In the first 48 hours of President Donald Trump’s second tenure, he acted on almost every single cultural war that excited his base for the past twelve months, including the signing of dozens of executive orders aimed at immigrants, gender expression, the environment and Dei – policy.
Trump also forgave the sentence of every person who participated in the violent uprising at the Capitol. On stage – Twice – at the front of thousands of people in DC and millions watching on TV.
Trump’s actions have caused a lot of excitement among the right -wing law in the US. They are also considered a blueprint by a worshiping supporter of right -wing legislators, extremist influencers and white supremacist groups around the world. And those people and organizations now believe that Trump’s actions should not only be copied, but taken to the next level.
“It’s more than just a political success,” Martin Sellner, the right-wing activist and leader of the identifying movement of Austria, wrote on his telegram channel. “It is a metapolitical victory: the end of the weedness and trans ideology, the stop of illegal immigration and many other ideas are normalized in society.”
‘These extremists think that this is the way to go, that their countries should take a lesson from what Trump represents, and that they should not get weak about it, and not allow activists to wake up, because everyone knows that the Right thing to do is get rid of the immigrants, ”Wendy VIA, CEO of the global project against hatred and extremism, tells Wired.
Sellner, who once communicated with the Christchurch Massacre Shooter, is best known for the popularization of the white nationalist concept of ‘remigration’, the idea of ethnically cleaning Western countries of all. That extremist ideology received traction among other right -wing groups in Europe, including alternative to Germany (AFD) and the Freedom Party of Austria. Trump even promoted ‘remigration’ in September.
Sellner now believes that Trump’s return to the Oval Office indicates a moment to take his agenda mainstream.
“By pushing further into the area of the ‘unspeakable’, we move out of the defense and for the first time we really move the Overton window to the right,” Sellner wrote. “Even if you think Trumpism is going far enough, you need to support the radical flank.”
Sellner is not alone in Europe. Across the continent, right -wing figures praised Trump’s actions on migration and gender and called on leaders in their own countries to follow it.
In France, the Generation Identity Group, the youth wing of the right -wing identifying movement, wrote on Telegram: “Remigration in full swing. Identitarism has won ideologically, it will only take time before this victory is reflected in the material world. “
In Ireland, Keith Woods, the right-wing influencer and ally of American white Supremacist Nick Fuentes, shared a cut of Musk’s Nazi-like salute with the heading: “Ok maybe they really got dead.” Irish UFC fighter Conor McGregor, who has been in line with the right-wing community of Ireland over the past few years, was in the capital for the inauguration and met the home speaker Mike Johnson. McGregor praised Trump’s immigration policies and wrote on Instagram: ‘Ireland and his rocket of human trafficking must be absolute decomposition! It is a violation of our safety and our sovereignty. For me, this is a national emergency. ”(McGregor recently said he is considering running for president in Ireland, which is a symbolic role without any real power.)