Figures from 200 parties in 25 countries suggest hardline groups have had rise in donations in recent years, increasing war chests before European parliament elections

A quarter of all private money donated to political parties in the EU is going to far-right, far-left and populist movements, boosting their finances by millions of euros before crucial European parliament elections next week.

With the polls predicting a rise in support for hardline conservative, Eurosceptic and pro-Russia parties, the Guardian and other 26 media partners, led by the investigations group Follow the Money, are publishing Transparency Gap, the most extensive analysis yet of political financing in the EU.

The data was gathered from the annual reports of more than 200 parties across 25 countries.

It shows €150m (£128m), the equivalent of €1 in every €4 of all private donations made between 2019 and 2022, went to populist parties and those with the most extreme political views.

Far-right groups have pulled in more than €97m, equivalent to €1 in every €7 of private money.

  • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Holy horseshoe theory bullshit, Batman!

    To equate the far right who want to take away the rights (and often lives) of all minorities with the far left who want to take away most of the wealth of billionaires and multinational corporations is extremely lazy and incurious at best, deliberate disinformation at worst.

    And that’s not even mentioning the MSM use of “populist” as meaning “everyone who doesn’t conform to the establishment orthodoxy whether they’re far right demagogues or policy oriented leftists” 🤦

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    6 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A quarter of all private money donated to political parties in the EU is going to far-right, far-left and populist movements, boosting their finances by millions of euros before crucial European parliament elections next week.

    With the polls predicting a rise in support for hardline conservative, Eurosceptic and pro-Russia parties, the Guardian and other 26 media partners, led by the investigations group Follow the Money, are publishing Transparency Gap, the most extensive analysis yet of political financing in the EU.

    While most countries oblige parties to declare their total income from private and public sources, rules vary widely and financing in some member states is a “black box”.

    The research found no signs of wrongdoing, but a major study commissioned by the European parliament into political party funding concluded that a lack of transparency can lead to corruption risks.

    The analysis shows that, when combined, far-right, far-left and populist parties are attracting more than half of the non-public funding in Slovenia, Italy, Poland, Hungary, Portugal and Greece.

    At a far-right rally in Madrid earlier this month, the Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orbán, delivered a video message calling “for patriots to occupy Brussels”, saying legislators there were responsible for “unleashing massive illegal migration” and “poisoning our children with gender propaganda”.


    The original article contains 936 words, the summary contains 209 words. Saved 78%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • DieguiTux8623@feddit.it
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    6 months ago

    far-right, far-left and populist movements

    Isn’t this how it is supposed to work? Why should anyone’s voice be silenced if all opinions are worth the same?

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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      6 months ago

      if all opinions are worth the same?

      They aren’t.

      “Kill all the Muslims” is not worth the same as “we should all try to get along.”

    • barryamelton@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      Opinions that try to break societies’ democratic contract are not worth anything at all. You break your side of the democratic contract by working for our war enemies, or break the fundamental rights of society, dont expect the rest of society to give a damn. That’s how tolerance works. It is a contract.

      • DieguiTux8623@feddit.it
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        6 months ago

        Yes I agree with you, of course, in theory it should work like this. But all around me I see things going so terribly wrong, so I assume practice must be somewhat different from the theory.

        E.g. in my country far-right politicians have been democratically elected and they are dismantling the nation and changing the constitution, all legally.

        Edit: Nobody is giving a f-ck neither internally nor externally (e.g. OTAN or EU) so I assume they are fine with it too.