The sustained ascendancy of far-right movements represents the most significant political realignment in Europe since the end of the Cold War. What was once a fragmented collection of fringe factions has evolved into a potent and mainstream political force, capable of setting agendas, winning elections, and fundamentally challenging the continent's foundational liberal democratic principles. This transformation demands a systematic examination that moves beyond mere description to analyze the mechanisms of its success and the profound implications for Europe's future. This essay will argue that the far right's rise is not a temporary protest but a structured assault on the liberal order, achieved through a potent combination of ideological coherence, strategic mobilization, and the effective exploitation of societal anxieties. To substantiate this, the analysis will first deconstruct the core ideology of the far right in Europe, identifying its roots in nativism, populism, and authoritarianism. It will then investigate the strategies and platforms*these parties employ to translate ideology into popular appeal and electoral victory. Following this, the essay will assess the tangible outcomes of this appeal by examining the political success of the far right, from electoral breakthroughs to governing participation. Finally, the analysis will confront the most critical consequence of this success: the blow to European liberal democracy. This will be explored through two key dimensions: how these movements are undermining the liberal domestic and foreign policies of the European Union and the broader challenges to the liberal political order in Europe itself, threatening the very norms of pluralism, institutional integrity, and human rights. Through this structure, the essay will illuminate how the far right is successfully navigating democratic channels to pursue an illiberal transformation of the European project.
Diangui Huang (Sun,) studied this question.