June 11, 2024 - 11:55am

The big story of the weekend’s elections to the European Parliament was the rise of Right-populist parties. From France and Italy to Germany and Austria, anti-establishment groups increased their vote share and underlined their growing power in the wake of widespread protests across the continent earlier this year. But which countries have seen the most pronounced Rightward turn? Which is the European Union’s most populist country?

UnHerd has conducted its own analysis, combining the percentage of available seats in each EU country won — at the time of writing — by parties which are members of the EU’s Right-populist groups, the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) and Identity and Democracy (ID). Our calculation has also included cases, such as the AfD in Germany and Fidesz in Hungary, where Right-populist parties are unaffiliated with the European Parliament groups.

Europe’s Right-populist league table
% of seats won in 2024 elections by Right-populist parties

In terms of proportion of European Parliament seats won by Right-populist parties, Hungary comes out on top with 52%, or 11 out of 21 available seats. This is thanks to the success of the Right-wing Fidesz-KDNP coalition, consisting of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s governing party and the Christian Democratic People’s Party (KDNP), which is now unaffiliated with any of the Parliament’s groups having left the European People’s Party Group (EPP) in 2021.

France and Italy are second and third, respectively, on the populist leaderboard, following the surge of Marine Le Pen’s National Rally (RN) in the Fifth Republic and the 24 seats achieved by Brothers of Italy, an ECR member. While Poland and Austria round out the top five for percentage of seats won, a clear trend emerging is that Europe’s most established economies — France, Italy and Germany (which ranks fourth in terms of total seats won by Right-populist parties) — are among its most sensitive to populist movements.

The new populist map of Europe
European Parliament election results 2024

Politically, Europe’s map is being redrawn, and UnHerd has produced a visualisation of where this change is most apparent. While EU states in northwestern Europe are turning populist following the weekend’s results, the trend has been less dramatic in the Iberian countries of Spain and Portugal, in Eastern Europe, and in Scandinavia. This is despite farmer protests in Slovakia, Romania and Bulgaria last year, not to mention the previous success of the Right-wing Sweden Democrats.

With an election already called in France, the effects of these election results are bound to reverberate around the continent for some time. Whether Europe’s map will be reconfigured further remains to be seen.