Anglosphere's Distance
The Anglosphere's media compounds this.
Decades ago, outlets like The New York Times
or CBS maintained lively European bureaus, offering nuance
and real understanding of reality on the ground.
Budget cuts and shifting priorities have
shuttered many, replacing correspondents with wire services and
freelancers.
Walter Duranty's
downplaying of Joseph Stalin's
Holodomor, despite his Moscow
base, shows proximity isn't a cure-all, but its absence distorts
coverage, even by the mere addition of intermediaries.
Today's reports - relying on embassy briefings, nongovernmental
organization releases, the European media's English language
editions, or echo-chamber articles - many times lack critical
context.
For example, there was the framing of
Dutch tractor protests as
climate backlash rather than a livelihood crisis.
For policymakers and investors, this distance
misjudges risks, from policy legitimacy to market stability.
Global Stakes at Risk
The stakes are high.
Misreading Europe leads to ill-fated policies,
regulatory backlash, and eroding trust in journalism, fueling
polarization. Each "shock result" signals analytical failure with
global repercussions - markets shift, alliances waver, and migration
patterns change.
The postwar consensus, while essential, has
ossified into dogma, blinding elites to new threats.
A Call for Clarity
To see Europe clearly, we ought to think and act like historians...
We stop waiting for "The Truth" to arrive in
a statement and start building our own mosaic.
This means reading across ideological spectra,
using artificial intelligence to translate non-English conservative
sources like Junge Freiheit (even if one vehemently disagrees
with its editorial line), tracking polling trends, and listening
beyond capitals.
This is not about endorsing right-wing or conservative parties over
liberal and progressive ideologies; rather, it underscores that
navigating with a flawed map - lacking the full true picture - hurts
everyone's performance.
Understanding Europe's diverse political
currents, progressive gains and conservative surges alike, reduces
the risk of costly surprises...
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