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Wikipedia

Far-right politics

Far-right politics, also referred to as the extreme right or right-wing extremism, are political beliefs and actions further to the right of the left–right political spectrum than the standard political right, particularly in terms of being radically conservative, ultra-nationalist, and authoritarian, as well as having nativist ideologies and tendencies.[1]

Historically, "far-right politics" has been used to describe the experiences of fascism, Nazism, and Falangism. Contemporary definitions now include neo-fascism, neo-Nazism, the Third Position, the alt-right, racial supremacism and other ideologies or organizations that feature aspects of authoritarian, ultra-nationalist, chauvinist, xenophobic, theocratic, racist, homophobic, transphobic, and/or reactionary views.[2]

Far-right politics have led to oppression, political violence, forced assimilation, ethnic cleansing, and genocide against groups of people based on their supposed inferiority or their perceived threat to the native ethnic group, nation, state, national religion, dominant culture, or conservative social institutions.[3]

Overview

Concept and worldview

 
Benito Mussolini, dictator and founder of Italian Fascism, a far-right ideology

According to scholars Jean-Yves Camus and Nicolas Lebourg, the core of the far right's worldview is organicism, the idea that society functions as a complete, organized and homogeneous living being. Adapted to the community they wish to constitute or reconstitute (whether based on ethnicity, nationality, religion or race), the concept leads them to reject every form of universalism in favor of autophilia and alterophobia, or in other words the idealization of a "we" excluding a "they".[4] The far right tends to absolutize differences between nations, races, individuals or cultures since they disrupt their efforts towards the utopian dream of the "closed" and naturally organized society, perceived as the condition to ensure the rebirth of a community finally reconnected to its quasi-eternal nature and re-established on firm metaphysical foundations.[5][6]

As they view their community in a state of decay facilitated by the ruling elites, far-right members portray themselves as a natural, sane and alternative elite, with the redemptive mission of saving society from its promised doom. They reject both their national political system and the global geopolitical order (including their institutions and values, e.g. political liberalism and egalitarian humanism) which are presented as needing to be abandoned or purged of their impurities, so that the "redemptive community" can eventually leave the current phase of liminal crisis to usher in the new era.[4][6] The community itself is idealized through great archetypal figures (the Golden Age, the savior, decadence and global conspiracy theories) as they glorify non-rationalistic and non-materialistic values such as the youth or the cult of the dead.[4]

Political scientist Cas Mudde argues that the far right can be viewed as a combination of four broadly defined concepts, namely exclusivism (e.g. racism, xenophobia, ethnocentrism, ethnopluralism, chauvinism, including welfare chauvinism), anti-democratic and non-individualist traits (e.g. cult of personality, hierarchism, monism, populism, anti-particracy, an organicist view of the state), a traditionalist value system lamenting the disappearance of historic frames of reference (e.g. law and order, the family, the ethnic, linguistic and religious community and nation as well as the natural environment) and a socioeconomic program associating corporatism, state control of certain sectors, agrarianism, and a varying degree of belief in the free play of socially Darwinistic market forces. Mudde then proposes a subdivision of the far-right nebula into moderate and radical leanings, according to their degree of exclusionism and essentialism.[7][8]

Definition and comparative analysis

The Encyclopedia of Politics: The Left and the Right states that far-right politics include "persons or groups who hold extreme nationalist, xenophobic, racist, religious fundamentalist, or other reactionary views." While the term far right is typically applied to fascists and neo-Nazis, it has also been used to refer to those to the right of mainstream right-wing politics.[9]

According to political scientist Lubomír Kopeček, "[t]he best working definition of the contemporary far right may be the four-element combination of nationalism, xenophobia, law and order, and welfare chauvinism proposed for the Western European environment by Cas Mudde."[10] Relying on those concepts, far-right politics includes yet is not limited to aspects of authoritarianism, anti-communism[10] and nativism.[11] Claims that superior people should have greater rights than inferior people are often associated with the far right, as they have historically favored a social Darwinistic or elitist hierarchy based on the belief in the legitimacy of the rule of a supposed superior minority over the inferior masses.[12] Regarding the socio-cultural dimension of nationality, culture and migration, one far-right position is the view that certain ethnic, racial or religious groups should stay separate, based on the belief that the interests of one's own group should be prioritized.[13]

In western Europe, far right parties have been associated with anti-immigrant policies, as well as opposition to globalism and European integration. They often make nationalist and xenophobic appeals which make allusions to ethnic nationalism rather than civic nationalism (or liberal nationalism). Some have at their core illiberal policies such as removing checks on executive authority, and protections for minorities from majority (multipluralism). In the 1990s, the "winning formula" was often to attract anti-immigrant blue collar workers and white collar workers who wanted less state intervention in the economy, but in the 2000s, this switched to welfare chauvinism.[14]

In comparing the Western European and post-Communist Central European far-right, Kopeček writes that "[t]he Central European far right was also typified by a strong anti-Communism, much more markedly than in Western Europe", allowing for "a basic ideological classification within a unified party family, despite the heterogeneity of the far right parties." Kopeček concludes that a comparison of Central European far-right parties with those of Western Europe shows that "these four elements are present in Central Europe as well, though in a somewhat modified form, despite differing political, economic, and social influences."[10] In the American and more general Anglo-Saxon environment, the most common term is "radical right", which has a broader meaning than the European radical right.[15][10] Mudde defines the American radical right as an "old school of nativism, populism, and hostility to central government [which] was said to have developed into the post-World War II combination of ultranationalism and anti-communism, Christian fundamentalism, militaristic orientation, and anti-alien sentiment."[15]

Jodi Dean argues that "the rise of far-right anti-communism in many parts of the world" should be interpreted "as a politics of fear, which utilizes the disaffection and anger generated by capitalism. [...] Partisans of far right-wing organizations, in turn, use anti-communism to challenge every political current which is not embedded in a clearly exposed nationalist and racist agenda. For them, both the USSR and the European Union, leftist liberals, ecologists, and supranational corporations – all of these may be called 'communist' for the sake of their expediency."[16]

In Hate in the Homeland: The New Global Far Right, Cynthia Miller-Idriss examines the far-right as a global movement and representing a cluster of overlapping "antidemocratic, antiegalitarian, white supremacist" beliefs that are "embedded in solutions like authoritarianism, ethnic cleansing or ethnic migration, and the establishment of separate ethno-states or enclaves along racial and ethnic lines".[17]

Modern debates

Terminology

According to Jean-Yves Camus and Nicolas Lebourg, the modern ambiguities in the definition of far-right politics lie in the fact that the concept is generally used by political adversaries to "disqualify and stigmatize all forms of partisan nationalism by reducing them to the historical experiments of Italian Fascism [and] German National Socialism."[18] Mudde agrees and notes that "the term is not only used for scientific purposes but also for political purposes. Several authors define right-wing extremism as a sort of anti-thesis against their own beliefs."[19] While the existence of such a political position is widely accepted among scholars, figures associated with the far-right rarely accept this denomination, preferring terms like "national movement" or "national right".[18] There is also debate about how appropriate the labels neo-fascist or neo-Nazi are. In the words of Mudde, "the labels Neo-Nazi and to a lesser extent neo-Fascism are now used exclusively for parties and groups that explicitly state a desire to restore the Third Reich or quote historical National Socialism as their ideological influence."[20]

One issue is whether parties should be labelled radical or extreme, a distinction that is made by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany when determining whether or not a party should be banned.[nb 1] Within the broader family of the far right, the extreme right is revolutionary, opposing popular sovereignty and majority rule, and sometimes supporting violence, whereas the radical right is reformist, accepting free elections, but opposing fundamental elements of liberal democracy such as minority rights, rule of law, or separation of powers.[21]

After a survey of the academic literature, Mudde concluded in 2002 that the terms "right-wing extremism", "right-wing populism", "national populism", or "neo-populism" were often used as synonyms by scholars, in any case with "striking similarities", except notably among a few authors studying the extremist-theoretical tradition.[nb 2]

Relation to right-wing politics

Italian philosopher and political scientist Norberto Bobbio argues that attitudes towards equality are primarily what distinguish left-wing politics from right-wing politics on the political spectrum:[22] "the left considers the key inequalities between people to be artificial and negative, which should be overcome by an active state, whereas the right believes that inequalities between people are natural and positive, and should be either defended or left alone by the state."[23]

Aspects of far-right ideology can be identified in the agenda of some contemporary right-wing parties: in particular, the idea that superior persons should dominate society while undesirable elements should be purged, which in extreme cases has resulted in genocides.[24] Charles Grant, director of the Centre for European Reform in London, distinguishes between fascism and right-wing nationalist parties which are often described as far right such as the National Front in France.[25] Mudde notes that the most successful European far-right parties in 2019 were "former mainstream right-wing parties that have turned into populist radical right ones."[26] According to historian Mark Sedgwick, "[t]here is no general agreement as to where the mainstream ends and the extreme starts, and if there ever had been agreement on this, the recent shift in the mainstream would challenge it."[27]

Proponents of the horseshoe theory interpretation of the left–right political spectrum identify the far left and the far right as having more in common with each other as extremists than each of them has with centrists or moderates.[28] However, the horseshoe theory does not enjoy support within academic circles[29] and has received criticism,[29][30][31] including the view that it has been centrists who have supported far-right and fascist regimes over socialist ones.[32]

Nature of support

Jens Rydgren describes a number of theories as to why individuals support far-right political parties and the academic literature on this topic distinguishes between demand-side theories that have changed the "interests, emotions, attitudes and preferences of voters" and supply-side theories which focus on the programmes of parties, their organization and the opportunity structures within individual political systems.[33] The most common demand-side theories are the social breakdown thesis, the relative deprivation thesis, the modernization losers thesis and the ethnic competition thesis.[34]

The rise of far-right parties has also been viewed as a rejection of post-materialist values on the part of some voters. This theory which is known as the reverse post-material thesis blames both left-wing and progressive parties for embracing a post-material agenda (including feminism and environmentalism) that alienates traditional working class voters.[35][36] Another study argues that individuals who join far-right parties determine whether those parties develop into major political players or whether they remain marginalized.[37]

Early academic studies adopted psychoanalytical explanations for the far right's support. The 1933 publication The Mass Psychology of Fascism by Wilhelm Reich argued the theory that fascists came to power in Germany as a result of sexual repression. For some far-right parties in Western Europe, the issue of immigration has become the dominant issue among them, so much so that some scholars refer to these parties as "anti-immigrant" parties.[38]

Intellectual history

Background

The French Revolution in 1789 created a major shift in political thought by challenging the established ideas supporting hierarchy with new ones about universal equality and freedom.[39] The modern left–right political spectrum also emerged during this period. Democrats and proponents of universal suffrage were located on the left side of the elected French Assembly, while monarchists seated farthest to the right.[18]

The strongest opponents of liberalism and democracy during the 19th century, such as Joseph de Maistre and Friedrich Nietzsche, were highly critical of the French Revolution.[39] Those who advocated a return to the absolute monarchy during the 19th century called themselves "ultra-monarchists" and embraced a "mystic" and "providentialist" vision of the world where royal dynasties were seen as the "repositories of divine will". The opposition to liberal modernity was based on the belief that hierarchy and rootedness are more important than equality and liberty, with the latter two being dehumanizing.[40]

Emergence

In the French public debate following the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, far right was used to describe the strongest opponents of the far left, those who supported the events occurring in Russia.[5] A number of thinkers on the far right nonetheless claimed an influence from an anti-Marxist and anti-egalitarian interpretation of socialism, based on a military comradeship that rejected Marxist class analysis, or what Oswald Spengler had called a "socialism of the blood", which is sometimes described by scholars as a form of "socialist revisionism".[41] They included Charles Maurras, Benito Mussolini, Arthur Moeller van den Bruck and Ernst Niekisch.[42][43][44] Those thinkers eventually split along nationalist lines from the original communist movement, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels contradicting nationalist theories with the idea that "the working men [had] no country."[45] The main reason for that ideological confusion can be found in the consequences of the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, which according to Swiss historian Philippe Burrin had completely redesigned the political landscape in Europe by diffusing the idea of an anti-individualistic concept of "national unity" rising above the right and left division.[44]

As the concept of "the masses" was introduced into the political debate through industrialization and the universal suffrage, a new right-wing founded on national and social ideas began to emerge, what Zeev Sternhell has called the "revolutionary right" and a foreshadowing of fascism. The rift between the left and nationalists was furthermore accentuated by the emergence of anti-militarist and anti-patriotic movements like anarchism or syndicalism, which shared even less similarities with the far right.[45] The latter began to develop a "nationalist mysticism" entirely different from that on the left, and antisemitism turned into a credo of the far right, marking a break from the traditional economic "anti-Judaism" defended by parts of the far left, in favour of a racial and pseudo-scientific notion of alterity. Various nationalist leagues began to form across Europe like the Pan-German League or the Ligue des Patriotes, with the common goal of a uniting the masses beyond social divisions.[46][47]

Völkisch and revolutionary right

 
Spanish Falangist volunteer forces of the Blue Division entrain at San Sebastián, 1942

The Völkisch movement emerged in the late 19th century, drawing inspiration from German Romanticism and its fascination for a medieval Reich supposedly organized into a harmonious hierarchical order. Erected on the idea of "blood and soil", it was a racialist, populist, agrarian, romantic nationalist and an antisemitic movement from the 1900s onward as a consequence of a growing exclusive and racial connotation.[48] They idealized the myth of an "original nation", that still could be found at their times in the rural regions of Germany, a form of "primitive democracy freely subjected to their natural elites."[43] Thinkers led by Arthur de Gobineau, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, Alexis Carrel and Georges Vacher de Lapouge distorted Darwin's theory of evolution to advocate a "race struggle" and an hygienist vision of the world. The purity of the bio-mystical and primordial nation theorized by the Völkischen then began to be seen as corrupted by foreign elements, Jewish in particular.[48]

Translated in Maurice Barrès' concept of "the earth and the dead", these ideas influenced the pre-fascist "revolutionary right" across Europe. The latter had its origin in the fin de siècle intellectual crisis and it was, in the words of Fritz Stern, the deep "cultural despair" of thinkers feeling uprooted within the rationalism and scientism of the modern world.[49] It was characterized by a rejection of the established social order, with revolutionary tendencies and anti-capitalist stances, a populist and plebiscitary dimension, the advocacy of violence as a means of action and a call for individual and collective palingenesis ("regeneration, rebirth").[50]

Contemporary thought

The key thinkers of contemporary far-right politics are claimed by Mark Sedgwick to share four key elements, namely apocalyptism, fear of global elites, belief in Carl Schmitt's friend–enemy distinction and the idea of metapolitics.[51] The apocalyptic strain of thought begins in Oswald Spengler's The Decline of the West and is shared by Julius Evola and Alain de Benoist. It continues in The Death of the West by Pat Buchanan as well as in the fears of Islamization of Europe.[51] Related to it is the fear of global elites, who are seen as responsible for the decline.[51] Ernst Jünger was concerned about rootless cosmopolitan elites while de Benoist and Buchanan oppose the managerial state and Curtis Yarvin is against "the Cathedral".[51] Schmitt's friend–enemy distinction has inspired the French Nouvelle Droite idea of ethnopluralism, which has become highly influential on the alt-right when combined with American racism.[51]

 
CasaPound rally in Naples

In a 1961 book deemed influential in the European far-right at large, French neo-fascist writer Maurice Bardèche introduced the idea that fascism could survive the 20th century under a new metapolitical guise adapted to the changes of the times. Rather than trying to revive doomed regimes with their single party, secret police or public display of Caesarism, Bardèche argued that its theorists should promote the core philosophical idea of fascism regardless of its framework,[6] i.e. the concept that only a minority, "the physically saner, the morally purer, the most conscious of national interest", can represent best the community and serve the less gifted in what Bardèche calls a new "feudal contract".[52]

Another influence on contemporary far-right thought has been the Traditionalist School, which included Julius Evola, and has influenced Steve Bannon and Aleksandr Dugin, advisors to Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin as well as the Jobbik party in Hungary.[53]

Regarding Latin America, Rene Leal of the University of Santiago, Chile notes that the oppressive exploitation of labor under neoliberal governments in the region precipitated the growth of far-right politics in the region.[54]

International organizations

 
National origins of Fascist International Congress participants in 1934

During the rise of Nazi Germany, far-right international organizations began to emerge in the 1930s with the International Conference of Fascist Parties in 1932 and the Fascist International Congress in 1934.[55] During the 1934 Fascist International Conference, the Comitati d'Azione per l'Universalità di Roma [it] (CAUR; English: Action Committees for the Universality of Rome), created by Benito Mussolini's Fascist Regime to create a network for a "Fascist International", representatives from far-right groups gathered in Montreux, Switzerland, including Romania's Iron Guard, Norway's Nasjonal Samling, the Greek National Socialist Party, Spain's Falange movement, Ireland's Blueshirts, France's Mouvement Franciste and Portugal's União Nacional, among others.[56][57] However, no international group was fully established before the outbreak of World War II.[55]

Following World War II, other far-right organizations attempted to establish themselves, such as the European organizations of Nouvel Ordre Européen, European Social Movement and Circulo Español de Amigos de Europa or the further-reaching World Union of National Socialists and the League for Pan-Nordic Friendship.[58] Beginning in the 1980s, far-right groups began to solidify themselves through official political avenues.[58]

With the founding of the European Union in 1993, far-right groups began to espouse Euroscepticism, nationalist and anti-migrant beliefs.[55] By 2010, the Eurosceptic group European Alliance for Freedom emerged and saw some prominence during the 2014 European Parliament election.[55][58] The majority of far-right groups in the 2010s began to establish international contacts with right-wing coalitions to develop a solidified platform.[55] In 2017, Steve Bannon would create The Movement, an organization to create an international far-right group based on Aleksandr Dugin's The Fourth Political Theory, for the 2019 European Parliament election.[59][60] The European Alliance for Freedom would also reorganize into Identity and Democracy for the 2019 European Parliament election.[58]

The far-right Spanish party Vox initially introduced the Madrid Charter project, a planned group to denounce left-wing groups in Ibero-America, to the government of United States president Donald Trump while visiting the United States in February 2019, with Santiago Abascal and Rafael Bardají using their good relations with the administration to build support within the Republican Party and establishing strong ties with American contacts.[60][61][62] In March 2019, Abascal tweeted an image of himself wearing a morion similar to a conquistador, with ABC writing in an article detailing the document that this event provided a narrative that "symbolizes in part the expansionist mood of Vox and its ideology far from Spain".[63] The charter subsequently grew to include signers that had little to no relation to Latin America and Spanish-speaking areas.[64] Vox has advised Javier Milei in Argentina, the Bolsonaro family in Brazil, José Antonio Kast in Chile and Keiko Fujimori in Peru.[65]

Nationalists from Europe and the United States met at a Holiday Inn in St. Petersburg on March 22, 2015 for first convention of the International Russian Conservative Forum organized by pro-Putin Rodina-party. The event was attended by fringe right-wing extremists like Nordic Resistance Movement from Scandinavia but also by more mainstream MEPs from Golden Dawn and National Democratic Party of Germany. In addition to Rodina, Russian neo-Nazis from Russian Imperial Movement and Rusich Group were also in attendance. From the US the event was attended by Jared Taylor and Brandon Russell.[66][67][68][69][70]

History by country

Africa

Rwanda

 
Photographs of genocide victims displayed at the Genocide Memorial Center in Kigali

A number of far-right extremist and paramilitary groups carried out the Rwandan genocide under the racial supremacist ideology of Hutu Power, developed by journalist and Hutu supremacist Hassan Ngeze.[71] On 5 July 1975, exactly two years after the 1973 Rwandan coup d'état, the far right National Republican Movement for Democracy and Development (MRND) was founded under president Juvénal Habyarimana. Between 1975 and 1991, the MRND was the only legal political party in the country. It was dominated by Hutus, particularly from Habyarimana's home region of Northern Rwanda. An elite group of MRND party members who were known to have influence on the President and his wife Agathe Habyarimana are known as the akazu, an informal organization of Hutu extremists whose members planned and lead the 1994 Rwandan genocide.[72][73] Prominent Hutu businessman and member of the akazu, Félicien Kabuga was one of the genocides main financiers, providing thousands of machetes which were used to commit the genocide.[74] Kabuga also founded Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines, used to broadcast propaganda and direct the génocidaires. Kabuga was arrested in France On 16 May 2020, and charged with crimes against humanity.[75]

Interahamwe

The Interahamwe was formed around 1990 as the youth wing of the MRND and enjoyed the backing of the Hutu Power government. The Interahamwe were driven out of Rwanda after Tutsi-led Rwandan Patriotic Front victory in the Rwandan Civil War in July 1994 and are considered a terrorist organisation by many African and Western governments. The Interahamwe and splinter groups such as the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda continue to wage an insurgency against Rwanda from neighboring countries, where they are also involved in local conflicts and terrorism. The Interahamwe were the main perpetrators of the Rwandan genocide, during which an estimated 500,000 to 1,000,000 Tutsi, Twa and moderate Hutus were killed from April to July 1994 and the term Interahamwe was widened to mean any civilian bands killing Tutsi.[76][77]

Coalition for the Defence of the Republic

Other far-right groups and paramilitaries involved included the anti-democratic segregationist Coalition for the Defence of the Republic (CDR), which called for complete segregation of Hutus from Tutsis. The CDR had a paramilitary wing known as the Impuzamugambi. Together with the Interahamwe militia, the Impuzamugambi played a central role in the Rwandan genocide.[78][71]

South Africa

Herstigte Nasionale Party

The far right in South Africa emerged as the Herstigte Nasionale Party (HNP) in 1969, formed by Albert Hertzog as breakaway from the predominant right-wing South African National Party, an Afrikaner ethno-nationalist party that implemented the racist, segregationist program of apartheid, the legal system of political, economic and social separation of the races intended to maintain and extend political and economic control of South Africa by the White minority.[79][80][81] The HNP was formed after the South African National Party re-established diplomatic relations with Malawi and legislated to allow Māori players and spectators to enter the country during the 1970 New Zealand rugby union team tour in South Africa.[82] The HNP advocated for a Calvinist, racially segregated and Afrikaans-speaking nation.[83]

Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging

In 1973, Eugène Terre'Blanche, a former police officer founded the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (Afrikaner Resistance Movement), a South African neo-Nazi paramilitary organisation, often described as a white supremacist group.[84][85][86] Since its founding in 1973 by Eugène Terre'Blanche and six other far-right Afrikaners, it has been dedicated to secessionist Afrikaner nationalism and the creation of an independent Boer-Afrikaner republic in part of South Africa. During negotiations to end apartheid in South Africa in the early 1990s, the organization terrorized and killed black South Africans.[87]

Togo

Togo has been ruled by members of the Gnassingbé family and the far-right military dictatorship formerly known as the Rally of the Togolese People since 1969. Despite the legalisation of political parties in 1991 and the ratification of a democratic constitution in 1992, the regime continues to be regarded as oppressive. In 1993, the European Union cut off aid in reaction to the regime's human-rights offenses. After's Eyadema's death in 2005, his son Faure Gnassingbe took over, then stood down and was re-elected in elections that were widely described as fraudulent and occasioned violence that resulted in as many as 600 deaths and the flight from Togo of 40,000 refugees.[88] In 2012, Faure Gnassingbe dissolved the RTP and created the Union for the Republic.[89][90][91]

Throughout the reign of the Gnassingbé family, Togo has been extremely oppressive. According to a United States Department of State report based on conditions in 2010, human rights abuses are common and include "security force use of excessive force, including torture, which resulted in deaths and injuries; official impunity; harsh and life-threatening prison conditions; arbitrary arrests and detention; lengthy pretrial detention; executive influence over the judiciary; infringement of citizens' privacy rights; restrictions on freedoms of press, assembly, and movement; official corruption; discrimination and violence against women; child abuse, including female genital mutilation (FGM), and sexual exploitation of children; regional and ethnic discrimination; trafficking in persons, especially women and children; societal discrimination against persons with disabilities; official and societal discrimination against homosexual persons; societal discrimination against persons with HIV; and forced labor, including by children."[92]

Americas

Brazil

 
Children make the Nazi salute in Presidente Bernardes, São Paulo, circa 1935.

During the 1920s and 1930s, a local brand of religious fascism appeared known as Brazilian Integralism, coalescing around the party known as Brazilian Integralist Action. It adopted many characteristics of European fascist movements, including a green-shirted paramilitary organization with uniformed ranks, highly regimented street demonstrations and rhetoric against Marxism and liberalism.[93]

Prior to World War II, the Nazi Party had been making and distributing propaganda among ethnic Germans in Brazil. The Nazi regime built close ties with Brazil through the estimated 100 thousand native Germans and 1 million German descendants living in Brazil at the time.[94] In 1928, the Brazilian section of the Nazi Party was founded in Timbó, Santa Catarina. This section reached 2,822 members and was the largest section of the Nazi Party outside Germany.[95][96] About 100 thousand born Germans and about one million descendants lived in Brazil at that time.[97]

After Germany's defeat in World War II, many Nazi war criminals fled to Brazil and hid among the German-Brazilian communities. The most notable example of this was Josef Mengele, a Nazi SS officer and physician known as the "Angel of Death" for his deadly experiments on prisoners at the Auschwitz II (Birkenau) concentration camp, who fled first to Argentina, then Paraguay, before finally settling in Brazil in 1960. Mengele eventually drowned in 1979 in Bertioga, on the coast of São Paulo state, without ever having been recognized in his 19 years in Brazil.[98]

The far right has continued to operate throughout Brazil[99] and a number of far-right parties existed in the modern era including Patriota, the Brazilian Labour Renewal Party, the Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order, the National Renewal Alliance and the Social Liberal Party as well as death squads such as the Command for Hunting Communists. President of Brazil Jair Bolsonaro is a member of the Alliance for Brazil, a far-right nationalist political group that aims to become a political party.[100][101][102] Bolsonaro has been widely described by numerous media organizations as far right.[103]

Central American death squads

In Guatemala, the far-right[104][105] government of Carlos Castillo Armas utilized death squads after coming to power in the 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état.[104][105] Along with other far-right extremists, Castillo Armas started the National Liberation Movement (Movimiento de Liberación Nacional, or MLN). The founders of the party described it as the "party of organized violence".[106] The new government promptly reversed the democratic reforms initiated during the Guatemalan Revolution and the agrarian reform program (Decree 900) that was the main project of president Jacobo Arbenz Guzman and which directly impacted the interests of both the United Fruit Company and the Guatemalan landowners.[107]

Mano Blanca, otherwise known as the Movement of Organized Nationalist Action, was set up in 1966 as a front for the MLN to carry out its more violent activities,[108][109] along with many other similar groups, including the New Anticommunist Organization and the Anticommunist Council of Guatemala.[106][110] Mano Blanca was active during the governments of colonel Carlos Arana Osorio and general Kjell Laugerud García and was dissolved by general Fernando Romeo Lucas Garcia in 1978.[111]

Armed with the support and coordination of the Guatemalan Armed Forces, Mano Blanca began a campaign described by the United States Department of State as one of "kidnappings, torture, and summary execution."[109] One of the main targets of Mano Blanca was the Revolutionary Party, an anti-communist group that was the only major reform oriented party allowed to operate under the military-dominated regime. Other targets included the banned leftist parties.[109] Human rights activist Blase Bonpane described the activities of Mano Blanca as being an integral part of the policy of the Guatemalan government and by extension the policy of the United States government and the Central Intelligence Agency.[107][112] Overall, Mano Blanca was responsible for thousands of murders and kidnappings, leading travel writer Paul Theroux to refer to them as "Guatemala's version of a volunteer Gestapo unit".[113]

Chile

The National Socialist Movement of Chile (MNSCH) was created in the 1930s with the funding from the German population in Chile.[114] In 1938, the MNSCH was dissolved after it attempted a coup and recreated itself as the Popular Freedom Alliance party, later merging with the Agrarian Party to create the Agrarian Labor Party (PAL).[115] PAL would go through various mergers to become the Partido Nacional Popular (Chile) [es], then National Action and finally the National Party.

Following the fall of Nazi Germany, many Nazis fled to Chile.[116] The National Party supported the 1973 Chilean coup d'état that established the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet with many members assuming positions in Pinochet's government. Pinochet headed a far-right dictatorship in Chile from 1973 to 1990.[54][117] According to author Peter Levenda, Pinochet was "openly pro-Nazi" and used former Gestapo members to train his own Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional (DINA) personnel.[116] Pinochet's DINA sent political prisoners to the Chilean-German town of Colonia Dignidad, with the town's actions being defended by the Pinochet government.[116][118][119] The Central Intelligence Agency and Simon Wiesenthal also provided evidence of Josef Mengele – the infamous Nazi concentration camp doctor known as the "Angel of Death" for his lethal experiments on human subjects – being present in Colonia Dignidad.[116][119] Former DINA member Michael Townley also stated that biological warfare weapons experiments occurred at the colony.[120]

Following the end of Pinochet's government, the National Party would split to become the more centrist National Renewal (RN), while individuals who supported Pinochet organized Independent Democratic Union (UDI). UDI is a far-right political party that was formed by former Pinochet officials.[121][122][123][124] In 2019, the far-right Republican Party was founded by José Antonio Kast, a UDI politician who believed his former party criticized Pinochet too often.[125][126][127][128] According to Cox and Blanco, the Republican Party appeared in Chilean politics in a similar manner to Spain's Vox party, with both parties splitting off from an existing right wing party to collect disillusioned voters.[129]

Death squads in El Salvador
 
A billboard serving as a reminder of one of many massacres in El Salvador that occurred during the civil war

During the Salvadoran Civil War, far-right death squads known in Spanish by the name of Escuadrón de la Muerte, literally "Squadron of Death, achieved notoriety when a sniper assassinated Archbishop Óscar Romero while he was saying mass in March 1980. In December 1980, three American nuns and a lay worker were gangraped and murdered by a military unit later found to have been acting on specific orders. Death squads were instrumental in killing thousands of peasants and activists. Funding for the squads came primarily from right-wing Salvadoran businessmen and landowners.[130]

El Salvadorian death squads indirectly received arms, funding, training and advice during the Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush administrations.[131] Some death squads such as Sombra Negra are still operating in El Salvador.[132]

Death squads in Honduras

Honduras also had far-right death squads active through the 1980s, the most notorious of which was Battalion 3–16. Hundreds of people, teachers, politicians and union bosses were assassinated by government-backed forces. Battalion 316 received substantial support and training from the United States through the Central Intelligence Agency.[133] At least nineteen members were School of the Americas graduates.[134][135] As of mid-2006, seven members, including Billy Joya, later played important roles in the administration of President Manuel Zelaya.[136]

Following the 2009 Honduran constitutional crisis, former Battalion 3–16 member Nelson Willy Mejía Mejía became Director-General of Immigration[137][138] and Billy Joya was de facto President Roberto Micheletti's security advisor.[139] Napoleón Nassar Herrera, another former Battalion 3–16 member,[136][140] was high Commissioner of Police for the north-west region under Zelaya and under Micheletti, even becoming a Secretary of Security spokesperson "for dialogue" under Micheletti.[141][142] Zelaya claimed that Joya had reactivated the death squad, with dozens of government opponents having been murdered since the ascent of the Michiletti and Lobo governments.[139]

Mexico

National Synarchist Union

The largest far-right party in Mexico is the National Synarchist Union. It was historically a movement of the Roman Catholic extreme right, in some ways akin to clerical fascism and Falangism, strongly opposed to the left-wing and secularist policies of the Institutional Revolutionary Party and its predecessors that governed Mexico from 1929 to 2000 and 2012 to 2018.[143][144]

Peru

 

During the internal conflict in Peru and a struggling presidency of Alan García, the Peruvian Armed Forces created Plan Verde, initially a coup plan that involved establishing a government that would carry out the genocide of impoverished and indigenous Peruvians, the control or censorship of media and the establishment of a neoliberal economy controlled by a military junta in Peru.[145][146][147] Military planners also decided against the coup as they expected Mario Vargas Llosa, a neoliberal candidate, to be elected in the 1990 Peruvian general election.[148][149] Vargas Llosa later reported that Anthony C. E. Quainton, the United States Ambassador to Peru, personally told him that allegedly leaked documents of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) purportedly being supportive of his opponent Alberto Fujimori were authentic, reportedly due to Fujimori's relationship with Vladimiro Montesinos, a former National Intelligence Service (SIN) officer who was tasked with spying on the Peruvian military for the CIA.[150][151] An agreement was ultimately adopted between the armed forces and Fujimori after he was inaugurated president,[148] with the Fujimori implementing many of the objectives outlined in Plan Verde.[151][148] Fujimori then established Fujimorism, an ideology with authoritarian[152] and fascist traits,[153][154] leading Peru beside Montesinos as a dictator following the 1992 Peruvian coup d'état until he fled to Japan in 2000 during the Vladivideos scandal. While in Japan, Fujimori announced plans to run in Japan's Upper House elections in July 2007 for the far-right People's New Party.[155][156][157]

Following Alberto Fujimori's arrest and trial, his daughter Keiko Fujimori assumed leadership of the Fujimoirst movement and established Popular Force, a far-right political party.[158][159][160] The 2016 Peruvian general election resulted with the party holding the most power in the Congress of Peru from 2016 to 2019, marking the beginning of a political crisis. Approaching the 2021 Peruvian general election, far-right politician Rafael López Aliaga and his party Popular Renewal rose in popularity during the first round of campaigning.[161][162][163][164][165][166]

United States

In United States politics, the terms "extreme right", "far-right", and "ultra-right" are labels used to describe "militant forms of insurgent revolutionary right ideology and separatist ethnocentric nationalism",[167] such as Christian Identity,[167] the Creativity Movement,[167] the Ku Klux Klan,[167] the National Socialist Movement,[167][168][169] the National Alliance,[167] the Joy of Satan Ministries,[168][169] and the Order of Nine Angles.[170] These far-right groups share conspiracist views of power which are overwhelmingly anti-Semitic and reject pluralist democracy in favour of an organic oligarchy that would unite the perceived homogeneously racial Völkish nation.[167][170] The far-right in the United States is composed of various neo-fascist, neo-Nazi, white nationalist, and white supremacist organizations and networks who have been known to refer to an "acceleration" of racial conflict through violent means such as assassinations, murders, terrorist attacks, and societal collapse, in order to achieve the building of a white ethnostate.[170]

Radical right
 
Ku Klux Klan parade in Washington, D.C., September 1926

Starting in the 1870s and continuing through the late 19th century, numerous White supremacist paramilitary groups operated in the South, with the goal of organizing against and intimidating supporters of the Republican Party. Examples of such groups included the Red Shirts and the White League. The Second Ku Klux Klan, which was formed in 1915, combined Protestant fundamentalism and moralism with right-wing extremism. Its major support came from the urban South, the Midwest, and the Pacific Coast.[171] While the Klan initially drew upper middle class support, its bigotry and violence alienated these members and it came to be dominated by less educated and poorer members.[172]

Between the 1920s and the 1930s, the Ku Klux Klan developed an explicitly nativist, pro-Anglo-Saxon Protestant, anti-Catholic, anti-Irish, anti-Italian, and anti-Jewish stance in relation to the growing political, economic, and social uncertainty related to the arrival of European immigrants on the American soil, predominantly composed of Irish people, Italians, and Eastern European Jews.[173] The Ku Klux Klan claimed that there was a secret Catholic army within the United States loyal to the Pope, that one million Knights of Columbus were arming themselves, and that Irish-American policemen would shoot Protestants as heretics. Their sensationalistic claims eventually developed into full-blown political conspiracy theories, to the point that the Klan claimed that Roman Catholics were planning to take Washington and put the Vatican in power and that all presidential assassinations had been carried out by Roman Catholics.[174][175] The prominent Klan leader D. C. Stephenson believed in the antisemitic canard of Jewish control of finance, claiming that international Jewish bankers were behind the World War I and planned to destroy economic opportunities for Christians. Other Klansmen in the Jewish Bolshevism conspiracy theory and claimed that the Russian Revolution and communism were orchestrated by the Jews. They frequently reprinted parts of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion and New York City was condemned as an evil city controlled by Jews and Roman Catholics. The objects of the Klan fear tended to vary by locale and included African Americans as well as American Roman Catholics, Jews, labour unions, liquor, Orientals, and Wobblies. They were also anti-elitist and attacked "the intellectuals", seeing themselves as egalitarian defenders of the common man.[176] During the Great Depression, there were a large number of small nativist groups, whose ideologies and bases of support were similar to those of earlier nativist groups. However, proto-fascist movements such as Huey Long's Share Our Wealth and Charles Coughlin's National Union for Social Justice emerged which differed from other right-wing groups by attacking big business, calling for economic reforms, and rejecting nativism. Coughlin's group later developed a racist ideology.[177]

During the Cold War and the Red Scares, the far right "saw spies and communists influencing government and entertainment. Thus, despite bipartisan anticommunism in the United States, it was the right that mainly fought the great ideological battle against the communists."[178] The John Birch Society, founded in 1958, is a prominent example of a far-right organization mainly concerned with anti-communism and the perceived threat of communism. Neo-Nazi militant Robert Jay Matthews of the White supremacist group The Order came to support the John Birch Society, especially when conservative icon Barry Goldwater from Arizona ran for the presidency on the Republican Party ticket. Far-right conservatives consider John Birch to be the first casualty of the Cold War.[179] In the 1990s, many conservatives turned against then-President George H. W. Bush, who pleasured neither the Republican Party's more moderate and far-right wings. As a result, Bush was primared by Pat Buchanan. In the 2000s, critics of President George W. Bush's conservative unilateralism argued it can be traced to both Vice President Dick Cheney who embraced the policy since the early 1990s and to far-right Congressmen who won their seats during the conservative revolution of 1994.[10]

Although small voluntary militias had existed in the United States throughout the latter half of the 20th century, the groups became more popular during the early 1990s, after a series of standoffs between armed citizens and federal government agents, such as the 1992 Ruby Ridge siege and 1993 Waco Siege. These groups expressed concern for what they perceived as government tyranny within the United States and generally held constitutionalist, libertarian, and right-libertarian political views, with a strong focus on the Second Amendment gun rights and tax protest. They also embraced many of the same conspiracy theories as predecessor groups on the radical right, particularly the New World Order conspiracy theory. Examples of such groups are the patriot and militia movements Oath Keepers and the Three Percenters. A minority of militia groups, such as the Aryan Nations and the Posse Comitatus, were White nationalists and saw militia and patriot movements as a form of White resistance against what they perceived to be a liberal and multiculturalist government. Militia and patriot organizations were involved in the 2014 Bundy standoff[180][181] and the 2016 occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge.[182][183]

 
Far-right flags on display at the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville

After the September 11 attacks in 2001, the counter-jihad movement, supported by groups such as Stop Islamization of America and individuals such as Frank Gaffney and Pamela Geller, began to gain traction among the American right. The counter-jihad members were widely dubbed "Islamophobic" for their vocal criticism of the Islamic religion and its founder Muhammad,[184] and their belief that there was a significant threat posed by Muslims living in America.[184] Its proponents believed that the United States was under threat from "Islamic supremacism", accusing the Council on American-Islamic Relations and even prominent conservatives such as Suhail A. Khan and Grover Norquist of supporting radical Islamist groups and organizations, such as the Muslim Brotherhood. The alt-right emerged during the 2016 United States presidential election cycle in support of the Donald Trump's presidential campaign (see: Trumpism). It draws influence from paleoconservatism, paleolibertarianism, White nationalism, the manosphere, and the Identitarian and neoreactionary movements. The alt-right differs from previous radical right movements due to its heavy internet presence on websites such as 4chan.[185]

Chetan Bhatt, in White Extinction: Metaphysical Elements of Contemporary Western Fascism, says that "The 'fear of white extinction', and related ideas of population eugenics, have travelled far and represent a wider political anxiety about 'white displacement' in the US, UK, and Europe that has fuelled the right-wing phenomena referred to by that sanitizing word 'populism', a term that neatly evades attention to the racism and white majoritarianism that energizes it."[186]

Asia

Japan

 
Gaisen Uyoku (街宣右翼), a Japanese far-right group, holding an anti-China speech at the square of Kinshichō Station in Sumida, Tokyo (2010)

In 1996, the National Police Agency estimated that there were over 1,000 extremist right-wing groups in Japan, with about 100,000 members in total. These groups are known in Japanese as Uyoku dantai. While there are political differences among the groups, they generally carry a philosophy of anti-leftism, hostility towards China, North Korea and South Korea, and justification of Japan's role and war crimes in World War II. Uyoku dantai groups are well known for their highly visible propaganda vehicles fitted with loudspeakers and prominently marked with the name of the group and propaganda slogans. The vehicles play patriotic or wartime-era Japanese songs. Activists affiliated with such groups have used Molotov cocktails and time bombs to intimidate moderate Japanese politicians and public figures, including former Deputy Foreign Minister Hitoshi Tanaka and Fuji Xerox Chairman Yotaro Kobayashi. An ex-member of a right-wing group set fire to Liberal Democratic Party politician Koichi Kato's house. Koichi Kato and Yotaro Kobayashi had spoken out against Koizumi's visits to Yasukuni Shrine.[187] Openly revisionist, Nippon Kaigi is considered "the biggest right-wing organization in Japan."[188][189]

Europe

Croatia

Individuals and groups in Croatia that employ far-right politics are most often associated with the historical Ustaše movement, hence they have connections to neo-Nazism and neo-fascism. That World War II political movement was an extremist organization at the time supported by the German Nazis and the Italian Fascists. The association with the Ustaše has been called neo-Ustashism by Slavko Goldstein.[190] Most active far-right political parties in Croatia openly state their continuity with the Ustaše.[191] These include the Croatian Party of Rights and Authentic Croatian Party of Rights.[191] Croatia's far-right often advocates the false theory that the Jasenovac concentration camp was a "labour camp" where mass murder did not take place.[192]

The coalition led by Miroslav Škoro's far-right Homeland Movement came third at the 2020 parliamentary election, winning 10.9% of the vote and 16 seats.[193][194]

Estonia

 
General Andres Larka speaking in 1933

Estonia's most significant far-right movement was the Vaps movement. Its ideological predecessor Valve Liit was founded by Admiral Johan Pitka and later banned for maligning the government. The organization became politicized quickly Vaps soon turned into a mass fascist movement.[195] In 1933, Estonians voted on Vaps' proposed changes to the constitution and the party later won a large proportion of the vote. However, the State Elder Konstantin Päts declared state of emergency and imprisoned the leadership of the Vaps. In 1935, all political parties were banned. In 1935, a Vaps coup attempt was discovered, which led to the banning of the Finnish Patriotic People's Movement's youth wing that had been secretly aiding and arming them.[196][197]

 
Far-right torch march in Tallinn

During World War II, the Estonian Self-Administration was a collaborationist pro-Nazi government set up in Estonia, headed by Vaps member Hjalmar Mäe.[198] In the 21st century, the coalition-governing Conservative People's Party of Estonia been described as far right.[199] The neo-Nazi terrorist organization Feuerkrieg Division was found and operates in the country, with some members of the Conservative People's Party of Estonia having been linked to the Feuerkrieg Division.[200][201][202][203] The party's youth organisation Blue Awakening organises an annual torchlight march through Tallinn on Estonia's Independence Day. The event has been harshly criticized by the Simon Wiesenthal Center that described it as "Nuremberg-esque" and likened the ideology of the participants to that of the Estonian nazi collaborators.[204][205]

Finland

 
The Peasant March, a show of force in Helsinki by the Lapua Movement on 7 July 1930

In Finland, support for the far right was most widespread between 1920 and 1940 when the Academic Karelia Society, Lapua Movement, Patriotic People's Movement and Vientirauha operated in the country and had hundreds of thousands of members.[206] Far-right groups exercised considerable political power during this period, pressuring the government to outlaw communist parties and newspapers and expel Freemasons from the armed forces.[207][208] During the Cold War, all parties deemed fascist were banned according to the Paris Peace Treaties and all former fascist activists had to find new political homes.[209] Despite Finlandization, many continued in public life. Three former members of the Waffen SS served as ministers of defense; Sulo Suorttanen and Pekka Malinen as well as Mikko Laaksonen [fi].[210][211]

 
Captain Arvi Kalsta addressing an SKJ meeting

The skinhead culture gained momentum during the late 1980s and peaked during the late 1990s. Numerous hate crimes were committed against refugees, including a number of racially motivated murders.[212][213]

Today, the most prominent neo-Nazi group is the Nordic Resistance Movement, which is tied to multiple murders, attempted murders and assaults of political enemies was found in 2006 and proscribed in 2019. Prominent far-right parties include the Blue-and-Black Movement and Power Belongs to the People.[214] The second biggest Finnish party, the Finns Party, has been described as far right.[215][216][217][218] The leader of the Finns party, Jussi Halla-aho, has been convicted of hate speech due to his comments stating that, "Prophet Muhammad was a pedophile and Islam justifies pedophilia and Pedophilia was Allah's will." Finns Party members have frequently supported far-right and neo-Nazi movements such as the Finnish Defense League, Soldiers of Odin, Nordic Resistance Movement, Rajat Kiinni (Close the Borders), and Suomi Ensin (Finland First). "[219]

The NRM and other far-right nationalist parties organize an annual torch march demonstration in Helsinki in memory of the Finnish SS-battalion on the Finnish independence day which ends at the Hietaniemi cemetery where members visit the tomb of Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim and the monument to the Finnish SS Battalion.[220][221] The event is protested by antifascists, leading to counterdemonstrators being violently assaulted by NRM members who act as security. The demonstration attracts close to 3,000 participants according to the estimates of the police and hundreds of officers patrol Helsinki to prevent violent clashes.[222][223][224]

France

The largest far-right party in Europe is the French anti-immigration party National Rally, formally known as the National Front.[225][226] The party was founded in 1972, uniting a variety of French far-right groups under the leadership of Jean-Marie Le Pen.[227] Since 1984, it has been the major force of French nationalism.[228] Jean-Marie Le Pen's daughter Marine Le Pen was elected to succeed him as party leader in 2012. Under Jean-Marie Le Pen's leadership, the party sparked outrage for hate speech, including Holocaust denial and Islamophobia.[229][230]

Germany

In 1945, the Allied powers took control of Germany and banned the swastika, Nazi Party and the publication of Mein Kampf. Explicitly Nazi and neo-Nazi organizations are banned in Germany.[231] In 1960, the West German parliament voted unanimously to "make it illegal to incite hatred, to provoke violence, or to insult, ridicule or defame 'parts of the population' in a manner apt to breach the peace." German law outlaws anything that "approves of, glorifies or justifies the violent and despotic rule of the National Socialists."[231] Section 86a of the Strafgesetzbuch (Criminal Code) outlaws any "use of symbols of unconstitutional organizations" outside the contexts of "art or science, research or teaching". The law primarily outlaws the use of Nazi symbols, flags, insignia, uniforms, slogans and forms of greeting.[232] In the 21st century, the German far right consists of various small parties and two larger groups, namely Alternative for Germany (AfD) and Pegida.[231][233][234][235] In March 2021, the Germany domestic intelligence agency Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution placed the AfD under surveillance, the first time in the post-war period that a main opposition party had been subjected to such scrutiny.[236]

Greece

Metaxism

The far right in Greece first came to power under the ideology of Metaxism, a proto-fascist ideology developed by dictator Ioannis Metaxas.[237] Metaxism called for the regeneration of the Greek nation and the establishment of an ethnically homogeneous state.[238] Metaxism disparaged liberalism, and held individual interests to be subordinate to those of the nation, seeking to mobilize the Greek people as a disciplined mass in service to the creation of a "new Greece".[238]

The Metaxas government and its official doctrines are often compared to conventional totalitarian-conservative dictatorships such as Francisco Franco's Spain or António de Oliveira Salazar's Portugal.[237][239] The Metaxist government derived its authority from the conservative establishment and its doctrines strongly supported traditional institutions such as the Greek Orthodox Church and the Greek Royal Family; essentially reactionary, it lacked the radical theoretical dimensions of ideologies such as Italian Fascism and German Nazism.[237][239]

Axis occupation of Greece and aftermath
 
German soldiers in 1941 raising the German War Flag over the Acropolis which would be taken down by Manolis Glezos and Apostolos Santas in one of the first acts of resistance

The Metaxis regime came to an end after the Axis powers invaded Greece. The Axis occupation of Greece began in April 1941.[240] The occupation ruined the Greek economy and brought about terrible hardships for the Greek civilian population.[241] The Jewish population of Greece was nearly eradicated. Of its pre-war population of 75–77,000, only around 11–12,000 survived, either by joining the resistance or being hidden.[242] Following the short-lived interim government of Georgios Papandreou, the military seized power in Greece during the 1967 Greek coup d'état, replacing the interim government with the right-wing United States-backed Greek junta. The Junta was a series of military juntas that ruled Greece from 1967 to 1974. The dictatorship was characterised by right-wing cultural policies, restrictions on civil liberties and the imprisonment, torture and exile of political opponents. The junta's rule ended on 24 July 1974 under the pressure of the Turkish invasion of Cyprus, leading to the Metapolitefsi ("regime change") to democracy and the establishment of the Third Hellenic Republic.[243][244]

Until 2019, the dominant far-right party in Greece in the 21st century was the neo-Nazi[245][246][247][248][249][250][251] and Mataxist inspired[252][253][254][255][256] Golden Dawn.[257][258][259][260][261] At the May 2012 Greek legislative election, Golden Dawn won 21 seats in the Hellenic Parliament, receiving 6.97% of the vote.[262][263] It became the third largest party in the Greek Parliament with 17 seats after the January 2015 election, winning 6.28% of the vote.[264]

Founded by Nikolaos Michaloliakos, Golden Dawn had its origins in the movement that worked towards a return to right-wing military dictatorship in Greece. Following an investigation into the 2013 murder of Pavlos Fyssas, an anti-fascist rapper, by a supporter of the party,[265] Michaloliakos and several other Golden Dawn parliamentarians and members were arrested and held in pre-trial detention on suspicion of forming a criminal organization.[266] The trial began on 20 April 2015[267] and eventually led to the conviction of 7 of its leaders for heading a criminal organisation and 61 other defendants for participating in a criminal organisation.[268] Guilty verdicts on charges of murder, attempted murder, and violent attacks on immigrants and left-wing political opponents were also delivered and prison sentences of a combined total of over 500 years were handed out.

Golden Dawn later lost all of its remaining seats in the Greek Parliament in the 2019 Greek legislative election, and [269] a 2020 survey showed the party's popularity plummeting to just 1.5%, down from 2.9% in previous year's elections.[270] This means that the largest party in Greece that is considered right wing to far right is Greek Solution, which has been described as ideologically ultranationalist[271][272] and right-wing populist.[273] The party garnered 3.7% of the vote in the 2019 Greek legislative election, winning 10 out of the 300 seats in the Hellenic Parliament and 4.18% of the vote in the 2019 European Parliament election in Greece, winning one seat in the European Parliament.[274]

Hungary

The Kingdom of Hungary was an Axis power during World War II. By 1944, Hungary was in secret negotiations with the Allies. Upon discovering these secret negotiations Germany invaded Hungary in March 1944, effectively sabotaging the attempts to jump out of the war until the Budapest Offensive started later that same year.[275]

Italy

The far right has maintained a continuous political presence in Italy since the fall of Mussolini. The neo-fascist party Italian Social Movement (1946–1995), influenced by the previous Italian Social Republic (1943–1945), became one of the chief reference points for the European far-right from the end of World War II until the late 1980s.[276]

Silvio Berlusconi and his Forza Italia party dominated politics from 1994. According to some scholars, it gave neo-fascism a new respectability.[277] Caio Giulio Cesare Mussolini, great-grandson of Benito Mussolini, stood for the 2019 European Parliament election as a member of the far right Brothers of Italy party.[277] In 2011, it was estimated that the neo-fascist CasaPound party had 5,000 members.[278] The name is derived from the fascist poet Ezra Pound. It has also been influenced by the Manifesto of Verona, the Labour Charter of 1927 and social legislation of fascism.[279] There has been collaboration between CasaPound and the identitarian movement.[280]

The European migrant crisis has become an increasingly divisive issue in Italy.[281] Interior Minister Matteo Salvini has been courting far-right voters. His Northern League party has become an anti-immigrant, nationalist movement. Both parties are using Mussolini nostalgia to further their aims.[277]

Netherlands

Despite being neutral, the Netherlands was invaded by Nazi Germany on 10 May 1940 as part of Fall Gelb.[282] About 70% of the country's Jewish population were killed during the occupation, a much higher percentage than comparable countries such as Belgium and France.[283] Most of the south of the country was liberated in the second half of 1944. The rest, especially the west and north of the country still under occupation, suffered from a famine at the end of 1944 known as the Hunger Winter. On 5 May 1945, the whole country was finally liberated by the total surrender of all German forces. Since the end of World War II, the Netherlands has had a number of small far-right groups and parties, the largest and most successful being the Party for Freedom led by Geert Wilders.[284] Other far-right Dutch groups include the neo-Nazi Dutch People's Union (1973–present),[285] the Centre Party (1982–1986), the Centre Party '86 (1986–1998), the Dutch Block (1992–2000), New National Party (1998–2005) and the ultranationalist National Alliance (2003–2007).[286][287]

Poland

 
National Radical Camp march in Kraków, July 2007

Following the collapse of Communist Poland, a number of far-right groups came to prominence including The National Revival of Poland, the European National Front, the Association for Tradition and Culture "Niklot".[288] The All-Polish Youth and National Radical Camp were recreated in 1989 and 1993, respectively becoming Poland's most prominent far-right organizations. In 1995, the Anti-Defamation League estimated the number of far-right and white power skinheads in Poland at 2,000.[289] Since late 2000s smaller fascist groups have merged to form the neo-Nazi Autonome Nationalisten. A number of far-right parties have run candidates in elections including the League of Polish Families, the National Movement with limited success.[290]

In 2019, the Confederation Liberty and Independence had the best performance of any far-right coalition to date, earning 1,256,953 votes which was 6.81% of the total vote in an election that saw a historically high turnout. Members of far-right groups make up a significant portion of those taking part in the annual Independence March in central Warsaw which started in 2009 to mark Independence Day. About 60,000 were in the 2017 march marking the 99th anniversary of independence, with placards such as "Clean Blood" seen on the march.[291]

Romania

The preeminent far-right party in Romania is the Greater Romania Party, founded in 1991 by Tudor, who was formerly known as a "court poet" of Communist dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu[292] and his literary mentor, the writer Eugen Barbu, one year after Tudor launched the România Mare weekly magazine, which remains the most important propaganda tool of the PRM. Tudor subsequently launched a companion daily newspaper called Tricolorul. The historical expression Greater Romania refers to the idea of recreating the former Kingdom of Romania which existed during the interwar period. Having been the largest entity to bear the name of Romania, the frontiers were marked with the intent of uniting most territories inhabited by ethnic Romanians into a single country and it is now a rallying cry for Romanian nationalists. Due to internal conditions under Communist Romania after World War II, the expression's use was forbidden in publications until after the Romanian Revolution in 1989. The party's initial success was partly attributed to the deep rootedness of Ceaușescu's national communism in Romania.[293]

Both the ideology and the main political focus of the Greater Romania Party are reflected in frequently strongly nationalistic articles written by Tudor. The party has called for the outlawing of the ethnic Hungarian party, the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania, for allegedly plotting the secession of Transylvania.[294]

Russia

The period of development of Russian fascism in the 1930s-1940s was characterized by sympathy for Italian fascism and German Nazism and pronounced anti-communism and antisemitism.

 
The Russian Fascist Party in the first half of the 20th century. The slogan "Let's get our homeland!" is also used by the modern far-right in Russia

Russian fascism has its roots in the movements known in history as the Black Hundreds and the White movement. It was distributed among white émigré circles living in Germany, Manchukuo, and the United States. In Germany and the United States (unlike Manchukuo), they practically did not conduct political activity, limiting themselves to the publication of newspapers and brochures.

Some ideologues of the white movement, such as Ivan Ilyin and Vasily Shulgin, welcomed the coming to power of Mussolini in Italy and Hitler in Germany, offering their comrades-in-arms the fascist "method" as a way to fight socialism, communism, and godlessness. At the same time, they did not deny fascist political repression and antisemitism and even justified them.[295]

With the outbreak of World War II, Russian fascists in Germany supported Nazi Germany and joined the ranks of Russian collaborators.

Some Russian neo-Nazi organizations are part of the international World Union of National Socialists (WUNS, founded in 1962). As of 2012, six Russian organizations are among the officially registered members of the union: National Resistance, National Socialist Movement - Russian Division, All-Russian Public Patriotic Movement "Russian National Unity", National Socialist Movement "Slavic Union" (prohibited by a court decision in June 2010), and others. The following organizations are not included in WUNS: the National Socialist Society (banned by a court decision in 2010), the Russian All-National Union (banned in September 2011), and others, such as skinheads: "Legion" Werewolf "" (liquidated in 1996), "Schultz-88" (liquidated in 2006), "White Wolves" (liquidated in 2008-2010), "New Order" (ceased to exist), " Russian goal "(ceased to exist), and others. Some of the more radical neo-Nazi organizations, using terrorist methods, belonged to skinhead groups such as the Werewolf Legion (liquidated in 1996), Schultz-88 (liquidated in 2006), White Wolves (liquidated in 2008— 2010), New Order (ceased to exist), "Russian Goal" (ceased to exist), and others.[296]

Until the end of the 1990s, one of the largest parties of Russian national extremists was the neo-Nazi socio-political movement "Russian National Unity" (RNE), founded by Alexander Barkashov in 1990. At the end of 1999, the RNE made an unsuccessful attempt to take part in the elections to the State Duma. Barkashov considered "true Orthodoxy" as a fusion of Christianity with paganism and advocated the "Russian God" and the "Aryan swastika" allegedly associated with it. He wrote about the Atlanteans, the Etruscans, and the "Aryan" civilization as the direct predecessors of the Russian nation, in a centuries-old struggle with the "Semites", the "world Jewish conspiracy", and the "dominance of the Jews in Russia". The symbol of the movement was a modified swastika. Barkashov was a parishioner of the "True Orthodox ("Catacomb") Church", and the first cells of the RNE were formed as brotherhoods and communities of the RTOC.[297]

The ideology of Russian neo-Nazism is closely connected with the ideology of Slavic neo-paganism (rodnovery). In a number of cases, there are also organizational ties between neo-Nazis and neo-pagans. One of the founders of Russian neo-paganism, the former dissident Alexey Dobrovolsky (pagan name - Dobroslav) shared the ideas of Nazism and transferred them to his neo-pagan teaching.[297][298] Modern Russian neo-paganism took shape in the second half[299] of the 1970s and is associated with the activities of Dobrovolsky and Moscow Arabist Valery Yemelyanov (neo-pagan name - Velemir),[300][298] both supporters of antisemitism. Rodnoverie is a popular religion among Russian skinheads.[301][302] These skinheads, however, do not usually practice their religion.[303]

Historian Dmitry Shlapentokh wrote that, as in Europe, neo-paganism in Russia pushes some of its adherents to antisemitism. This antisemitism is closely related to negative attitudes towards Asians, and this emphasis on racial factors can lead neo-pagans to neo-Nazism. The tendency of neo-pagans to antisemitism is a logical development of the ideas of neo-paganism and imitation of the Nazis, and is also a consequence of a number of specific conditions of modern Russian politics. Unlike previous regimes, the modern Russian political regime, as well as the ideology of the middle class, combines support for Orthodoxy with philosemitism and a positive attitude towards Muslims. These features of the regime contributed to the formation of specific views of neo-Nazi neo-pagans, which are represented to a large extent among the socially unprotected and marginalized Russian youth. In their opinion, power in Russia was usurped by a cabal of conspirators, including hierarchs of the Orthodox Church, Jews, and Muslims. Contrary to external differences, it is believed that these forces have united in their desire to maintain power over the Russian "Aryans".[304]

Serbia

 
Chetniks in Belgrade, 1920

In the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, multiple far-right organizations and parties operated during the late Interwar period such as the Yugoslav National Movement (Zbor), Yugoslav Radical Union (JRZ) and Organization of Yugoslav Nationalists (ORJUNA). Zbor was headed by Dimitrije Ljotić, who during the World War II collaborated with the Axis powers.[305] Ljotić was a supporter of Italian fascism,[306] and he advocated for the establishment of a centralized Yugoslav state that would be dominated by Serbs, and a return to Christian traditions.[307] Zbor was the only registered political party in Yugoslavia that openly promoted antisemitism and xenophobia.[308] JRZ was registered as a political party in 1934 by Milan Stojadinović, a right-wing politician who expressed his support towards Italian fascism during his premiership.[309] JRZ was initially a coalition made up of Stojadinović's, Anton Korošec's and Mehmed Spaho's supporters, and the party was the main stronghold for Yugoslav ethnic nationalists and supporters of Karađorđević dynasty.[310] ORJUNA was a prominent organization in the 1920s that was influenced by fascism.[306] During World War II, Chetniks, an ethnic ultranationalist movement rose to prominence.[311] Chetniks were staunchly anti-communist and they supported monarchism and the creation of a Greater Serbian state.[312][313] They, including their leader Draža Mihailović, collaborated with the Axis powers in the second half of the World War II.[314]

After the re-establishment of the multi-party system in Serbia in 1990, multiple right-wing movements and parties began getting popularity from which the Serbian Radical Party was the most successful.[306] Vojislav Šešelj, who founded the party, promoted popular notions of "international conspiracy against the Serbs" during the 1990s which gained him popularity in the 1992 and 1997 election.[315] During the 1990s, SRS has been also described as neofascist due to their vocal support of ethnic ultranationalism and irredentism.[316][317] Its popularity went into decline after the 2008 election when its acting leader Tomislav Nikolić seceded from the party to form the Serbian Progressive Party.[318] Besides SRS, during the 2000s multiple neofascist and Neo-Nazi movements began getting popular, such as Nacionalni stroj, Obraz and 1389 Movement.[319] Dveri, an organization turned political party, was also a prominent promoter of far-right content, and they were mainly known for their clerical-fascist, socially conservative and anti-Western stances.[320][321] Since 2019, the far-right Serbian Party Oathkeepers has gained popularity mainly due to their ultranationalist views,[322] including the openly neofascist Leviathan Movement.[323][324]

United Kingdom

The British far-right rose out of the fascist movement. In 1932, Oswald Mosley founded the British Union of Fascists (BUF) which was banned during World War II.[325] Founded in 1954 by A. K. Chesterton, the League of Empire Loyalists became the main British far-right group at the time. It was a pressure group rather than a political party, and did not contest elections. Most of its members were part of the Conservative Party and were known for politically embarrassing stunts at party conferences.[326] Other fascist parties included the National Front (NF), the White Defence League and the National Labour Party who eventually merged to form the British National Party (BNP).[327]

With the decline of the British Empire becoming inevitable, British far-right parties turned their attention to internal matters. The 1950s had seen an increase in immigration to the UK from its former colonies, particularly India, Pakistan, the Caribbean and Uganda. Led by John Bean and Andrew Fountaine, the BNP opposed the admittance of these people to the UK. A number of its rallies such as one in 1962 in Trafalgar Square ended in race riots. After a few early successes, the party got into difficulties and was destroyed by internal arguments. In 1967 it joined forces with John Tyndall and the remnants of Chesterton's League of Empire Loyalists to form Britain's largest far-right organisation, the National Front (NF).[328] The BNP and the NF supported extreme loyalism in Northern Ireland, and attracted Conservative Party members who had become disillusioned after Harold Macmillan had recognised the right to independence of the African colonies and had criticised Apartheid in South Africa.[329]

Some Northern Irish loyalist paramilitaries have links with far-right and neo-Nazi groups in Britain, including Combat 18,[330][331] the British National Socialist Movement[332] and the NF.[333] Since the 1990s, loyalist paramilitaries have been responsible for numerous racist attacks in loyalist areas.[334] During the 1970s, the NF's rallies became a regular feature of British politics. Election results remained strong in a few working-class urban areas, with a number of local council seats won, but the party never came anywhere near winning representation in parliament.

Since the 1970s, the NF's support has been in decline whilst Nick Griffin and the BNP grew in popularity. Around the turn of the 21st century, the BNP won a number of councillor seats. At its peak in the late 2000s, the party had 54 local council seats, one seat in the Greater London Assembly, two seats in the European Parliament, and were the official opposition in the Barking and Dagenham London Borough Council. They won almost a million votes in the 2009 European Parliament elections, and contested the majority of seats in the UK in the 2010 general election. The party's membership was 12,632 and its financial resources financial resources were an estimated £1,983,947.[41] By the early 2010s the BNP saw its support and membership quickly collapse due to internal divisions caused by a disappointing performance in the 2010 elections. Griffin was ousted as leader in 2014 after losing his European Parliament seat, and since then the party has been in terminal decline under the leadership of Adam Walker.

A number of breakaway groups have been established by former members of the BNP, such as Britain First by ex-councillor Paul Golding, the British Democrats by ex-MEP and leadership candidate Andrew Brons, as well as Patriotic Alternative by Mark Collett. UK Independence Party (UKIP) leader Nigel Farage claimed that his party absorbed much of the BNP's former voters during their electoral peak in the early 2010s.[335] The party was accused of shifting towards far-right, anti-Islam politics under the leadership of Paul Nuttall and Gerard Batten during its decline the late 2010s. Anti-Islam activist and former UKIP leadership candidate Anne Marie Waters established the far-right For Britain Movement, which gained a small number of ex-BNP councillors. It was deregistered in 2022, and subsequently a large portion of prominent far-right activists began coalescing around the British Democrats, which has quickly established itself as the UK's only far-right party with any electoral representation.

Oceania

Australia

 
Captain Francis de Groot declares the Sydney Harbour Bridge open in March 1932.

Coming to prominence in Sydney with the formation of the New Guard (1931) and the Centre Party (1933), the far right has played a part in Australian political discourse since the second world war.[336] These proto-fascist groups were monarchist, anti-communist and authoritarian in nature. Early far-right groups were followed by the explicitly fascist Australia First Movement (1941).[337][338] The far right in Australia went on to acquire more explicitly racial connotations during the 1960s and 1970s, morphing into self-proclaimed Nazi, fascist and antisemitic movements, organisations that opposed non-white and non-Christian immigration such as the neo-Nazi National Socialist Party of Australia (1967) and the militant white supremacist group National Action (1982).[339][340][341]

Since the 1980s, the term has mainly been used to describe those who express the wish to preserve what they perceive to be Judeo-Christian, Anglo-Australian culture and those who campaign against Aboriginal land rights, multiculturalism, immigration and asylum seekers. Since 2001, Australia has seen the development of modern neo-Nazi, neo-fascist or alt-right groups such as the True Blue Crew, the United Patriots Front, Fraser Anning's Conservative National Party and the Antipodean Resistance.[342]

New Zealand

A small number of far-right organisations have existed in New Zealand since World War II, including the Conservative Front, the New Zealand National Front and the National Democrats Party.[343][344] Far-right parties in New Zealand lack significant support, with their protests often dwarfed by counter protest.[345] After the Christchurch mosque shootings in 2019, the National Front "publicly shut up shop"[346] and largely went underground like other far-right groups.[347]

Fiji

Nationalist Vanua Tako Lavo Party

The Nationalist Vanua Tako Lavo Party was a far-right political party which advocated Fijian ethnic nationalism.[348] In 2009, party leader Iliesa Duvuloco was arrested for breaching the military regime's emergency laws by distributing pamphlets calling for an uprising against the military regime.[349] In January 2013, the military regime introduced regulations that essentially de-registered the party.[350][351]

Online

A number of far-right internet pages and forums are focused on and frequented by the far right. These include Stormfront and Iron March.

Stormfront

Stormfront is the oldest and most prominent neo-Nazi website,[352] described by the Southern Poverty Law Center and other media organizations as the "murder capital of the internet".[353] In August 2017, Stormfront was taken offline for just over a month when its registrar seized its domain name due to complaints that it promoted hatred and that some of its members were linked to murder. The Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law claimed credit for the action after advocating for Stormfront's web host, Network Solutions, to enforce its Terms of Service agreement which prohibits users from using its services to incite violence.[354]

Iron March

Iron March was a fascist web forum founded in 2011 by Russian nationalist Alexander "Slavros" Mukhitdinov. An unknown individual uploaded a database of Iron March users to the Internet Archive in November 2019 and multiple neo-Nazi users were identified, including an ICE detention center captain and several active members of the United States Armed Forces.[355][356] As of mid 2018, the Southern Poverty Law Center linked Iron March to nearly 100 murders.[357][355] Mukhitdinov remained a murky figure at the time of the leaks.[358]

Terrorgram

The Terrorgram community on Telegram is a network of Telegram channels and accounts that subscribe to and promote militant accelerationism. Terrorgram channels are neofascist in ideology, and regularly share instructions and manuals on how to carry out acts of racially-motivated violence and anti-government, anti-authority terrorism.[359] In 2021, the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD), an international think-tank, exposed more than two hundred neo-Nazi pro-terrorism telegram channels that make up the Terrorgram network, many of which contained instructions to build weapons and bombs.[360][361][362]

Right-wing terrorism

Right-wing terrorism is terrorism motivated by a variety of far right ideologies and beliefs, including anti-communism, neo-fascism, neo-Nazism, racism, xenophobia and opposition to immigration. This type of terrorism has been sporadic, with little or no international cooperation.[363] Modern right-wing terrorism first appeared in western Europe in the 1980s and it first appeared in Eastern Europe following the dissolution of the Soviet Union.[364]

Right-wing terrorists aim to overthrow governments and replace them with nationalist or fascist-oriented governments.[363] The core of this movement includes neo-fascist skinheads, far-right hooligans, youth sympathisers and intellectual guides who believe that the state must rid itself of foreign elements in order to protect rightful citizens.[364] However, they usually lack a rigid ideology.[364]

According to Cas Mudde, far-right terrorism and violence in the West have been generally perpetrated in recent times by individuals or groups of individuals "who have at best a peripheral association" with politically relevant organizations of the far right. Nevertheless, Mudde follows, "in recent years far-right violence has become more planned, regular, and lethal, as terrorists attacks in Christchurch (2019), Pittsburgh (2018), and Norway (2011) show."[26]

See also

References

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right, politics, also, referred, extreme, right, right, wing, extremism, political, beliefs, actions, further, right, left, right, political, spectrum, than, standard, political, right, particularly, terms, being, radically, conservative, ultra, nationalist, a. Far right politics also referred to as the extreme right or right wing extremism are political beliefs and actions further to the right of the left right political spectrum than the standard political right particularly in terms of being radically conservative ultra nationalist and authoritarian as well as having nativist ideologies and tendencies 1 Historically far right politics has been used to describe the experiences of fascism Nazism and Falangism Contemporary definitions now include neo fascism neo Nazism the Third Position the alt right racial supremacism and other ideologies or organizations that feature aspects of authoritarian ultra nationalist chauvinist xenophobic theocratic racist homophobic transphobic and or reactionary views 2 Far right politics have led to oppression political violence forced assimilation ethnic cleansing and genocide against groups of people based on their supposed inferiority or their perceived threat to the native ethnic group nation state national religion dominant culture or conservative social institutions 3 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Concept and worldview 1 2 Definition and comparative analysis 2 Modern debates 2 1 Terminology 2 2 Relation to right wing politics 2 3 Nature of support 3 Intellectual history 3 1 Background 3 2 Emergence 3 3 Volkisch and revolutionary right 3 4 Contemporary thought 4 International organizations 5 History by country 5 1 Africa 5 1 1 Rwanda 5 1 1 1 Interahamwe 5 1 1 2 Coalition for the Defence of the Republic 5 1 2 South Africa 5 1 2 1 Herstigte Nasionale Party 5 1 2 2 Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging 5 1 3 Togo 5 2 Americas 5 2 1 Brazil 5 2 2 Central American death squads 5 2 3 Chile 5 2 3 1 Death squads in El Salvador 5 2 3 2 Death squads in Honduras 5 2 4 Mexico 5 2 4 1 National Synarchist Union 5 2 5 Peru 5 2 6 United States 5 2 6 1 Radical right 5 3 Asia 5 3 1 Japan 5 4 Europe 5 4 1 Croatia 5 4 2 Estonia 5 4 3 Finland 5 4 4 France 5 4 5 Germany 5 4 6 Greece 5 4 6 1 Metaxism 5 4 6 2 Axis occupation of Greece and aftermath 5 4 7 Hungary 5 4 8 Italy 5 4 9 Netherlands 5 4 10 Poland 5 4 11 Romania 5 4 12 Russia 5 4 13 Serbia 5 4 14 United Kingdom 5 5 Oceania 5 5 1 Australia 5 5 2 New Zealand 5 5 3 Fiji 5 5 3 1 Nationalist Vanua Tako Lavo Party 6 Online 6 1 Stormfront 6 2 Iron March 6 3 Terrorgram 7 Right wing terrorism 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 9 2 Notes 10 Further reading 11 External linksOverviewConcept and worldview Benito Mussolini dictator and founder of Italian Fascism a far right ideology According to scholars Jean Yves Camus and Nicolas Lebourg the core of the far right s worldview is organicism the idea that society functions as a complete organized and homogeneous living being Adapted to the community they wish to constitute or reconstitute whether based on ethnicity nationality religion or race the concept leads them to reject every form of universalism in favor of autophilia and alterophobia or in other words the idealization of a we excluding a they 4 The far right tends to absolutize differences between nations races individuals or cultures since they disrupt their efforts towards the utopian dream of the closed and naturally organized society perceived as the condition to ensure the rebirth of a community finally reconnected to its quasi eternal nature and re established on firm metaphysical foundations 5 6 As they view their community in a state of decay facilitated by the ruling elites far right members portray themselves as a natural sane and alternative elite with the redemptive mission of saving society from its promised doom They reject both their national political system and the global geopolitical order including their institutions and values e g political liberalism and egalitarian humanism which are presented as needing to be abandoned or purged of their impurities so that the redemptive community can eventually leave the current phase of liminal crisis to usher in the new era 4 6 The community itself is idealized through great archetypal figures the Golden Age the savior decadence and global conspiracy theories as they glorify non rationalistic and non materialistic values such as the youth or the cult of the dead 4 Political scientist Cas Mudde argues that the far right can be viewed as a combination of four broadly defined concepts namely exclusivism e g racism xenophobia ethnocentrism ethnopluralism chauvinism including welfare chauvinism anti democratic and non individualist traits e g cult of personality hierarchism monism populism anti particracy an organicist view of the state a traditionalist value system lamenting the disappearance of historic frames of reference e g law and order the family the ethnic linguistic and religious community and nation as well as the natural environment and a socioeconomic program associating corporatism state control of certain sectors agrarianism and a varying degree of belief in the free play of socially Darwinistic market forces Mudde then proposes a subdivision of the far right nebula into moderate and radical leanings according to their degree of exclusionism and essentialism 7 8 Definition and comparative analysis The Encyclopedia of Politics The Left and the Right states that far right politics include persons or groups who hold extreme nationalist xenophobic racist religious fundamentalist or other reactionary views While the term far right is typically applied to fascists and neo Nazis it has also been used to refer to those to the right of mainstream right wing politics 9 According to political scientist Lubomir Kopecek t he best working definition of the contemporary far right may be the four element combination of nationalism xenophobia law and order and welfare chauvinism proposed for the Western European environment by Cas Mudde 10 Relying on those concepts far right politics includes yet is not limited to aspects of authoritarianism anti communism 10 and nativism 11 Claims that superior people should have greater rights than inferior people are often associated with the far right as they have historically favored a social Darwinistic or elitist hierarchy based on the belief in the legitimacy of the rule of a supposed superior minority over the inferior masses 12 Regarding the socio cultural dimension of nationality culture and migration one far right position is the view that certain ethnic racial or religious groups should stay separate based on the belief that the interests of one s own group should be prioritized 13 In western Europe far right parties have been associated with anti immigrant policies as well as opposition to globalism and European integration They often make nationalist and xenophobic appeals which make allusions to ethnic nationalism rather than civic nationalism or liberal nationalism Some have at their core illiberal policies such as removing checks on executive authority and protections for minorities from majority multipluralism In the 1990s the winning formula was often to attract anti immigrant blue collar workers and white collar workers who wanted less state intervention in the economy but in the 2000s this switched to welfare chauvinism 14 In comparing the Western European and post Communist Central European far right Kopecek writes that t he Central European far right was also typified by a strong anti Communism much more markedly than in Western Europe allowing for a basic ideological classification within a unified party family despite the heterogeneity of the far right parties Kopecek concludes that a comparison of Central European far right parties with those of Western Europe shows that these four elements are present in Central Europe as well though in a somewhat modified form despite differing political economic and social influences 10 In the American and more general Anglo Saxon environment the most common term is radical right which has a broader meaning than the European radical right 15 10 Mudde defines the American radical right as an old school of nativism populism and hostility to central government which was said to have developed into the post World War II combination of ultranationalism and anti communism Christian fundamentalism militaristic orientation and anti alien sentiment 15 Jodi Dean argues that the rise of far right anti communism in many parts of the world should be interpreted as a politics of fear which utilizes the disaffection and anger generated by capitalism Partisans of far right wing organizations in turn use anti communism to challenge every political current which is not embedded in a clearly exposed nationalist and racist agenda For them both the USSR and the European Union leftist liberals ecologists and supranational corporations all of these may be called communist for the sake of their expediency 16 In Hate in the Homeland The New Global Far Right Cynthia Miller Idriss examines the far right as a global movement and representing a cluster of overlapping antidemocratic antiegalitarian white supremacist beliefs that are embedded in solutions like authoritarianism ethnic cleansing or ethnic migration and the establishment of separate ethno states or enclaves along racial and ethnic lines 17 Modern debatesTerminology According to Jean Yves Camus and Nicolas Lebourg the modern ambiguities in the definition of far right politics lie in the fact that the concept is generally used by political adversaries to disqualify and stigmatize all forms of partisan nationalism by reducing them to the historical experiments of Italian Fascism and German National Socialism 18 Mudde agrees and notes that the term is not only used for scientific purposes but also for political purposes Several authors define right wing extremism as a sort of anti thesis against their own beliefs 19 While the existence of such a political position is widely accepted among scholars figures associated with the far right rarely accept this denomination preferring terms like national movement or national right 18 There is also debate about how appropriate the labels neo fascist or neo Nazi are In the words of Mudde the labels Neo Nazi and to a lesser extent neo Fascism are now used exclusively for parties and groups that explicitly state a desire to restore the Third Reich or quote historical National Socialism as their ideological influence 20 One issue is whether parties should be labelled radical or extreme a distinction that is made by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany when determining whether or not a party should be banned nb 1 Within the broader family of the far right the extreme right is revolutionary opposing popular sovereignty and majority rule and sometimes supporting violence whereas the radical right is reformist accepting free elections but opposing fundamental elements of liberal democracy such as minority rights rule of law or separation of powers 21 After a survey of the academic literature Mudde concluded in 2002 that the terms right wing extremism right wing populism national populism or neo populism were often used as synonyms by scholars in any case with striking similarities except notably among a few authors studying the extremist theoretical tradition nb 2 Relation to right wing politics Italian philosopher and political scientist Norberto Bobbio argues that attitudes towards equality are primarily what distinguish left wing politics from right wing politics on the political spectrum 22 the left considers the key inequalities between people to be artificial and negative which should be overcome by an active state whereas the right believes that inequalities between people are natural and positive and should be either defended or left alone by the state 23 Aspects of far right ideology can be identified in the agenda of some contemporary right wing parties in particular the idea that superior persons should dominate society while undesirable elements should be purged which in extreme cases has resulted in genocides 24 Charles Grant director of the Centre for European Reform in London distinguishes between fascism and right wing nationalist parties which are often described as far right such as the National Front in France 25 Mudde notes that the most successful European far right parties in 2019 were former mainstream right wing parties that have turned into populist radical right ones 26 According to historian Mark Sedgwick t here is no general agreement as to where the mainstream ends and the extreme starts and if there ever had been agreement on this the recent shift in the mainstream would challenge it 27 Proponents of the horseshoe theory interpretation of the left right political spectrum identify the far left and the far right as having more in common with each other as extremists than each of them has with centrists or moderates 28 However the horseshoe theory does not enjoy support within academic circles 29 and has received criticism 29 30 31 including the view that it has been centrists who have supported far right and fascist regimes over socialist ones 32 Nature of support Jens Rydgren describes a number of theories as to why individuals support far right political parties and the academic literature on this topic distinguishes between demand side theories that have changed the interests emotions attitudes and preferences of voters and supply side theories which focus on the programmes of parties their organization and the opportunity structures within individual political systems 33 The most common demand side theories are the social breakdown thesis the relative deprivation thesis the modernization losers thesis and the ethnic competition thesis 34 The rise of far right parties has also been viewed as a rejection of post materialist values on the part of some voters This theory which is known as the reverse post material thesis blames both left wing and progressive parties for embracing a post material agenda including feminism and environmentalism that alienates traditional working class voters 35 36 Another study argues that individuals who join far right parties determine whether those parties develop into major political players or whether they remain marginalized 37 Early academic studies adopted psychoanalytical explanations for the far right s support The 1933 publication The Mass Psychology of Fascism by Wilhelm Reich argued the theory that fascists came to power in Germany as a result of sexual repression For some far right parties in Western Europe the issue of immigration has become the dominant issue among them so much so that some scholars refer to these parties as anti immigrant parties 38 Intellectual historyBackground The French Revolution in 1789 created a major shift in political thought by challenging the established ideas supporting hierarchy with new ones about universal equality and freedom 39 The modern left right political spectrum also emerged during this period Democrats and proponents of universal suffrage were located on the left side of the elected French Assembly while monarchists seated farthest to the right 18 The strongest opponents of liberalism and democracy during the 19th century such as Joseph de Maistre and Friedrich Nietzsche were highly critical of the French Revolution 39 Those who advocated a return to the absolute monarchy during the 19th century called themselves ultra monarchists and embraced a mystic and providentialist vision of the world where royal dynasties were seen as the repositories of divine will The opposition to liberal modernity was based on the belief that hierarchy and rootedness are more important than equality and liberty with the latter two being dehumanizing 40 Emergence In the French public debate following the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 far right was used to describe the strongest opponents of the far left those who supported the events occurring in Russia 5 A number of thinkers on the far right nonetheless claimed an influence from an anti Marxist and anti egalitarian interpretation of socialism based on a military comradeship that rejected Marxist class analysis or what Oswald Spengler had called a socialism of the blood which is sometimes described by scholars as a form of socialist revisionism 41 They included Charles Maurras Benito Mussolini Arthur Moeller van den Bruck and Ernst Niekisch 42 43 44 Those thinkers eventually split along nationalist lines from the original communist movement Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels contradicting nationalist theories with the idea that the working men had no country 45 The main reason for that ideological confusion can be found in the consequences of the Franco Prussian War of 1870 which according to Swiss historian Philippe Burrin had completely redesigned the political landscape in Europe by diffusing the idea of an anti individualistic concept of national unity rising above the right and left division 44 As the concept of the masses was introduced into the political debate through industrialization and the universal suffrage a new right wing founded on national and social ideas began to emerge what Zeev Sternhell has called the revolutionary right and a foreshadowing of fascism The rift between the left and nationalists was furthermore accentuated by the emergence of anti militarist and anti patriotic movements like anarchism or syndicalism which shared even less similarities with the far right 45 The latter began to develop a nationalist mysticism entirely different from that on the left and antisemitism turned into a credo of the far right marking a break from the traditional economic anti Judaism defended by parts of the far left in favour of a racial and pseudo scientific notion of alterity Various nationalist leagues began to form across Europe like the Pan German League or the Ligue des Patriotes with the common goal of a uniting the masses beyond social divisions 46 47 Volkisch and revolutionary right Spanish Falangist volunteer forces of the Blue Division entrain at San Sebastian 1942 The Volkisch movement emerged in the late 19th century drawing inspiration from German Romanticism and its fascination for a medieval Reich supposedly organized into a harmonious hierarchical order Erected on the idea of blood and soil it was a racialist populist agrarian romantic nationalist and an antisemitic movement from the 1900s onward as a consequence of a growing exclusive and racial connotation 48 They idealized the myth of an original nation that still could be found at their times in the rural regions of Germany a form of primitive democracy freely subjected to their natural elites 43 Thinkers led by Arthur de Gobineau Houston Stewart Chamberlain Alexis Carrel and Georges Vacher de Lapouge distorted Darwin s theory of evolution to advocate a race struggle and an hygienist vision of the world The purity of the bio mystical and primordial nation theorized by the Volkischen then began to be seen as corrupted by foreign elements Jewish in particular 48 Translated in Maurice Barres concept of the earth and the dead these ideas influenced the pre fascist revolutionary right across Europe The latter had its origin in the fin de siecle intellectual crisis and it was in the words of Fritz Stern the deep cultural despair of thinkers feeling uprooted within the rationalism and scientism of the modern world 49 It was characterized by a rejection of the established social order with revolutionary tendencies and anti capitalist stances a populist and plebiscitary dimension the advocacy of violence as a means of action and a call for individual and collective palingenesis regeneration rebirth 50 Contemporary thoughtThe key thinkers of contemporary far right politics are claimed by Mark Sedgwick to share four key elements namely apocalyptism fear of global elites belief in Carl Schmitt s friend enemy distinction and the idea of metapolitics 51 The apocalyptic strain of thought begins in Oswald Spengler s The Decline of the West and is shared by Julius Evola and Alain de Benoist It continues in The Death of the West by Pat Buchanan as well as in the fears of Islamization of Europe 51 Related to it is the fear of global elites who are seen as responsible for the decline 51 Ernst Junger was concerned about rootless cosmopolitan elites while de Benoist and Buchanan oppose the managerial state and Curtis Yarvin is against the Cathedral 51 Schmitt s friend enemy distinction has inspired the French Nouvelle Droite idea of ethnopluralism which has become highly influential on the alt right when combined with American racism 51 CasaPound rally in Naples In a 1961 book deemed influential in the European far right at large French neo fascist writer Maurice Bardeche introduced the idea that fascism could survive the 20th century under a new metapolitical guise adapted to the changes of the times Rather than trying to revive doomed regimes with their single party secret police or public display of Caesarism Bardeche argued that its theorists should promote the core philosophical idea of fascism regardless of its framework 6 i e the concept that only a minority the physically saner the morally purer the most conscious of national interest can represent best the community and serve the less gifted in what Bardeche calls a new feudal contract 52 Another influence on contemporary far right thought has been the Traditionalist School which included Julius Evola and has influenced Steve Bannon and Aleksandr Dugin advisors to Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin as well as the Jobbik party in Hungary 53 Regarding Latin America Rene Leal of the University of Santiago Chile notes that the oppressive exploitation of labor under neoliberal governments in the region precipitated the growth of far right politics in the region 54 International organizations National origins of Fascist International Congress participants in 1934 During the rise of Nazi Germany far right international organizations began to emerge in the 1930s with the International Conference of Fascist Parties in 1932 and the Fascist International Congress in 1934 55 During the 1934 Fascist International Conference the Comitati d Azione per l Universalita di Roma it CAUR English Action Committees for the Universality of Rome created by Benito Mussolini s Fascist Regime to create a network for a Fascist International representatives from far right groups gathered in Montreux Switzerland including Romania s Iron Guard Norway s Nasjonal Samling the Greek National Socialist Party Spain s Falange movement Ireland s Blueshirts France s Mouvement Franciste and Portugal s Uniao Nacional among others 56 57 However no international group was fully established before the outbreak of World War II 55 Following World War II other far right organizations attempted to establish themselves such as the European organizations of Nouvel Ordre Europeen European Social Movement and Circulo Espanol de Amigos de Europa or the further reaching World Union of National Socialists and the League for Pan Nordic Friendship 58 Beginning in the 1980s far right groups began to solidify themselves through official political avenues 58 With the founding of the European Union in 1993 far right groups began to espouse Euroscepticism nationalist and anti migrant beliefs 55 By 2010 the Eurosceptic group European Alliance for Freedom emerged and saw some prominence during the 2014 European Parliament election 55 58 The majority of far right groups in the 2010s began to establish international contacts with right wing coalitions to develop a solidified platform 55 In 2017 Steve Bannon would create The Movement an organization to create an international far right group based on Aleksandr Dugin s The Fourth Political Theory for the 2019 European Parliament election 59 60 The European Alliance for Freedom would also reorganize into Identity and Democracy for the 2019 European Parliament election 58 The far right Spanish party Vox initially introduced the Madrid Charter project a planned group to denounce left wing groups in Ibero America to the government of United States president Donald Trump while visiting the United States in February 2019 with Santiago Abascal and Rafael Bardaji using their good relations with the administration to build support within the Republican Party and establishing strong ties with American contacts 60 61 62 In March 2019 Abascal tweeted an image of himself wearing a morion similar to a conquistador with ABC writing in an article detailing the document that this event provided a narrative that symbolizes in part the expansionist mood of Vox and its ideology far from Spain 63 The charter subsequently grew to include signers that had little to no relation to Latin America and Spanish speaking areas 64 Vox has advised Javier Milei in Argentina the Bolsonaro family in Brazil Jose Antonio Kast in Chile and Keiko Fujimori in Peru 65 Nationalists from Europe and the United States met at a Holiday Inn in St Petersburg on March 22 2015 for first convention of the International Russian Conservative Forum organized by pro Putin Rodina party The event was attended by fringe right wing extremists like Nordic Resistance Movement from Scandinavia but also by more mainstream MEPs from Golden Dawn and National Democratic Party of Germany In addition to Rodina Russian neo Nazis from Russian Imperial Movement and Rusich Group were also in attendance From the US the event was attended by Jared Taylor and Brandon Russell 66 67 68 69 70 History by countryAfrica See also Fascism in Africa Rwanda Photographs of genocide victims displayed at the Genocide Memorial Center in Kigali A number of far right extremist and paramilitary groups carried out the Rwandan genocide under the racial supremacist ideology of Hutu Power developed by journalist and Hutu supremacist Hassan Ngeze 71 On 5 July 1975 exactly two years after the 1973 Rwandan coup d etat the far right National Republican Movement for Democracy and Development MRND was founded under president Juvenal Habyarimana Between 1975 and 1991 the MRND was the only legal political party in the country It was dominated by Hutus particularly from Habyarimana s home region of Northern Rwanda An elite group of MRND party members who were known to have influence on the President and his wife Agathe Habyarimana are known as the akazu an informal organization of Hutu extremists whose members planned and lead the 1994 Rwandan genocide 72 73 Prominent Hutu businessman and member of the akazu Felicien Kabuga was one of the genocides main financiers providing thousands of machetes which were used to commit the genocide 74 Kabuga also founded Radio Television Libre des Mille Collines used to broadcast propaganda and direct the genocidaires Kabuga was arrested in France On 16 May 2020 and charged with crimes against humanity 75 Interahamwe Main article Interahamwe The Interahamwe was formed around 1990 as the youth wing of the MRND and enjoyed the backing of the Hutu Power government The Interahamwe were driven out of Rwanda after Tutsi led Rwandan Patriotic Front victory in the Rwandan Civil War in July 1994 and are considered a terrorist organisation by many African and Western governments The Interahamwe and splinter groups such as the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda continue to wage an insurgency against Rwanda from neighboring countries where they are also involved in local conflicts and terrorism The Interahamwe were the main perpetrators of the Rwandan genocide during which an estimated 500 000 to 1 000 000 Tutsi Twa and moderate Hutus were killed from April to July 1994 and the term Interahamwe was widened to mean any civilian bands killing Tutsi 76 77 Coalition for the Defence of the Republic Main article Coalition for the Defence of the Republic Other far right groups and paramilitaries involved included the anti democratic segregationist Coalition for the Defence of the Republic CDR which called for complete segregation of Hutus from Tutsis The CDR had a paramilitary wing known as the Impuzamugambi Together with the Interahamwe militia the Impuzamugambi played a central role in the Rwandan genocide 78 71 South Africa Herstigte Nasionale Party Main article Herstigte Nasionale Party The far right in South Africa emerged as the Herstigte Nasionale Party HNP in 1969 formed by Albert Hertzog as breakaway from the predominant right wing South African National Party an Afrikaner ethno nationalist party that implemented the racist segregationist program of apartheid the legal system of political economic and social separation of the races intended to maintain and extend political and economic control of South Africa by the White minority 79 80 81 The HNP was formed after the South African National Party re established diplomatic relations with Malawi and legislated to allow Maori players and spectators to enter the country during the 1970 New Zealand rugby union team tour in South Africa 82 The HNP advocated for a Calvinist racially segregated and Afrikaans speaking nation 83 Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging Main article Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging In 1973 Eugene Terre Blanche a former police officer founded the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging Afrikaner Resistance Movement a South African neo Nazi paramilitary organisation often described as a white supremacist group 84 85 86 Since its founding in 1973 by Eugene Terre Blanche and six other far right Afrikaners it has been dedicated to secessionist Afrikaner nationalism and the creation of an independent Boer Afrikaner republic in part of South Africa During negotiations to end apartheid in South Africa in the early 1990s the organization terrorized and killed black South Africans 87 Togo Main article Human rights in Togo Togo has been ruled by members of the Gnassingbe family and the far right military dictatorship formerly known as the Rally of the Togolese People since 1969 Despite the legalisation of political parties in 1991 and the ratification of a democratic constitution in 1992 the regime continues to be regarded as oppressive In 1993 the European Union cut off aid in reaction to the regime s human rights offenses After s Eyadema s death in 2005 his son Faure Gnassingbe took over then stood down and was re elected in elections that were widely described as fraudulent and occasioned violence that resulted in as many as 600 deaths and the flight from Togo of 40 000 refugees 88 In 2012 Faure Gnassingbe dissolved the RTP and created the Union for the Republic 89 90 91 Throughout the reign of the Gnassingbe family Togo has been extremely oppressive According to a United States Department of State report based on conditions in 2010 human rights abuses are common and include security force use of excessive force including torture which resulted in deaths and injuries official impunity harsh and life threatening prison conditions arbitrary arrests and detention lengthy pretrial detention executive influence over the judiciary infringement of citizens privacy rights restrictions on freedoms of press assembly and movement official corruption discrimination and violence against women child abuse including female genital mutilation FGM and sexual exploitation of children regional and ethnic discrimination trafficking in persons especially women and children societal discrimination against persons with disabilities official and societal discrimination against homosexual persons societal discrimination against persons with HIV and forced labor including by children 92 Americas See also Fascism in North America and Fascism in South America Brazil Children make the Nazi salute in Presidente Bernardes Sao Paulo circa 1935 During the 1920s and 1930s a local brand of religious fascism appeared known as Brazilian Integralism coalescing around the party known as Brazilian Integralist Action It adopted many characteristics of European fascist movements including a green shirted paramilitary organization with uniformed ranks highly regimented street demonstrations and rhetoric against Marxism and liberalism 93 Prior to World War II the Nazi Party had been making and distributing propaganda among ethnic Germans in Brazil The Nazi regime built close ties with Brazil through the estimated 100 thousand native Germans and 1 million German descendants living in Brazil at the time 94 In 1928 the Brazilian section of the Nazi Party was founded in Timbo Santa Catarina This section reached 2 822 members and was the largest section of the Nazi Party outside Germany 95 96 About 100 thousand born Germans and about one million descendants lived in Brazil at that time 97 After Germany s defeat in World War II many Nazi war criminals fled to Brazil and hid among the German Brazilian communities The most notable example of this was Josef Mengele a Nazi SS officer and physician known as the Angel of Death for his deadly experiments on prisoners at the Auschwitz II Birkenau concentration camp who fled first to Argentina then Paraguay before finally settling in Brazil in 1960 Mengele eventually drowned in 1979 in Bertioga on the coast of Sao Paulo state without ever having been recognized in his 19 years in Brazil 98 The far right has continued to operate throughout Brazil 99 and a number of far right parties existed in the modern era including Patriota the Brazilian Labour Renewal Party the Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order the National Renewal Alliance and the Social Liberal Party as well as death squads such as the Command for Hunting Communists President of Brazil Jair Bolsonaro is a member of the Alliance for Brazil a far right nationalist political group that aims to become a political party 100 101 102 Bolsonaro has been widely described by numerous media organizations as far right 103 Central American death squads Main article National Liberation Movement Guatemala In Guatemala the far right 104 105 government of Carlos Castillo Armas utilized death squads after coming to power in the 1954 Guatemalan coup d etat 104 105 Along with other far right extremists Castillo Armas started the National Liberation Movement Movimiento de Liberacion Nacional or MLN The founders of the party described it as the party of organized violence 106 The new government promptly reversed the democratic reforms initiated during the Guatemalan Revolution and the agrarian reform program Decree 900 that was the main project of president Jacobo Arbenz Guzman and which directly impacted the interests of both the United Fruit Company and the Guatemalan landowners 107 Mano Blanca otherwise known as the Movement of Organized Nationalist Action was set up in 1966 as a front for the MLN to carry out its more violent activities 108 109 along with many other similar groups including the New Anticommunist Organization and the Anticommunist Council of Guatemala 106 110 Mano Blanca was active during the governments of colonel Carlos Arana Osorio and general Kjell Laugerud Garcia and was dissolved by general Fernando Romeo Lucas Garcia in 1978 111 Armed with the support and coordination of the Guatemalan Armed Forces Mano Blanca began a campaign described by the United States Department of State as one of kidnappings torture and summary execution 109 One of the main targets of Mano Blanca was the Revolutionary Party an anti communist group that was the only major reform oriented party allowed to operate under the military dominated regime Other targets included the banned leftist parties 109 Human rights activist Blase Bonpane described the activities of Mano Blanca as being an integral part of the policy of the Guatemalan government and by extension the policy of the United States government and the Central Intelligence Agency 107 112 Overall Mano Blanca was responsible for thousands of murders and kidnappings leading travel writer Paul Theroux to refer to them as Guatemala s version of a volunteer Gestapo unit 113 Chile Dictator of Chile Augusto Pinochet meeting with United States President George H W Bush in 1990 The National Socialist Movement of Chile MNSCH was created in the 1930s with the funding from the German population in Chile 114 In 1938 the MNSCH was dissolved after it attempted a coup and recreated itself as the Popular Freedom Alliance party later merging with the Agrarian Party to create the Agrarian Labor Party PAL 115 PAL would go through various mergers to become the Partido Nacional Popular Chile es then National Action and finally the National Party Following the fall of Nazi Germany many Nazis fled to Chile 116 The National Party supported the 1973 Chilean coup d etat that established the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet with many members assuming positions in Pinochet s government Pinochet headed a far right dictatorship in Chile from 1973 to 1990 54 117 According to author Peter Levenda Pinochet was openly pro Nazi and used former Gestapo members to train his own Direccion de Inteligencia Nacional DINA personnel 116 Pinochet s DINA sent political prisoners to the Chilean German town of Colonia Dignidad with the town s actions being defended by the Pinochet government 116 118 119 The Central Intelligence Agency and Simon Wiesenthal also provided evidence of Josef Mengele the infamous Nazi concentration camp doctor known as the Angel of Death for his lethal experiments on human subjects being present in Colonia Dignidad 116 119 Former DINA member Michael Townley also stated that biological warfare weapons experiments occurred at the colony 120 Following the end of Pinochet s government the National Party would split to become the more centrist National Renewal RN while individuals who supported Pinochet organized Independent Democratic Union UDI UDI is a far right political party that was formed by former Pinochet officials 121 122 123 124 In 2019 the far right Republican Party was founded by Jose Antonio Kast a UDI politician who believed his former party criticized Pinochet too often 125 126 127 128 According to Cox and Blanco the Republican Party appeared in Chilean politics in a similar manner to Spain s Vox party with both parties splitting off from an existing right wing party to collect disillusioned voters 129 Death squads in El Salvador Main article Death squads in El Salvador A billboard serving as a reminder of one of many massacres in El Salvador that occurred during the civil war During the Salvadoran Civil War far right death squads known in Spanish by the name of Escuadron de la Muerte literally Squadron of Death achieved notoriety when a sniper assassinated Archbishop oscar Romero while he was saying mass in March 1980 In December 1980 three American nuns and a lay worker were gangraped and murdered by a military unit later found to have been acting on specific orders Death squads were instrumental in killing thousands of peasants and activists Funding for the squads came primarily from right wing Salvadoran businessmen and landowners 130 El Salvadorian death squads indirectly received arms funding training and advice during the Jimmy Carter Ronald Reagan and George H W Bush administrations 131 Some death squads such as Sombra Negra are still operating in El Salvador 132 Death squads in Honduras Main article Death squads in Honduras Honduras also had far right death squads active through the 1980s the most notorious of which was Battalion 3 16 Hundreds of people teachers politicians and union bosses were assassinated by government backed forces Battalion 316 received substantial support and training from the United States through the Central Intelligence Agency 133 At least nineteen members were School of the Americas graduates 134 135 As of mid 2006 seven members including Billy Joya later played important roles in the administration of President Manuel Zelaya 136 Following the 2009 Honduran constitutional crisis former Battalion 3 16 member Nelson Willy Mejia Mejia became Director General of Immigration 137 138 and Billy Joya was de facto President Roberto Micheletti s security advisor 139 Napoleon Nassar Herrera another former Battalion 3 16 member 136 140 was high Commissioner of Police for the north west region under Zelaya and under Micheletti even becoming a Secretary of Security spokesperson for dialogue under Micheletti 141 142 Zelaya claimed that Joya had reactivated the death squad with dozens of government opponents having been murdered since the ascent of the Michiletti and Lobo governments 139 Mexico National Synarchist Union Main article National Synarchist Union The largest far right party in Mexico is the National Synarchist Union It was historically a movement of the Roman Catholic extreme right in some ways akin to clerical fascism and Falangism strongly opposed to the left wing and secularist policies of the Institutional Revolutionary Party and its predecessors that governed Mexico from 1929 to 2000 and 2012 to 2018 143 144 Peru Alberto Fujimori the creator of Fujimorism During the internal conflict in Peru and a struggling presidency of Alan Garcia the Peruvian Armed Forces created Plan Verde initially a coup plan that involved establishing a government that would carry out the genocide of impoverished and indigenous Peruvians the control or censorship of media and the establishment of a neoliberal economy controlled by a military junta in Peru 145 146 147 Military planners also decided against the coup as they expected Mario Vargas Llosa a neoliberal candidate to be elected in the 1990 Peruvian general election 148 149 Vargas Llosa later reported that Anthony C E Quainton the United States Ambassador to Peru personally told him that allegedly leaked documents of the Central Intelligence Agency CIA purportedly being supportive of his opponent Alberto Fujimori were authentic reportedly due to Fujimori s relationship with Vladimiro Montesinos a former National Intelligence Service SIN officer who was tasked with spying on the Peruvian military for the CIA 150 151 An agreement was ultimately adopted between the armed forces and Fujimori after he was inaugurated president 148 with the Fujimori implementing many of the objectives outlined in Plan Verde 151 148 Fujimori then established Fujimorism an ideology with authoritarian 152 and fascist traits 153 154 leading Peru beside Montesinos as a dictator following the 1992 Peruvian coup d etat until he fled to Japan in 2000 during the Vladivideos scandal While in Japan Fujimori announced plans to run in Japan s Upper House elections in July 2007 for the far right People s New Party 155 156 157 Following Alberto Fujimori s arrest and trial his daughter Keiko Fujimori assumed leadership of the Fujimoirst movement and established Popular Force a far right political party 158 159 160 The 2016 Peruvian general election resulted with the party holding the most power in the Congress of Peru from 2016 to 2019 marking the beginning of a political crisis Approaching the 2021 Peruvian general election far right politician Rafael Lopez Aliaga and his party Popular Renewal rose in popularity during the first round of campaigning 161 162 163 164 165 166 United States See also Fascism in the United States In United States politics the terms extreme right far right and ultra right are labels used to describe militant forms of insurgent revolutionary right ideology and separatist ethnocentric nationalism 167 such as Christian Identity 167 the Creativity Movement 167 the Ku Klux Klan 167 the National Socialist Movement 167 168 169 the National Alliance 167 the Joy of Satan Ministries 168 169 and the Order of Nine Angles 170 These far right groups share conspiracist views of power which are overwhelmingly anti Semitic and reject pluralist democracy in favour of an organic oligarchy that would unite the perceived homogeneously racial Volkish nation 167 170 The far right in the United States is composed of various neo fascist neo Nazi white nationalist and white supremacist organizations and networks who have been known to refer to an acceleration of racial conflict through violent means such as assassinations murders terrorist attacks and societal collapse in order to achieve the building of a white ethnostate 170 Radical right Main article Radical right United States Ku Klux Klan parade in Washington D C September 1926 Starting in the 1870s and continuing through the late 19th century numerous White supremacist paramilitary groups operated in the South with the goal of organizing against and intimidating supporters of the Republican Party Examples of such groups included the Red Shirts and the White League The Second Ku Klux Klan which was formed in 1915 combined Protestant fundamentalism and moralism with right wing extremism Its major support came from the urban South the Midwest and the Pacific Coast 171 While the Klan initially drew upper middle class support its bigotry and violence alienated these members and it came to be dominated by less educated and poorer members 172 Between the 1920s and the 1930s the Ku Klux Klan developed an explicitly nativist pro Anglo Saxon Protestant anti Catholic anti Irish anti Italian and anti Jewish stance in relation to the growing political economic and social uncertainty related to the arrival of European immigrants on the American soil predominantly composed of Irish people Italians and Eastern European Jews 173 The Ku Klux Klan claimed that there was a secret Catholic army within the United States loyal to the Pope that one million Knights of Columbus were arming themselves and that Irish American policemen would shoot Protestants as heretics Their sensationalistic claims eventually developed into full blown political conspiracy theories to the point that the Klan claimed that Roman Catholics were planning to take Washington and put the Vatican in power and that all presidential assassinations had been carried out by Roman Catholics 174 175 The prominent Klan leader D C Stephenson believed in the antisemitic canard of Jewish control of finance claiming that international Jewish bankers were behind the World War I and planned to destroy economic opportunities for Christians Other Klansmen in the Jewish Bolshevism conspiracy theory and claimed that the Russian Revolution and communism were orchestrated by the Jews They frequently reprinted parts of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion and New York City was condemned as an evil city controlled by Jews and Roman Catholics The objects of the Klan fear tended to vary by locale and included African Americans as well as American Roman Catholics Jews labour unions liquor Orientals and Wobblies They were also anti elitist and attacked the intellectuals seeing themselves as egalitarian defenders of the common man 176 During the Great Depression there were a large number of small nativist groups whose ideologies and bases of support were similar to those of earlier nativist groups However proto fascist movements such as Huey Long s Share Our Wealth and Charles Coughlin s National Union for Social Justice emerged which differed from other right wing groups by attacking big business calling for economic reforms and rejecting nativism Coughlin s group later developed a racist ideology 177 During the Cold War and the Red Scares the far right saw spies and communists influencing government and entertainment Thus despite bipartisan anticommunism in the United States it was the right that mainly fought the great ideological battle against the communists 178 The John Birch Society founded in 1958 is a prominent example of a far right organization mainly concerned with anti communism and the perceived threat of communism Neo Nazi militant Robert Jay Matthews of the White supremacist group The Order came to support the John Birch Society especially when conservative icon Barry Goldwater from Arizona ran for the presidency on the Republican Party ticket Far right conservatives consider John Birch to be the first casualty of the Cold War 179 In the 1990s many conservatives turned against then President George H W Bush who pleasured neither the Republican Party s more moderate and far right wings As a result Bush was primared by Pat Buchanan In the 2000s critics of President George W Bush s conservative unilateralism argued it can be traced to both Vice President Dick Cheney who embraced the policy since the early 1990s and to far right Congressmen who won their seats during the conservative revolution of 1994 10 Although small voluntary militias had existed in the United States throughout the latter half of the 20th century the groups became more popular during the early 1990s after a series of standoffs between armed citizens and federal government agents such as the 1992 Ruby Ridge siege and 1993 Waco Siege These groups expressed concern for what they perceived as government tyranny within the United States and generally held constitutionalist libertarian and right libertarian political views with a strong focus on the Second Amendment gun rights and tax protest They also embraced many of the same conspiracy theories as predecessor groups on the radical right particularly the New World Order conspiracy theory Examples of such groups are the patriot and militia movements Oath Keepers and the Three Percenters A minority of militia groups such as the Aryan Nations and the Posse Comitatus were White nationalists and saw militia and patriot movements as a form of White resistance against what they perceived to be a liberal and multiculturalist government Militia and patriot organizations were involved in the 2014 Bundy standoff 180 181 and the 2016 occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge 182 183 Far right flags on display at the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville After the September 11 attacks in 2001 the counter jihad movement supported by groups such as Stop Islamization of America and individuals such as Frank Gaffney and Pamela Geller began to gain traction among the American right The counter jihad members were widely dubbed Islamophobic for their vocal criticism of the Islamic religion and its founder Muhammad 184 and their belief that there was a significant threat posed by Muslims living in America 184 Its proponents believed that the United States was under threat from Islamic supremacism accusing the Council on American Islamic Relations and even prominent conservatives such as Suhail A Khan and Grover Norquist of supporting radical Islamist groups and organizations such as the Muslim Brotherhood The alt right emerged during the 2016 United States presidential election cycle in support of the Donald Trump s presidential campaign see Trumpism It draws influence from paleoconservatism paleolibertarianism White nationalism the manosphere and the Identitarian and neoreactionary movements The alt right differs from previous radical right movements due to its heavy internet presence on websites such as 4chan 185 Chetan Bhatt in White Extinction Metaphysical Elements of Contemporary Western Fascism says that The fear of white extinction and related ideas of population eugenics have travelled far and represent a wider political anxiety about white displacement in the US UK and Europe that has fuelled the right wing phenomena referred to by that sanitizing word populism a term that neatly evades attention to the racism and white majoritarianism that energizes it 186 Asia See also Fascism in Asia Japan Main article Uyoku dantai Further information Japanese nationalism and Racism in Japan Gaisen Uyoku 街宣右翼 a Japanese far right group holding an anti China speech at the square of Kinshichō Station in Sumida Tokyo 2010 In 1996 the National Police Agency estimated that there were over 1 000 extremist right wing groups in Japan with about 100 000 members in total These groups are known in Japanese as Uyoku dantai While there are political differences among the groups they generally carry a philosophy of anti leftism hostility towards China North Korea and South Korea and justification of Japan s role and war crimes in World War II Uyoku dantai groups are well known for their highly visible propaganda vehicles fitted with loudspeakers and prominently marked with the name of the group and propaganda slogans The vehicles play patriotic or wartime era Japanese songs Activists affiliated with such groups have used Molotov cocktails and time bombs to intimidate moderate Japanese politicians and public figures including former Deputy Foreign Minister Hitoshi Tanaka and Fuji Xerox Chairman Yotaro Kobayashi An ex member of a right wing group set fire to Liberal Democratic Party politician Koichi Kato s house Koichi Kato and Yotaro Kobayashi had spoken out against Koizumi s visits to Yasukuni Shrine 187 Openly revisionist Nippon Kaigi is considered the biggest right wing organization in Japan 188 189 Europe See also Fascism in Europe Croatia Main article Far right politics in Croatia Individuals and groups in Croatia that employ far right politics are most often associated with the historical Ustase movement hence they have connections to neo Nazism and neo fascism That World War II political movement was an extremist organization at the time supported by the German Nazis and the Italian Fascists The association with the Ustase has been called neo Ustashism by Slavko Goldstein 190 Most active far right political parties in Croatia openly state their continuity with the Ustase 191 These include the Croatian Party of Rights and Authentic Croatian Party of Rights 191 Croatia s far right often advocates the false theory that the Jasenovac concentration camp was a labour camp where mass murder did not take place 192 The coalition led by Miroslav Skoro s far right Homeland Movement came third at the 2020 parliamentary election winning 10 9 of the vote and 16 seats 193 194 Estonia General Andres Larka speaking in 1933 Estonia s most significant far right movement was the Vaps movement Its ideological predecessor Valve Liit was founded by Admiral Johan Pitka and later banned for maligning the government The organization became politicized quickly Vaps soon turned into a mass fascist movement 195 In 1933 Estonians voted on Vaps proposed changes to the constitution and the party later won a large proportion of the vote However the State Elder Konstantin Pats declared state of emergency and imprisoned the leadership of the Vaps In 1935 all political parties were banned In 1935 a Vaps coup attempt was discovered which led to the banning of the Finnish Patriotic People s Movement s youth wing that had been secretly aiding and arming them 196 197 Far right torch march in Tallinn During World War II the Estonian Self Administration was a collaborationist pro Nazi government set up in Estonia headed by Vaps member Hjalmar Mae 198 In the 21st century the coalition governing Conservative People s Party of Estonia been described as far right 199 The neo Nazi terrorist organization Feuerkrieg Division was found and operates in the country with some members of the Conservative People s Party of Estonia having been linked to the Feuerkrieg Division 200 201 202 203 The party s youth organisation Blue Awakening organises an annual torchlight march through Tallinn on Estonia s Independence Day The event has been harshly criticized by the Simon Wiesenthal Center that described it as Nuremberg esque and likened the ideology of the participants to that of the Estonian nazi collaborators 204 205 Finland Main article Far right politics in Finland The Peasant March a show of force in Helsinki by the Lapua Movement on 7 July 1930 In Finland support for the far right was most widespread between 1920 and 1940 when the Academic Karelia Society Lapua Movement Patriotic People s Movement and Vientirauha operated in the country and had hundreds of thousands of members 206 Far right groups exercised considerable political power during this period pressuring the government to outlaw communist parties and newspapers and expel Freemasons from the armed forces 207 208 During the Cold War all parties deemed fascist were banned according to the Paris Peace Treaties and all former fascist activists had to find new political homes 209 Despite Finlandization many continued in public life Three former members of the Waffen SS served as ministers of defense Sulo Suorttanen and Pekka Malinen as well as Mikko Laaksonen fi 210 211 Captain Arvi Kalsta addressing an SKJ meeting The skinhead culture gained momentum during the late 1980s and peaked during the late 1990s Numerous hate crimes were committed against refugees including a number of racially motivated murders 212 213 Today the most prominent neo Nazi group is the Nordic Resistance Movement which is tied to multiple murders attempted murders and assaults of political enemies was found in 2006 and proscribed in 2019 Prominent far right parties include the Blue and Black Movement and Power Belongs to the People 214 The second biggest Finnish party the Finns Party has been described as far right 215 216 217 218 The leader of the Finns party Jussi Halla aho has been convicted of hate speech due to his comments stating that Prophet Muhammad was a pedophile and Islam justifies pedophilia and Pedophilia was Allah s will Finns Party members have frequently supported far right and neo Nazi movements such as the Finnish Defense League Soldiers of Odin Nordic Resistance Movement Rajat Kiinni Close the Borders and Suomi Ensin Finland First 219 The NRM and other far right nationalist parties organize an annual torch march demonstration in Helsinki in memory of the Finnish SS battalion on the Finnish independence day which ends at the Hietaniemi cemetery where members visit the tomb of Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim and the monument to the Finnish SS Battalion 220 221 The event is protested by antifascists leading to counterdemonstrators being violently assaulted by NRM members who act as security The demonstration attracts close to 3 000 participants according to the estimates of the police and hundreds of officers patrol Helsinki to prevent violent clashes 222 223 224 France Main article History of far right movements in France The largest far right party in Europe is the French anti immigration party National Rally formally known as the National Front 225 226 The party was founded in 1972 uniting a variety of French far right groups under the leadership of Jean Marie Le Pen 227 Since 1984 it has been the major force of French nationalism 228 Jean Marie Le Pen s daughter Marine Le Pen was elected to succeed him as party leader in 2012 Under Jean Marie Le Pen s leadership the party sparked outrage for hate speech including Holocaust denial and Islamophobia 229 230 Germany Main article Far right politics in Germany 1945 present In 1945 the Allied powers took control of Germany and banned the swastika Nazi Party and the publication of Mein Kampf Explicitly Nazi and neo Nazi organizations are banned in Germany 231 In 1960 the West German parliament voted unanimously to make it illegal to incite hatred to provoke violence or to insult ridicule or defame parts of the population in a manner apt to breach the peace German law outlaws anything that approves of glorifies or justifies the violent and despotic rule of the National Socialists 231 Section 86a of the Strafgesetzbuch Criminal Code outlaws any use of symbols of unconstitutional organizations outside the contexts of art or science research or teaching The law primarily outlaws the use of Nazi symbols flags insignia uniforms slogans and forms of greeting 232 In the 21st century the German far right consists of various small parties and two larger groups namely Alternative for Germany AfD and Pegida 231 233 234 235 In March 2021 the Germany domestic intelligence agency Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution placed the AfD under surveillance the first time in the post war period that a main opposition party had been subjected to such scrutiny 236 Greece Metaxism Main article Metaxism Ioannis Metaxas The far right in Greece first came to power under the ideology of Metaxism a proto fascist ideology developed by dictator Ioannis Metaxas 237 Metaxism called for the regeneration of the Greek nation and the establishment of an ethnically homogeneous state 238 Metaxism disparaged liberalism and held individual interests to be subordinate to those of the nation seeking to mobilize the Greek people as a disciplined mass in service to the creation of a new Greece 238 The Metaxas government and its official doctrines are often compared to conventional totalitarian conservative dictatorships such as Francisco Franco s Spain or Antonio de Oliveira Salazar s Portugal 237 239 The Metaxist government derived its authority from the conservative establishment and its doctrines strongly supported traditional institutions such as the Greek Orthodox Church and the Greek Royal Family essentially reactionary it lacked the radical theoretical dimensions of ideologies such as Italian Fascism and German Nazism 237 239 Axis occupation of Greece and aftermath Main article Axis occupation of Greece German soldiers in 1941 raising the German War Flag over the Acropolis which would be taken down by Manolis Glezos and Apostolos Santas in one of the first acts of resistance The Metaxis regime came to an end after the Axis powers invaded Greece The Axis occupation of Greece began in April 1941 240 The occupation ruined the Greek economy and brought about terrible hardships for the Greek civilian population 241 The Jewish population of Greece was nearly eradicated Of its pre war population of 75 77 000 only around 11 12 000 survived either by joining the resistance or being hidden 242 Following the short lived interim government of Georgios Papandreou the military seized power in Greece during the 1967 Greek coup d etat replacing the interim government with the right wing United States backed Greek junta The Junta was a series of military juntas that ruled Greece from 1967 to 1974 The dictatorship was characterised by right wing cultural policies restrictions on civil liberties and the imprisonment torture and exile of political opponents The junta s rule ended on 24 July 1974 under the pressure of the Turkish invasion of Cyprus leading to the Metapolitefsi regime change to democracy and the establishment of the Third Hellenic Republic 243 244 Until 2019 the dominant far right party in Greece in the 21st century was the neo Nazi 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 and Mataxist inspired 252 253 254 255 256 Golden Dawn 257 258 259 260 261 At the May 2012 Greek legislative election Golden Dawn won 21 seats in the Hellenic Parliament receiving 6 97 of the vote 262 263 It became the third largest party in the Greek Parliament with 17 seats after the January 2015 election winning 6 28 of the vote 264 Founded by Nikolaos Michaloliakos Golden Dawn had its origins in the movement that worked towards a return to right wing military dictatorship in Greece Following an investigation into the 2013 murder of Pavlos Fyssas an anti fascist rapper by a supporter of the party 265 Michaloliakos and several other Golden Dawn parliamentarians and members were arrested and held in pre trial detention on suspicion of forming a criminal organization 266 The trial began on 20 April 2015 267 and eventually led to the conviction of 7 of its leaders for heading a criminal organisation and 61 other defendants for participating in a criminal organisation 268 Guilty verdicts on charges of murder attempted murder and violent attacks on immigrants and left wing political opponents were also delivered and prison sentences of a combined total of over 500 years were handed out Golden Dawn later lost all of its remaining seats in the Greek Parliament in the 2019 Greek legislative election and 269 a 2020 survey showed the party s popularity plummeting to just 1 5 down from 2 9 in previous year s elections 270 This means that the largest party in Greece that is considered right wing to far right is Greek Solution which has been described as ideologically ultranationalist 271 272 and right wing populist 273 The party garnered 3 7 of the vote in the 2019 Greek legislative election winning 10 out of the 300 seats in the Hellenic Parliament and 4 18 of the vote in the 2019 European Parliament election in Greece winning one seat in the European Parliament 274 Hungary The Kingdom of Hungary was an Axis power during World War II By 1944 Hungary was in secret negotiations with the Allies Upon discovering these secret negotiations Germany invaded Hungary in March 1944 effectively sabotaging the attempts to jump out of the war until the Budapest Offensive started later that same year 275 Italy The far right has maintained a continuous political presence in Italy since the fall of Mussolini The neo fascist party Italian Social Movement 1946 1995 influenced by the previous Italian Social Republic 1943 1945 became one of the chief reference points for the European far right from the end of World War II until the late 1980s 276 Silvio Berlusconi and his Forza Italia party dominated politics from 1994 According to some scholars it gave neo fascism a new respectability 277 Caio Giulio Cesare Mussolini great grandson of Benito Mussolini stood for the 2019 European Parliament election as a member of the far right Brothers of Italy party 277 In 2011 it was estimated that the neo fascist CasaPound party had 5 000 members 278 The name is derived from the fascist poet Ezra Pound It has also been influenced by the Manifesto of Verona the Labour Charter of 1927 and social legislation of fascism 279 There has been collaboration between CasaPound and the identitarian movement 280 The European migrant crisis has become an increasingly divisive issue in Italy 281 Interior Minister Matteo Salvini has been courting far right voters His Northern League party has become an anti immigrant nationalist movement Both parties are using Mussolini nostalgia to further their aims 277 Netherlands Main article Netherlands in World War II Despite being neutral the Netherlands was invaded by Nazi Germany on 10 May 1940 as part of Fall Gelb 282 About 70 of the country s Jewish population were killed during the occupation a much higher percentage than comparable countries such as Belgium and France 283 Most of the south of the country was liberated in the second half of 1944 The rest especially the west and north of the country still under occupation suffered from a famine at the end of 1944 known as the Hunger Winter On 5 May 1945 the whole country was finally liberated by the total surrender of all German forces Since the end of World War II the Netherlands has had a number of small far right groups and parties the largest and most successful being the Party for Freedom led by Geert Wilders 284 Other far right Dutch groups include the neo Nazi Dutch People s Union 1973 present 285 the Centre Party 1982 1986 the Centre Party 86 1986 1998 the Dutch Block 1992 2000 New National Party 1998 2005 and the ultranationalist National Alliance 2003 2007 286 287 Poland Main article Far right politics in Poland National Radical Camp march in Krakow July 2007 Following the collapse of Communist Poland a number of far right groups came to prominence including The National Revival of Poland the European National Front the Association for Tradition and Culture Niklot 288 The All Polish Youth and National Radical Camp were recreated in 1989 and 1993 respectively becoming Poland s most prominent far right organizations In 1995 the Anti Defamation League estimated the number of far right and white power skinheads in Poland at 2 000 289 Since late 2000s smaller fascist groups have merged to form the neo Nazi Autonome Nationalisten A number of far right parties have run candidates in elections including the League of Polish Families the National Movement with limited success 290 In 2019 the Confederation Liberty and Independence had the best performance of any far right coalition to date earning 1 256 953 votes which was 6 81 of the total vote in an election that saw a historically high turnout Members of far right groups make up a significant portion of those taking part in the annual Independence March in central Warsaw which started in 2009 to mark Independence Day About 60 000 were in the 2017 march marking the 99th anniversary of independence with placards such as Clean Blood seen on the march 291 Romania Main article Greater Romania Party The preeminent far right party in Romania is the Greater Romania Party founded in 1991 by Tudor who was formerly known as a court poet of Communist dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu 292 and his literary mentor the writer Eugen Barbu one year after Tudor launched the Romania Mare weekly magazine which remains the most important propaganda tool of the PRM Tudor subsequently launched a companion daily newspaper called Tricolorul The historical expression Greater Romania refers to the idea of recreating the former Kingdom of Romania which existed during the interwar period Having been the largest entity to bear the name of Romania the frontiers were marked with the intent of uniting most territories inhabited by ethnic Romanians into a single country and it is now a rallying cry for Romanian nationalists Due to internal conditions under Communist Romania after World War II the expression s use was forbidden in publications until after the Romanian Revolution in 1989 The party s initial success was partly attributed to the deep rootedness of Ceaușescu s national communism in Romania 293 Both the ideology and the main political focus of the Greater Romania Party are reflected in frequently strongly nationalistic articles written by Tudor The party has called for the outlawing of the ethnic Hungarian party the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania for allegedly plotting the secession of Transylvania 294 Russia Main article Russian nationalism The period of development of Russian fascism in the 1930s 1940s was characterized by sympathy for Italian fascism and German Nazism and pronounced anti communism and antisemitism The Russian Fascist Party in the first half of the 20th century The slogan Let s get our homeland is also used by the modern far right in Russia Russian fascism has its roots in the movements known in history as the Black Hundreds and the White movement It was distributed among white emigre circles living in Germany Manchukuo and the United States In Germany and the United States unlike Manchukuo they practically did not conduct political activity limiting themselves to the publication of newspapers and brochures Some ideologues of the white movement such as Ivan Ilyin and Vasily Shulgin welcomed the coming to power of Mussolini in Italy and Hitler in Germany offering their comrades in arms the fascist method as a way to fight socialism communism and godlessness At the same time they did not deny fascist political repression and antisemitism and even justified them 295 With the outbreak of World War II Russian fascists in Germany supported Nazi Germany and joined the ranks of Russian collaborators Some Russian neo Nazi organizations are part of the international World Union of National Socialists WUNS founded in 1962 As of 2012 six Russian organizations are among the officially registered members of the union National Resistance National Socialist Movement Russian Division All Russian Public Patriotic Movement Russian National Unity National Socialist Movement Slavic Union prohibited by a court decision in June 2010 and others The following organizations are not included in WUNS the National Socialist Society banned by a court decision in 2010 the Russian All National Union banned in September 2011 and others such as skinheads Legion Werewolf liquidated in 1996 Schultz 88 liquidated in 2006 White Wolves liquidated in 2008 2010 New Order ceased to exist Russian goal ceased to exist and others Some of the more radical neo Nazi organizations using terrorist methods belonged to skinhead groups such as the Werewolf Legion liquidated in 1996 Schultz 88 liquidated in 2006 White Wolves liquidated in 2008 2010 New Order ceased to exist Russian Goal ceased to exist and others 296 Until the end of the 1990s one of the largest parties of Russian national extremists was the neo Nazi socio political movement Russian National Unity RNE founded by Alexander Barkashov in 1990 At the end of 1999 the RNE made an unsuccessful attempt to take part in the elections to the State Duma Barkashov considered true Orthodoxy as a fusion of Christianity with paganism and advocated the Russian God and the Aryan swastika allegedly associated with it He wrote about the Atlanteans the Etruscans and the Aryan civilization as the direct predecessors of the Russian nation in a centuries old struggle with the Semites the world Jewish conspiracy and the dominance of the Jews in Russia The symbol of the movement was a modified swastika Barkashov was a parishioner of the True Orthodox Catacomb Church and the first cells of the RNE were formed as brotherhoods and communities of the RTOC 297 The ideology of Russian neo Nazism is closely connected with the ideology of Slavic neo paganism rodnovery In a number of cases there are also organizational ties between neo Nazis and neo pagans One of the founders of Russian neo paganism the former dissident Alexey Dobrovolsky pagan name Dobroslav shared the ideas of Nazism and transferred them to his neo pagan teaching 297 298 Modern Russian neo paganism took shape in the second half 299 of the 1970s and is associated with the activities of Dobrovolsky and Moscow Arabist Valery Yemelyanov neo pagan name Velemir 300 298 both supporters of antisemitism Rodnoverie is a popular religion among Russian skinheads 301 302 These skinheads however do not usually practice their religion 303 Historian Dmitry Shlapentokh wrote that as in Europe neo paganism in Russia pushes some of its adherents to antisemitism This antisemitism is closely related to negative attitudes towards Asians and this emphasis on racial factors can lead neo pagans to neo Nazism The tendency of neo pagans to antisemitism is a logical development of the ideas of neo paganism and imitation of the Nazis and is also a consequence of a number of specific conditions of modern Russian politics Unlike previous regimes the modern Russian political regime as well as the ideology of the middle class combines support for Orthodoxy with philosemitism and a positive attitude towards Muslims These features of the regime contributed to the formation of specific views of neo Nazi neo pagans which are represented to a large extent among the socially unprotected and marginalized Russian youth In their opinion power in Russia was usurped by a cabal of conspirators including hierarchs of the Orthodox Church Jews and Muslims Contrary to external differences it is believed that these forces have united in their desire to maintain power over the Russian Aryans 304 Serbia Main article Far right politics in Serbia Chetniks in Belgrade 1920 In the Kingdom of Yugoslavia multiple far right organizations and parties operated during the late Interwar period such as the Yugoslav National Movement Zbor Yugoslav Radical Union JRZ and Organization of Yugoslav Nationalists ORJUNA Zbor was headed by Dimitrije Ljotic who during the World War II collaborated with the Axis powers 305 Ljotic was a supporter of Italian fascism 306 and he advocated for the establishment of a centralized Yugoslav state that would be dominated by Serbs and a return to Christian traditions 307 Zbor was the only registered political party in Yugoslavia that openly promoted antisemitism and xenophobia 308 JRZ was registered as a political party in 1934 by Milan Stojadinovic a right wing politician who expressed his support towards Italian fascism during his premiership 309 JRZ was initially a coalition made up of Stojadinovic s Anton Korosec s and Mehmed Spaho s supporters and the party was the main stronghold for Yugoslav ethnic nationalists and supporters of Karađorđevic dynasty 310 ORJUNA was a prominent organization in the 1920s that was influenced by fascism 306 During World War II Chetniks an ethnic ultranationalist movement rose to prominence 311 Chetniks were staunchly anti communist and they supported monarchism and the creation of a Greater Serbian state 312 313 They including their leader Draza Mihailovic collaborated with the Axis powers in the second half of the World War II 314 After the re establishment of the multi party system in Serbia in 1990 multiple right wing movements and parties began getting popularity from which the Serbian Radical Party was the most successful 306 Vojislav Seselj who founded the party promoted popular notions of international conspiracy against the Serbs during the 1990s which gained him popularity in the 1992 and 1997 election 315 During the 1990s SRS has been also described as neofascist due to their vocal support of ethnic ultranationalism and irredentism 316 317 Its popularity went into decline after the 2008 election when its acting leader Tomislav Nikolic seceded from the party to form the Serbian Progressive Party 318 Besides SRS during the 2000s multiple neofascist and Neo Nazi movements began getting popular such as Nacionalni stroj Obraz and 1389 Movement 319 Dveri an organization turned political party was also a prominent promoter of far right content and they were mainly known for their clerical fascist socially conservative and anti Western stances 320 321 Since 2019 the far right Serbian Party Oathkeepers has gained popularity mainly due to their ultranationalist views 322 including the openly neofascist Leviathan Movement 323 324 United Kingdom Main article Far right politics in the United Kingdom The British far right rose out of the fascist movement In 1932 Oswald Mosley founded the British Union of Fascists BUF which was banned during World War II 325 Founded in 1954 by A K Chesterton the League of Empire Loyalists became the main British far right group at the time It was a pressure group rather than a political party and did not contest elections Most of its members were part of the Conservative Party and were known for politically embarrassing stunts at party conferences 326 Other fascist parties included the National Front NF the White Defence League and the National Labour Party who eventually merged to form the British National Party BNP 327 With the decline of the British Empire becoming inevitable British far right parties turned their attention to internal matters The 1950s had seen an increase in immigration to the UK from its former colonies particularly India Pakistan the Caribbean and Uganda Led by John Bean and Andrew Fountaine the BNP opposed the admittance of these people to the UK A number of its rallies such as one in 1962 in Trafalgar Square ended in race riots After a few early successes the party got into difficulties and was destroyed by internal arguments In 1967 it joined forces with John Tyndall and the remnants of Chesterton s League of Empire Loyalists to form Britain s largest far right organisation the National Front NF 328 The BNP and the NF supported extreme loyalism in Northern Ireland and attracted Conservative Party members who had become disillusioned after Harold Macmillan had recognised the right to independence of the African colonies and had criticised Apartheid in South Africa 329 Some Northern Irish loyalist paramilitaries have links with far right and neo Nazi groups in Britain including Combat 18 330 331 the British National Socialist Movement 332 and the NF 333 Since the 1990s loyalist paramilitaries have been responsible for numerous racist attacks in loyalist areas 334 During the 1970s the NF s rallies became a regular feature of British politics Election results remained strong in a few working class urban areas with a number of local council seats won but the party never came anywhere near winning representation in parliament Since the 1970s the NF s support has been in decline whilst Nick Griffin and the BNP grew in popularity Around the turn of the 21st century the BNP won a number of councillor seats At its peak in the late 2000s the party had 54 local council seats one seat in the Greater London Assembly two seats in the European Parliament and were the official opposition in the Barking and Dagenham London Borough Council They won almost a million votes in the 2009 European Parliament elections and contested the majority of seats in the UK in the 2010 general election The party s membership was 12 632 and its financial resources financial resources were an estimated 1 983 947 41 By the early 2010s the BNP saw its support and membership quickly collapse due to internal divisions caused by a disappointing performance in the 2010 elections Griffin was ousted as leader in 2014 after losing his European Parliament seat and since then the party has been in terminal decline under the leadership of Adam Walker A number of breakaway groups have been established by former members of the BNP such as Britain First by ex councillor Paul Golding the British Democrats by ex MEP and leadership candidate Andrew Brons as well as Patriotic Alternative by Mark Collett UK Independence Party UKIP leader Nigel Farage claimed that his party absorbed much of the BNP s former voters during their electoral peak in the early 2010s 335 The party was accused of shifting towards far right anti Islam politics under the leadership of Paul Nuttall and Gerard Batten during its decline the late 2010s Anti Islam activist and former UKIP leadership candidate Anne Marie Waters established the far right For Britain Movement which gained a small number of ex BNP councillors It was deregistered in 2022 and subsequently a large portion of prominent far right activists began coalescing around the British Democrats which has quickly established itself as the UK s only far right party with any electoral representation Oceania Australia Main article Far right politics in Australia Captain Francis de Groot declares the Sydney Harbour Bridge open in March 1932 Coming to prominence in Sydney with the formation of the New Guard 1931 and the Centre Party 1933 the far right has played a part in Australian political discourse since the second world war 336 These proto fascist groups were monarchist anti communist and authoritarian in nature Early far right groups were followed by the explicitly fascist Australia First Movement 1941 337 338 The far right in Australia went on to acquire more explicitly racial connotations during the 1960s and 1970s morphing into self proclaimed Nazi fascist and antisemitic movements organisations that opposed non white and non Christian immigration such as the neo Nazi National Socialist Party of Australia 1967 and the militant white supremacist group National Action 1982 339 340 341 Since the 1980s the term has mainly been used to describe those who express the wish to preserve what they perceive to be Judeo Christian Anglo Australian culture and those who campaign against Aboriginal land rights multiculturalism immigration and asylum seekers Since 2001 Australia has seen the development of modern neo Nazi neo fascist or alt right groups such as the True Blue Crew the United Patriots Front Fraser Anning s Conservative National Party and the Antipodean Resistance 342 New Zealand Main article Far right politics in New Zealand A small number of far right organisations have existed in New Zealand since World War II including the Conservative Front the New Zealand National Front and the National Democrats Party 343 344 Far right parties in New Zealand lack significant support with their protests often dwarfed by counter protest 345 After the Christchurch mosque shootings in 2019 the National Front publicly shut up shop 346 and largely went underground like other far right groups 347 Fiji Nationalist Vanua Tako Lavo Party Main article Nationalist Vanua Tako Lavo Party The Nationalist Vanua Tako Lavo Party was a far right political party which advocated Fijian ethnic nationalism 348 In 2009 party leader Iliesa Duvuloco was arrested for breaching the military regime s emergency laws by distributing pamphlets calling for an uprising against the military regime 349 In January 2013 the military regime introduced regulations that essentially de registered the party 350 351 OnlineA number of far right internet pages and forums are focused on and frequented by the far right These include Stormfront and Iron March Stormfront Main article Stormfront website Stormfront is the oldest and most prominent neo Nazi website 352 described by the Southern Poverty Law Center and other media organizations as the murder capital of the internet 353 In August 2017 Stormfront was taken offline for just over a month when its registrar seized its domain name due to complaints that it promoted hatred and that some of its members were linked to murder The Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law claimed credit for the action after advocating for Stormfront s web host Network Solutions to enforce its Terms of Service agreement which prohibits users from using its services to incite violence 354 Iron March Main article Iron March Iron March was a fascist web forum founded in 2011 by Russian nationalist Alexander Slavros Mukhitdinov An unknown individual uploaded a database of Iron March users to the Internet Archive in November 2019 and multiple neo Nazi users were identified including an ICE detention center captain and several active members of the United States Armed Forces 355 356 As of mid 2018 the Southern Poverty Law Center linked Iron March to nearly 100 murders 357 355 Mukhitdinov remained a murky figure at the time of the leaks 358 Terrorgram Main article Terrorgram The Terrorgram community on Telegram is a network of Telegram channels and accounts that subscribe to and promote militant accelerationism Terrorgram channels are neofascist in ideology and regularly share instructions and manuals on how to carry out acts of racially motivated violence and anti government anti authority terrorism 359 In 2021 the Institute for Strategic Dialogue ISD an international think tank exposed more than two hundred neo Nazi pro terrorism telegram channels that make up the Terrorgram network many of which contained instructions to build weapons and bombs 360 361 362 Right wing terrorismMain article Right wing terrorism The 1980 Bologna massacre by Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari Right wing terrorism is terrorism motivated by a variety of far right ideologies and beliefs including anti communism neo fascism neo Nazism racism xenophobia and opposition to immigration This type of terrorism has been sporadic with little or no international cooperation 363 Modern right wing terrorism first appeared in western Europe in the 1980s and it first appeared in Eastern Europe following the dissolution of the Soviet Union 364 Right wing terrorists aim to overthrow governments and replace them with nationalist or fascist oriented governments 363 The core of this movement includes neo fascist skinheads far right hooligans youth sympathisers and intellectual guides who believe that the state must rid itself of foreign elements in order to protect rightful citizens 364 However they usually lack a rigid ideology 364 According to Cas Mudde far right terrorism and violence in the West have been generally perpetrated in recent times by individuals or groups of individuals who have at best a peripheral association with politically relevant organizations of the far right Nevertheless Mudde follows in recent years far right violence has become more planned regular and lethal as terrorists attacks in Christchurch 2019 Pittsburgh 2018 and Norway 2011 show 26 See alsoAntifeminism European New Right Far left politics History of the far right in Spain Manosphere Right wing authoritarianism White ethnostate White powerReferences Other names Mudde 2002 p 11 Ignazi 2003 Nationalism Baker 2016 Aubrey 2004 Anti communism Kopecek 2007 Nativism and authoritarianism Camus amp Lebourg 2017 p 21 Hilliard amp Keith 1999 p 43 Fascism and Nazism Historical Exhibition Presented by the German Bundestag PDF Administration of the German Bundestag Research Section March 2006 Alt right white supremacy Lyons Matthew N 20 January 2017 Ctrl Alt Delete The origins and ideology of the Alternative Right Political Research Associates Retrieved 3 September 2019 Ultranationalist racist homophobic xenophobic etc Carlisle 2005 p 693 Phipps 2019 Ethnic persecution forced assimilation cleansing etc Golder 2016 Hilliard amp Keith 1999 p 38 Traditional social institutions Golder 2016 Davies amp Lynch 2002 p 264 a b c Camus amp Lebourg 2017 p 22 a b Camus amp Lebourg 2017 p 21 a b c Bar On 2016 p xiii Mudde Cas The Extreme Right Party Family An Ideological Approach PhD diss Leiden University 1998 Camus amp Lebourg 2017 pp 44 45 Carlisle 2005 p 694 a b c d e Kopecek Lubomir 2007 The Far Right in Europe Stredoevropske politicke studie International Institute of Political Science Masaryk University in Brno IX 4 280 293 Retrieved 21 December 2020 via Central and Eastern European Online Library Hilliard Robert L and Michael C Keith Waves of Rancor Tuning in the Radical Right Armonk New York M E Sharpe 1999 p 43 Woshinsky 2008 pp 154 155 Widfeldt Anders A fourth phase of the extreme right Nordic immigration critical parties in a comparative context In NORDEUROPAforum 2010 1 2 7 31 Edoc hu Art David 2011 Inside the Radical Right the Development of Anti Immigrant Parties in Western Europe New York Cambridge University Press pp 10 29 ISBN 978 1 139 07710 1 OCLC 727944932 a b Mudde 2002 p 13 Kuligowski Piotr Moll Lukasz Szadkowski Krystian 2019 Anti Communisms Discourses of Exclusion Praktyka Teoretyczna Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan 1 31 7 13 Retrieved 21 December 2020 via Central and Eastern European Online Library Miller Idriss Cynthia 2020 Hate in the Homeland The New Global Far Right Princeton University Press p 18 ISBN 978 0 691 20589 2 a b c Camus amp Lebourg 2017 pp 1 2 Mudde 2002 p 10 Mudde 2002 p 12 Mudde 2019 p 12 The extreme right rejects the essence of democracy that is popular sovereignty and majority rule The most infamous example of the extreme right is fascism which brought to power German Fuhrer Adolf Hitler and Italian Duce Benito Mussolini and was responsible for the most destructive war in world history The radical right accepts the essence of democracy but opposes fundamental elements of liberal democracy most notably minority rights rule of law and separation of powers Both subgroups oppose the postwar liberal democratic consensus but in fundamentally different ways While the extreme right is revolutionary the radical right is more reformist In essence the radical right trusts the power of the people the extreme right does not Bobbio Norberto 1997 Left and Right The Significance of a Political Distinction Translated by Cameron Allan University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226062465 Mudde 2019 p 11 Woshinsky 2008 p 156 Baker Peter 28 May 2016 Rise of Donald Trump Tracks Growing Debate Over Global Fascism The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 7 June 2016 a b Mudde 2019 p page needed Sedgwick 2019 p xiii William Safire Safire s Political Dictionary Oxford England UK Oxford University Press 2008 p 385 a b Berlet Chip Lyons Matthew N 2000 Right Wing Populism in America Too Close for Comfort New York Guilford Press p 342 Filipovic Miroslava Đoric Marija 2010 The Left or the Right Old Paradigms and New Governments Serbian Political Thought 2 1 2 121 144 doi 10 22182 spt 2122011 8 Pavlopoulos Vassilis 20 March 2014 Politics economics and the far right in Europe a social psychological perspective The Challenge of the Extreme Right in Europe Past Present Future Birkbeck University of London Choat Simon 12 May 2017 Horseshoe theory is nonsense the far right and far left have little in common The Conversation Retrieved 10 June 2020 Rydgren 2007 pp 241 263 Rydgren 2007 p 247 Bornschier Simon 2010 Cleavage politics and the populist right the new cultural conflict in Western Europe Temple University Press OCLC 748925475 Merkel P and Weinberg L 2004 Right wing Extremism in the Twenty first Century Frank Cass Publishers London pp 52 53 Art David 2011 Inside the Radical Right New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 49883 8 Allen Trevor J 8 July 2015 All in the party family Comparing far right voters in Western and Post Communist Europe Party Politics 23 3 274 285 doi 10 1177 1354068815593457 ISSN 1354 0688 S2CID 147793242 a b Beiner 2018 p 11 Beiner 2018 p 14 a b Bar On Tamir 7 December 2011 Backes Uwe Moreau Patrick eds Intellectual Right Wing Extremism Alain de Benoist s Mazeway Resynthesis since 2000 The Extreme Right in Europe Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht pp 333 358 doi 10 13109 9783666369223 333 ISBN 978 3 525 36922 7 Woods Roger 25 March 1996 The Conservative Revolution in the Weimar Republic Springer pp 1 2 ISBN 978 0 230 37585 7 a b Francois Stephane 24 August 2009 Qu est ce que la Revolution Conservatrice Fragments sur les Temps Presents in French Retrieved 23 July 2019 a b Camus amp Lebourg 2017 pp 7 8 a b Camus amp Lebourg 2017 pp 9 10 Camus amp Lebourg 2017 pp 11 12 Dupeux Louis 1994 La nouvelle droite revolutionnaire conservatrice et son influence sous la republique de Weimar Revue d Histoire Moderne amp Contemporaine 41 3 474 475 doi 10 3406 rhmc 1994 1732 a b Camus amp Lebourg 2017 pp 16 18 Stern Fritz R 1974 The Politics of Cultural Despair A Study in the Rise of the Germanic Ideology University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 02643 8 Camus amp Lebourg 2017 p 19 a b c d e Sedgwick 2019 Desbuissons Ghislaine 1990 Maurice Bardeche ecrivain et theoricien fasciste Revue d histoire moderne et contemporaine in French 37 1 148 159 doi 10 3406 rhmc 1990 1531 ISSN 0048 8003 JSTOR 20529642 Teitelbaum Benjamin R 2020 War for Eternity The Return of Traditionalism and the Rise of the Populist Right Penguin Books Limited pp 2 3 11 58 ISBN 978 0 14 199204 4 a b Leal Rene 2020 The Rise of Fascist Formations in Chile and in the World Social Sciences 9 12 230 doi 10 3390 socsci9120230 the West and the Rest considering the hegemony of neoliberalism in current global capitalism and the relevance of its ideology in the emergence of the far right Among the Rest who live in Latin America and in particular in Chile fascism is no stranger Chile was a battlefield falling to the dictatorship of the far right Pinochet regime a b c d e The Oxford Handbook of the Radical Right Oxford University Press 2018 pp 394 411 ISBN 978 0 19 027455 9 Bingham John Defining French Fascism Finding Fascists in France Canadian Journal of History Dec 1994 Payne Stanley G Fascist Italy and Spain 1922 1945 Spain and the Mediterranean Since 1898 Raanan Rein ed p 105 London 1999 a b c d The rise of the far right Building a trade union response London Trades Union Congress 2020 pp 25 36 Nemtsova Anna 24 April 2017 Russia s Alt Right Rasputin Says He s Steve Bannon s Ideological Soul Mate The Daily Beast Retrieved 6 October 2022 a b The Worrying Rise of Spain s Far Right Jacobin 28 April 2019 Retrieved 6 October 2022 Carvajal Alvaro 27 December 2020 Vox abre otro frente de disputa con el PP en Latinoamerica El Mundo in Spanish p 14 Retrieved 7 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Gonzalez Miguel Galarraga Gortazar Naiara Rivas Molina Federico 18 October 2021 Vox teje una alianza anticomunista en America Latina El Pais in Spanish Retrieved 7 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link La ultima cruzada de Vox combatir el comunismo en Iberoamerica ABC in Spanish 26 September 2021 Retrieved 7 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Mitralias Yorgos 5 October 2022 Towards the Brown International of the European and global far right Committee for the Abolition of Illegitimate Debt Retrieved 5 October 2022 Las instrucciones que recibe Kast desde Espana Resumen cl resumen cl in Spanish Retrieved 6 October 2022 A Hateful Sort of Love The New Yorker 5 October 2022 Europe s far right flocks to Russia International conservative forum held in St Petersburg Meduza 5 October 2022 Europe far right parties meet in St Petersburg Russia BBC 5 October 2022 Right Wing Groups Find a Haven for a Day in Russia New York Times 5 October 2022 Washington s Defunct Atomwaffen Division had Deep Ties to the Terrorist Org Russia Imperialist Movement Malcontent News 6 August 2022 In 2015 while in St Petersburg Russell met with Taylor of American Renaissance and the leaders of the Nordic Resistance Movement of Sweden the National Action group of Germany CasPound of Italy and Golden Dawn of Greece a b Saha Santosh C ed 2008 Ethnicity and sociopolitical change in Africa and other developing countries a constructive discourse in state building first ed Lexington Books p 92 ISBN 978 0 7391 2332 4 Aspegren Lennart 2006 Never again Rwanda and the World Human Rights Law From Dissemination to Application Essays in Honour of Goran Melander The Raoul Wallenberg Institute human rights library Vol 26 Martinus Nijhoff Publishers p 173 ISBN 9004151818 Des Forges Alison March 1999 Leave None to Tell the Story Genocide in Rwanda History The Army the Church and the Akazu New York Human Rights Watch ISBN 1 56432 171 1 MICT 13 38 United Nations International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals 11 November 2013 Retrieved 4 June 2020 Mechanism fugitive Felicien Kabuga arrested today Press release International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals 16 May 2020 Archived from the original on 25 November 2020 Reyntjens Filip 21 October 2014 Rwanda s Untold Story A reply to 38 scholars scientists researchers journalists and historians African Arguments Des Forges Alison 1999 Leave None to Tell the Story Genocide in Rwanda The Organization The Militia New York Human Rights Watch ISBN 1 56432 171 1 Rwanda genocide of 1994 Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc p 3 Retrieved 3 June 2020 The End of Apartheid Archive Information released online prior to January 20 2009 United States Department of State 2009 Archived from the original on 5 February 2009 Retrieved 5 February 2009 The prohibition of the African National Congress the Pan Africanist Congress the South African Communist Party and a number of subsidiary organizations is being rescinded www cvet org za CVET Community Video Education Trust 2 February 1990 Organizations Nationalist Party National Party 30 March 2011 Brotz Howard 1977 The Politics of South Africa Democracy and Racial Diversity Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 45 ISBN 978 0 19 215671 6 Du Toit Brian M 1991 The Far Right in Current South African Politics The Journal of Modern African Studies Cambridge University Press 29 4 627 667 doi 10 1017 S0022278X00005693 ISSN 1469 7777 JSTOR 161141 S2CID 154640869 Turpin Petrosino Carolyn 2013 The Beast Reawakens Fascism s Resurgence from Hitler s Spymasters to Today s Neo Nazi Groups and Right Wing Extremists Taylor and Francis ISBN 978 1 134 01424 8 There are hate groups in South Africa Perhaps among the most organized is the Afrikaner Resistance Movement or AWB Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging Included in its ideological platform are neo Nazism and White supremacy Robyn Curnow Nkepile Mabuse 5 April 2010 South Africa s neo Nazis drop revenge vow CNN Clark Nancy Worger William 2013 South Africa The Rise and Fall of Apartheid Routledge p xx ISBN 978 1 317 86165 2 Terre Blanche Eugene 1941 2010 Began career in the South African police In 1973 founded the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging as a Nazi inspired militant right wing movement upholding white supremacy Amnesty decision Truth and Reconciliation Commission 1999 Retrieved 22 April 2007 Togo profile BBC News 11 July 2011 Retrieved 11 January 2013 Togo le RPT est mort que vive l Unir in French Radio France Internationale 15 April 2012 Retrieved 28 April 2012 Yvette Attiogbe 14 April 2012 The Dissolution of the RPT It is Official togo online co uk Archived from the original on 9 August 2013 Retrieved 28 April 2012 Folly Mozolla 15 April 2012 Faure Gnassingbe has created his party Union pour la Republique UNIR in Atakpame togo online co uk Archived from the original on 7 August 2013 Retrieved 28 April 2012 2010 Human Rights Report Togo US Department of State Retrieved 11 January 2013 Benzaquem de Araujo Ricardo 1988 Totalitarismo e Revolucao o Integralismo de Plinio Salgado Rio de Janeiro Jorge Zahar Editor pp 30 33 46 48 ISBN 8585061839 Rene E Gertz June 1996 Influencia politica alema no Brasil na decada DE 1930 Estudios Interdisciplinarios de America Latina y el Caribe E I A L 7 1 Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 19 September 2011 Marcelo Carneiro 14 November 2001 Heil Hitler Novos documentos contam a historia do Partido Nazista no Brasil de Vargas VEJA Archived from the original on 18 March 2009 Dietrich Ana Maria 2007 Nazismo tropical O partido Nazista no Brasil Teses usp br Thesis Universidade de Sao Paulo doi 10 11606 T 8 2007 tde 10072007 113709 Retrieved 28 February 2017 Extrema Direita E Questao Nacional o nazismo no Brasil dos anos 30 PDF 4 March 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2009 Josef Mengele United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 2009 Retrieved 22 August 2019 Fascist Populist Debate Over Describing Brazil s Bolsonaro The New York Times Amaral Luciana 12 November 2019 Bolsonaro anuncia saida do PSL e confirma novo partido Alianca pelo Brasil in Portuguese Uol Retrieved 13 November 2019 Nolasco Thiago 12 November 2019 Bolsonaro anuncia saida do PSL e crianca do Alianca pelo Brasil in Portuguese R7 Retrieved 13 November 2019 Mazui Guilherme Rodrigues Paloma 12 November 2019 Bolsonaro anuncia saida do PSL e criacao de novo partido in Portuguese G1 Retrieved 13 November 2019 Far right Bolsonaro Blunck Julia 17 October 2018 Why Brazil s far right challenger Jair Bolsonaro has already won New Statesman Retrieved 4 November 2018 Phillips Tom Phillips Dom 7 October 2018 Far right populist Jair Bolsonaro leads as Brazil goes to vote The Guardian Retrieved 4 November 2018 Brazil far right politician enters presidential race BBC News 23 July 2018 Retrieved 4 November 2018 Londono Ernesto Darlington Shasta 17 October 2018 Jair Bolsonaro Wins Brazil s Presidency in a Shift to the Far Right The New York Times Retrieved 4 November 2018 Cuadros Alex 8 October 2018 Brazil Turns Its Back on Democracy The Atlantic Retrieved 4 November 2018 Frederowski Bruno Mandl Carolina 8 October 2018 Brazil s far right Bolsonaro No coalition politics in cabinet picks Reuters Retrieved 4 November 2018 Meredith Sam 9 October 2018 Who is the Trump of the Tropics All you need to know about Brazil s presidential frontrunner CNBC Retrieved 24 November 2018 Romero Luiz 6 October 2018 Brazilians are so averse to the Workers Party they re willing to elect a radical far right populist Quartz Retrieved 24 November 2018 a b Forsythe David P 2009 Encyclopedia of Human Rights Volume 1 Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 344 ISBN 978 0 19 533402 9 Retrieved 17 June 2020 The far right National Liberation Movement MLN led by Mario Sandoval Alarcon became an important political player after 1969 it was responsible for the first death squad killings of activists and regime opponents a b Bartrop Paul R Leonard Jacobs Steven 2014 Modern Genocide The Definitive Resource and Document Collection Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 970 ISBN 978 1 61069 364 6 a b Levenson Estrada Deborah Winter 2003 The Life That Makes Us Die The Death That Makes Us Live Facing Terrorism in Guatemala City Radical History Review 2003 85 94 104 doi 10 1215 01636545 2003 85 94 S2CID 143353418 a b Bonpane Blase 2000 Guerrillas of Peace Liberation Theology and the Central American Revolution iUniverse pp 30 50 ISBN 978 0 595 00418 8 Rothenburg David ed 2012 Memory of Silence The Guatemalan Truth Commission Report Palgrave Macmillan pp 112 113 ISBN 978 1 137 01114 5 a b c Grandin Greg Klein Naomi 2011 The Last Colonial Massacre Latin America in the Cold War University of Chicago Press pp 87 89 ISBN 978 0 226 30690 2 Batz Giovanni 2013 Military Factionalism and the Consolidation of Power in 1960s Guatemala In Garrard Burnett Virginia Lawrence Mark Atwood Moreno Julia E eds Beyond the Eagle s Shadow New Histories of Latin America s Cold War University of New Mexico Press pp 64 65 ISBN 978 0 8263 5369 6 Janda Kenneth 1980 Guatemala The Party System in 1950 1954 and 1953 1962 Political Parties A Cross National Survey New York The Free Press pp 635 636 Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 via janda org Blum William 2003 Killing Hope US Military and CIA interventions since World War II Zed Books pp 233 234 ISBN 978 1 84277 369 7 Theroux Paul 2014 The Old Patagonian Express Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 100 103 ISBN 978 0 547 52400 9 Stanley G Payne A History of Fascism 1914 1945 London Routledge 2001 p 341 Garay Cristian 1990 El Partido Agrario Laborista 1945 1958 Editorial Andres Bello Santiago OCLC 25534586 ISBN 956 13 0889 3 pp 133 135 a b c d Levenda Peter 2002 Unholy Alliance A History of Nazi Involvement in the Occult London Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 0 8264 1409 5 McCarthy Julie 14 September 2006 A Dictator s Legacy of Economic Growth NPR Retrieved 16 December 2021 Falconer Bruce 1 September 2008 The Torture Colony The American Scholar Retrieved 10 May 2019 a b Infield Glenn Secrets of the SS 1981 p 206 Staff writers 30 March 2005 Michael Townley fue interrogado por muerte de Frei Montalva Radio Cooperativa in Spanish Archived from the original on 29 July 2012 Retrieved 21 April 2016 Hunter Wendy 1997 Continuity or Change Civil Military Relations in Democratic Argentina Chile and Peru Political Science Quarterly Academy of Political Science 112 3 458 doi 10 2307 2657566 JSTOR 2657566 Rather than moving toward the center they were motivated by the imperatives of Chile s binomial electoral system which induces parties to form coalitions to ally with the far right Union Democratica Independiente UDI Bresnahan Rosalind November 2003 The Media and the Neoliberal Transition in Chile Democratic Promise Unfulfilled Latin American Perspectives SAGE Publishing 30 6 45 doi 10 1177 0095399703256257 S2CID 145784920 the far right party the Union Democratica Independiente Independent Democratic UDI Blofield Merike H Haas Liesl 2005 Defining a Democracy Reforming the Laws on Women s Rights in Chile 1990 2002 Latin American Politics and Society Cambridge University Press 47 3 42 The far right Independent Democratic Union UDI forms an electoral alliance with National Renovation RN McGowan Charis Women in Chile voice fears over far right presidential candidate Al Jazeera Retrieved 16 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link El Partido Republicano el proyecto populista de la derecha radical chilena Revista Uruguaya de Ciencia Politica 30 1 105 134 June 2021 In their ideological core the radical populist rights are composed of the combination of three traits nativism authoritarianism and populism This recap allows to identify dimensions of analysis applicable to the Republican Party Funk Robert L 26 October 2021 The Rise of Jose Antonio Kast in Chile Americas Quarterly Retrieved 24 November 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Far right populist ex protest leader set for runoff vote in Chile s presidential election The Guardian 21 November 2021 Retrieved 24 November 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Chile s Bolsonaro Hard right Kast rises targeting crime and violence Reuters 22 November 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Davila Mireya January 2020 La reemergencia del pinochetismo Barometro de politica y equidad 16 49 69 Bonner Raymond Weakness and Deceit U S Policy and El Salvador New York Times Books 1984 p 330 Arnson Cynthia J Window on the Past A Declassified History of Death Squads in El Salvador in Death Squads in Global Perspective Murder with Deniability Campbell and Brenner eds 88 El Salvador Death Squads Still Operating Banderasnews com Retrieved 13 November 2011 When a wave of torture and murder staggered a small U S ally truth was a casualty The Baltimore Sun 11 June 1995 Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 13 November 2011 U S continues to train Honduran soldiers Republic Broadcasting Network 21 July 2009 Archived from the original on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 3 August 2009 Imerman Vicky Heather Dean 2009 Notorious Honduran School of the Americas Graduates Derechos Human Rights Archived from the original on 4 December 2008 Retrieved 3 August 2009 a b Holland Clifton L June 2006 Honduras Human Rights Workers Denounce Battalion 3 16 Participation in Zelaya Government PDF Mesoamerica Institute for Central American Studies Archived from the original PDF on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 3 August 2009 Hodge James Linda Cooper 14 July 2009 U S continues to train Honduran soldiers National Catholic Reporter Archived from the original on 1 August 2009 Retrieved 5 August 2009 Comunicado in Spanish COFADEH 3 July 2009 Retrieved 5 August 2009 a b Goodman Amy 31 July 2009 Zelaya Speaks Z Communications Archived from the original on 24 December 2013 Retrieved 1 August 2009 Comite de Familiares de Detenidos Desaparecidos en Honduras February 2007 Hnd Solicitan al Presidente Zelaya la destitucion de integrantes del Batallon 3 16 nombrados en el Ministerio del Interior Nizkor Archived from the original on 24 September 2009 Retrieved 7 August 2009 Leiva Noe 2 August 2009 No se avizora el fin de la crisis hondurena El Nuevo Herald AFP Archived from the original on 5 August 2009 Retrieved 7 August 2009 Mejia Lilian Mauricio Perez Carlos Giron 18 July 2009 Pobladores Exigen Nueva Ley De Mineria 71 Detenidos Y 12 Heridos En Batalla Campal in Spanish MAC Mines and Communities Archived from the original on 17 September 2009 Retrieved 7 August 2009 Hammett Brian 1999 A Concise History of Mexico Smith Benjamin T 2009 Pistoleros and Popular Movements The Politics of State Formation in Postrevolutionary Oaxaca Lincoln University of Nebraska Press p 289 ISBN 978 0 8032 2280 9 Rospigliosi Fernando 1996 Las Fuerzas Armadas y el 5 de abril la percepcion de la amenaza subversiva como una motivacion golpista Lima Instituto de Estudios Peruanos pp 46 47 Gaussens Pierre 2020 The forced serilization of indigenous population in Mexico in the 1990s Canadian Journal of Bioethics 3 3 180 doi 10 7202 1073797ar S2CID 234586692 a government plan developed by the Peruvian army between 1989 and 1990s to deal with the Shining Path insurrection later known as the Green Plan whose unpublished text expresses in explicit terms a genocidal intention Burt Jo Marie September October 1998 Unsettled accounts militarization and memory in postwar Peru NACLA Report on the Americas Taylor amp Francis 32 2 35 41 doi 10 1080 10714839 1998 11725657 the military s growing frustration over the limitations placed upon its counterinsurgency operations by democratic institutions coupled with the growing inability of civilian politicians to deal with the spiraling economic crisis and the expansion of the Shining Path prompted a group of military officers to devise a coup plan in the late 1980s The plan called for the dissolution of Peru s civilian government military control over the state and total elimination of armed opposition groups The plan developed in a series of documents known as the Plan Verde outlined a strategy for carrying out a military coup in which the armed forces would govern for 15 to 20 years and radically restructure state society relations along neoliberal lines a b c Aviles William Spring 2009 Despite Insurgency Reducing Military Prerogatives in Colombia and Peru Latin American Politics and Society Cambridge University Press 51 1 57 85 doi 10 1111 j 1548 2456 2009 00040 x S2CID 154153310 Rospigliosi Fernando 1996 Las Fuerzas Armadas y el 5 de abril la percepcion de la amenaza subversiva como una motivacion golpista Lima Instituto de Estudios Peruanos pp 28 40 Rendon Silvio 2013 La intervencion de los Estados Unidos en el Peru Editorial Sur pp 145 150 ISBN 978 6124574139 a b Alfredo Schulte Bockholt 2006 Chapter 5 Elites Cocaine and Power in Colombia and Peru The politics of organized crime and the organized crime of politics a study in criminal power Lexington Books pp 114 118 ISBN 978 0 7391 1358 5 important members of the officer corps particularly within the army had been contemplating a military coup and the establishment of an authoritarian regime or a so called directed democracy The project was known as Plan Verde the Green Plan Fujimori essentially adopted the Plan Verde and the military became a partner in the regime The autogolpe or self coup of April 5 1992 dissolved the Congress and the country s constitution and allowed for the implementation of the most important components of the Plan Verde Asensio Raul Camacho Gabriela Gonzalez Natalia Grompone Romeo Pajuelo Teves Ramon Pena Jimenez Omayra Moscoso Macarena Vasquez Yerel Sosa Villagarcia Paolo 2021 El Profe Como Pedro Castillo se convirtio en presidente del Peru y que pasara a continuacion in Spanish 1 ed Lima Institute of Peruvian Studies pp 13 24 ISBN 978 6123260842 Retrieved 17 November 2021 Fujimorism was an unprecedented authoritarian political regime Quijano Anibal 1995 Fujimorism and Peru Socialism and Democracy 9 2 45 63 doi 10 1080 08854309508428165 Martinez Jose Honorio 15 June 2009 Neoliberalismo y genocidio en el regimen fujimorista Historia Actual Online 9 CHILE PERU Decision to Extradite Fujimori Sets International Precedent Inter Press Service 21 September 2007 Retrieved 26 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Millonarios japoneses al rescate de Fujimori El Tiempo in Spanish 11 August 2007 Retrieved 26 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link The Decline and Fall of Yukio Hatoyama Washington Examiner 2 June 2010 Retrieved 26 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Tiene futuro nuestra extrema derecha La Republica in Spanish 11 January 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Tribunal peruano ordena liberar a Keiko Fujimori Radio France Internationale 1 May 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Jimenez Beatriz 14 April 2011 El voto de Keiko elmundo es El Mundo Retrieved 26 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Candidato de la ultraderecha peruana es acusado de golpista por sus oponentes EFE in Spanish Retrieved 12 March 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Campana sin favoritos eleva incertidumbre en Peru a un mes de las presidenciales France 24 11 March 2021 Retrieved 12 March 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Cavero Natalia Puertas 10 March 2021 Uncle Porky the conservative right wing businessman is second in Peruvian election polls Al Dia Retrieved 12 March 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Extreme Right Rises In Peruvian Politics Latin American Herald Tribune Archived from the original on 10 June 2021 Retrieved 12 March 2021 Candidato ultraconservador peruano pide destituir al presidente Sagasti Noticieros Televisa in Mexican Spanish 9 March 2021 Retrieved 12 March 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Aquino Marco 18 March 2021 Peru s Bolsonaro The Opus Dei ultra conservative who would kick out Odebrecht National Post Reuters Retrieved 18 March 2021 a b c d e f g Sectors of the U S Right Active in the Year 2011 The Public Eye Political Research Associates Retrieved 9 September 2019 a b Zaitchik Alexander 19 October 2006 The National Socialist Movement Implodes SPLCenter org Montgomery Alabama Southern Poverty Law Center Archived from the original on 19 September 2015 Retrieved 28 December 2020 The party s problems began last June when Citizens Against Hate discovered that NSM s Tulsa post office box was shared by The Joy of Satan Ministry in which the wife of NSM chairman emeritus Clifford Herrington is High Priestess Within NSM ranks meanwhile a bitter debate was sparked over the propriety of Herrington s Joy of Satan connections Schoep moved ahead with damage control operations by nudging chairman emeritus Herrington from his position under the cover of attending to personal matters But it was too late to stop NSM Minister of Radio and Information Michael Blevins aka Vonbluvens from following White out of the party citing disgust with Herrington s Joy of Satan ties Satanism declared Blevins in his resignation letter affects the whole prime directive guiding the NSM SURVIVAL OF THE WHITE RACE NSM was now a Noticeably Smaller Movement one trailed in extremist circles by a strong whiff of Satanism and related charges of sexual impropriety associated with Joy of Satan initiation rites and curiously strong teen recruitment efforts National Socialist Movement SPLCenter org Montgomery Alabama Southern Poverty Law Center 2020 Archived from the original on 8 September 2015 Retrieved 28 December 2020 The NSM has had its share of movement scandal In July 2006 it was rocked by revelations that co founder and chairman emeritus Cliff Herrington s wife was the High Priestess of the Joy of Satan Ministry and that her satanic church shared an address with the Tulsa Okla NSM chapter The exposure of Herrington s wife s Satanist connections caused quite a stir particularly among those NSM members who adhered to a racist and heretical variant of Christianity Christian Identity Before the dust settled both Herringtons were forced out of NSM Bill White the neo Nazi group s energetic spokesman also quit taking several NSM officials with him to create a new group the American National Socialist Workers Party a b The National Socialist Movement Adl org New York Anti Defamation League 2020 Archived from the original on 22 September 2017 Retrieved 28 December 2020 a b c Upchurch H E 22 December 2021 Cruickshank Paul Hummel Kristina eds The Iron March Forum and the Evolution of the Skull Mask Neo Fascist Network PDF CTC Sentinel West Point New York Combating Terrorism Center 14 10 27 37 Archived PDF from the original on 27 December 2021 Retrieved 19 January 2022 The skull mask network s ideology is a political religious hybrid based in large part on the work of the philosopher Julius Evola Evola mixed fascism with Traditionalism a syncretic 20th century religious movement that combines Hermetic occultism with the Hindu doctrine of cyclical time and a belief in a now lost primordial European paganism Adherents of this blend of doctrines which can be termed Traditionalist fascism believe that a caste based racially pure organic society will be restored after what they believe to be an ongoing age of corruption the Kali Yuga is swept away in an apocalyptic war and that it is their role to hasten the end of the Kali Yuga by generating chaos and violence Lipset amp Raab 1973 p 116 Lipset amp Raab 1973 p 125 Feldman Glenn 1999 Chapter 9 Race over Rum Romans and Republicans Politics Society and the Klan in Alabama 1915 1949 Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press pp 160 192 ISBN 978 0 8173 8950 5 OCLC 40830038 Cook Brianne 2020 2008 Watcher on the Tower and the Washington State Ku Klux Klan depts washington edu Seattle Washington Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project Archived from the original on 22 November 2021 Retrieved 15 March 2022 Morain Tom 4 March 2020 Iowa History Month The history of the Ku Klux Klan in Iowa The Des Moines Register Des Moines Iowa Retrieved 15 March 2022 Lipset amp Raab 1973 pp 138 139 Lipset amp Raab 1973 p 152 Carlisle 2005 p 588 Carlisle 2005 p 557 Examining the Sovereign Citizen Movement in the Obama Era Politics amp Policy Archived from the original on 2 May 2014 Retrieved 2 May 2014 Sovereign Citizens A Growing Domestic Threat to Law Enforcement FBI Retrieved 16 March 2019 Brown Karina 10 May 2016 Bundy Filing Shows Intent Behind Refuge Takeover Pasadena California Courthouse News Service Retrieved 11 May 2016 Casey Lissa Arnold Michael 9 May 2016 Defendant Ammon Bundy s Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction PDF Retrieved 11 May 2016 a b Cimino Richard P December 2005 No God in Common American Evangelical Discourse on Islam after 9 11 Review of Religious Research Springer Verlag on behalf of the Religious Research Association 47 2 162 174 doi 10 2307 3512048 ISSN 2211 4866 JSTOR 3512048 S2CID 143510803 Hermansson Patrik Lawrence David Mulhall Joe Murdoch Simon 2020 The International Alt Right Fascism for the 21st Century London Routledge ISBN 978 0 429 62709 5 Bhatt Chetan 2020 White Extinction Metaphysical Elements of Contemporary Western Fascism Theory Culture amp Society SAGE Publications 38 49 doi 10 1177 0263276420925523 ISSN 0263 2764 Clemons Steven 27 August 2006 The Rise of Japan s Thought Police The Washington Post Muneo Narusawa Abe Shinzo Japan s New Prime Minister a Far Right Denier of History The Asia Pacific Journal Vol 11 Issue 1 No 1 14 January 2013 The Economist of Britain on 5 January 2013 Cited in William L Brooks 2013 Will history again trip up Prime Minister Shinzo Abe The Asahi Shimbun 7 May 2013 Drago Hedl 10 November 2005 Croatia s Willingness To Tolerate Fascist Legacy Worries Many BCR Issue 73 IWPR Archived from the original on 16 November 2010 Retrieved 30 November 2010 a b Eremina Natalia Seredenko Sergei 2015 Right Radicalism in Party and Political Systems in Present day European States Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 74 ISBN 978 1 4438 7938 5 Milekic Sven 24 January 2017 Croatia Ex President Shown Downplaying WWII Crimes Balkan Insight BIRN Croatian PM hails victory for conservatives in parliamentary vote Deutsche Welle Retrieved 18 September 2020 Croatia s nationalist revival points to role for far right Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 18 September 2020 Kasekamp Andres Fall 1993 The Estonian Veterans League A fascist movement Journal of Baltic Studies 24 3 263 268 doi 10 1080 01629779300000151 Kasekamp Andres 2003 The Radical Right in Interwar Estonia Palgrave Arnold Schulbach April 1934 Vabside elu keskvanglas Free communication life in the central prison Vaba Maa in Estonian Vol 6 no 79 p 1 Voldemar Pinn Kahe mehe saatus Johannes Vares Hjalmar Mae Haapsalu 1994 Tanner Jari 4 March 2019 Far right gains in Estonia eyed for clues to EU wide vote AP News Roger Suso 31 December 2022 COM UN NEN DE TRETZE ANYS HA POGUT DIRIGIR DES D ESTONIA UNA ORGANITZACIo INTERNACIONAL NEONAZI ca Directa According to the Eesti Ekspress newspaper Commander had a contact with the deputy of the Conservative People s Party of Estonia EKRE and head of the youth section of the formation Ruuben Kaalep Silver Tambur 10 August 2020 A global neo Nazi organisation led by a 13 year old Estonian schoolboy Estonian World Archived from the original on 12 May 2020 Retrieved 10 April 2020 Grupuote kurios narys planavo ispuolį Lietuvoje įtraukti siekiama net ir vaikus The group whose member planned the attack in Lithuania even children are sought in involvement Delfi web portal 26 June 2020 Archived from the original on 27 June 2020 Retrieved 27 June 2020 EKRE MP Ruuben Kaalep has long history of neo Nazi activity Eesti Rahvusringhaaling 10 July 2019 Archived from the original on 8 May 2020 Retrieved 10 July 2019 Wiesenthal Center Criticizes Extreme Right March to Mark Estonian Independence Day Simon Wiesenthal Center 5 October 2020 Nazi Hunter Nuremberg esque march no way to celebrate Estonian independence International Business Times 5 October 2020 Vares Vesa amp Uola Mikko amp Majander Mikko Kansanvalta koetuksella Sarjassa Suomen eduskunta 100 vuotta Osa 3 Helsinki Edita 2006 ISBN 9513745430 pp 248 253 Iltalehti Teema Historia Lapuan liike Alma Media 2015 pp 34 35 L J Niinisto Paavo Susitaival 1896 1993 Aktivismi elamanasenteena 1998 Jorma O Tiainen et al eds 1987 Vuosisatamme Kronikka Jyvaskyla Gummerus p 668 ISBN 951202893X Lars Westerlund ed 2008 Sotavangit ja internoidut Prisoners of war and internees in Finnish English and Swedish Helsinki Kansallisarkisto National Archives ISBN 978 9515331397 Palveliko entinen puolustusministeri Arvo Pentti s 13 2 1915 k 1 2 1986 suomalaisessa SS Pataljoonassa 2 Maailmansodan aikana jos palveli kauanko missa ja milla sotilasarvolla Did former Minister of Defense Arvo Pentti b 13 February 1915 d 1 2 1986 serve in the Finnish SS Battalion during World War II if so for how long where and with what military rank Kysy kirjastonhoitajalta Ask your librarian in Finnish Kirjastot fi 31 May 2007 Retrieved 23 September 2016 Seitseman vuotta uusnatsina Helsingin sanomat 17 10 2013 Right Wing Terrorism and Militancy in the Nordic Countries A Comparative Case Study PDF University of Oslo Center for Research on Extremism Retrieved 5 November 2020 One particularly severe episode happened in 1997 when a group of about 50 skinheads attacked Somali youths playing football in the Helsinki suburb Kontula The violence did not stop before the police started shooting warning shots and 22 skinheads were sentenced for the attack Pekonen et al also mention a number of other violent events from the 1990s including ten particularly severe events from 1995 not included in the RTV dataset because sufficient event details are lacking a racist murder an immigrant stabbed by a skinhead four attacks on immigrants using explosives and another four immigrants beaten severely Extreme right radicals seeking more visible presence in Finland Finnish Broadcasting Company 2 February 2013 Retrieved 1 October 2017 Finnish centre left parties agree to form government FRANCE 24 31 May 2019 Rinne led his party to a razor thin victory in last month s general election holding off the far right Finns Party which surged into second place on an anti immigration agenda Finland s Social Democrats win razor thin victory against far right party euronews 15 April 2019 Finland s leftist Social Democrats won first place in Sunday s general election with 17 7 of the votes avoiding a near defeat by the far right Finns Party which rose in the ranks with an anti immigration agenda A look at euroskeptic and populist forces in the European Union The Japan Times 21 May 2019 Finland s far right anti immigration Finns Party more than doubled its seats in April national elections closely tailing the leftist Social Democrats who won only narrowly Six MPs of the far right Finns Party with a criminal record European Interest 19 April 2019 FactSheet The Finns Party Bridge Initiative Georgetown University Neo Nazis marching on the streets in European cities despite EU bans Brussels Times 28 March 2023 Helsinki Finland Towards Freedom and 612 for freedom march in memory of the Finnish SS battalion which fought with Nazi Germany On Europe s Streets Annual Marches Glorifying Nazism PDF B nai B rith Amadeu Antonio Foundation Federal Foreign Office 25 March 2023 The 612 march is a torchlight procession from central Helsinki to the Hietaniemi war cemetery where members visit the tomb of World War II era President Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim and the monument to the Finnish SS Battalion There are speeches at both the assembly point and at the cemetery eulogizing the Battle for Helsinki depicted by speakers as the occasion when Germans and Finns marched side by side and liberated the city from the communists Aarioikeistolaisten hihamerkit ja anarkistiliput vilahtelivat Helsingissa kun tuhannet marssivat itsenaisyyspaivan mielenosoituksissa Poliisi otti kiinni 13 ihmista Helsingin Sanomat 7 October 2020 Archived from the original on 4 November 2021 Retrieved 9 August 2021 Pohjoismainen vastarintaliike joukkonujakassa itsenaisyyspaivana uusnatsit naureskelivat vakivallalle Hauskaa Iltasanomat 7 October 2020 Archived from the original on 19 October 2021 Retrieved 9 August 2021 Nain toimii Suomen Vastarintaliike Yle Archived from the original on 23 September 2020 Retrieved 26 September 2020 The French National Front On its way to power Policy network net 22 January 2015 Archived from the original on 15 February 2018 Retrieved 31 March 2015 John Lichfield 1 March 2015 Rise of the French far right Front National party could make sweeping gains at this month s local elections Independent London Retrieved 31 March 2015 Davies Peter 2012 The National Front in France Ideology Discourse and Power Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 72530 4 Camus amp Lebourg 2017 p page needed Jean Marie Le Pen fined again for dismissing Holocaust as detail theguardian 6 April 2016 Jean Marie Le Pen condamne pour incitation a la haine raciale Le Monde fr lemonde fr 24 February 2005 a b c Wildman Sarah 16 August 2017 Why you see swastikas in America but not Germany Vox Vox Media Retrieved 2 June 2020 Section 86a Use of Symbols of Unconstitutional Organizations Criminal Code Strafgesetzbuch StGB German Law Archive Virchow Fabian 2016 PEGIDA Understanding the Emergence and Essence of Nativist Protest in Dresden Journal of Intercultural Studies 37 6 541 555 doi 10 1080 07256868 2016 1235026 S2CID 151752919 PEGIDA in Germany The Pegida Movement and German Political Culture Is Right Wing Populism Here to Stay Bennhold Katrin 3 March 2021 Germany Places Far Right AfD Party Under Surveillance for Extremism The New York Times a b c Payne Stanley G 1995 A History of Fascism 1914 45 University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 14874 2 a b Gert Sorensen Robert Mallett International fascism 1919 45 London Portland Oregon Frank Cass Publishers 2002 p 159 a b Lee Stephen J 2000 European Dictatorships 1918 1945 Routledge 2 edition 2000 ISBN 0415230462 Mazower Mark Inside Hitler s Greece The Experience of Occupation 1941 44 New Haven Yale University Press 2001 pages 22 amp 145 Martin Seckendorf Gunter Keber u a Bundesarchiv Hrsg Die Okkupationspolitik des deutschen Faschismus in Jugoslawien Griechenland Albanien Italien und Ungarn 1941 1945 Huthig Berlin 1992 Decker Muller Heidelberg 2000 Reihe Europa unterm Hakenkreuz Band 6 ISBN 3822618926 Munoz Antonio J 2018 The German Secret Field Police in Greece 1941 1944 Jefferson NC MacFarland amp Company p 95 ISBN 978 1 4766 6784 3 Kassimeris Christos 2006 Causes of the 1967 Greek Coup Democracy and Security 2 1 61 72 Clinton Says U S Regrets Aid to Junta in Cold War Los Angeles Times 21 November 1999 Wodak Ruth 2015 The Politics of Fear What Right Wing Populist Discourses Mean Sage However Golden Dawn s neo Nazi profile is clearly visible in the party s symbolism with its flag resembling a swastika Nazi salutes and chant of Blood and Honour encapsulating its xenophobic and racist ideology Vasilopoulou Halikiopoulou 2015 The Golden Dawn s Nationalist Solution p 32 The extremist character of the Golden Dawn its neo Nazi principles racism and ultranationalism as well as its violence render the party a least likely case of success Dalakoglou Dimitris 2013 Neo Nazism and neoliberalism A Few Comments on Violence in Athens At the Time of Crisis WorkingUSA 16 16 2 283 292 doi 10 1111 wusa 12044 Miliopoulos Lazaros 2011 Extremismus in Griechenland Extremismus in den EU Staaten in German VS Verlag p 154 doi 10 1007 978 3 531 92746 6 9 ISBN 978 3 531 17065 7 mit der seit 1993 als Partei anerkannten offen neonationalsozialistischen Gruppierung Goldene Morgenrote Chryssi Avgi Xrysh Aygh kooperierte cooperated with the openly neo National Socialist group Golden Dawn Chryssi Avgi Xrysh Aygh which has been recognized as a party since 1993 Davies Peter Jackson Paul 2008 The Far Right in Europe An Encyclopedia Greenwood World Press p 173 Altsech Moses August 2004 Anti Semitism in Greece Embedded in Society Post Holocaust and Anti Semitism 23 12 On 12 March 2004 Chrysi Avghi Golden Dawn the new weekly newspaper of the Neo Nazi organization with that name cited another survey which indicated that the percentage of Greeks who view immigrants unfavorably is 89 percent Explosion at Greek neo Nazi office CNN 19 March 2010 archived from the original on 8 March 2012 retrieved 2 February 2012 Dalakoglou Dimitris 2012 Beyond Spontaneity PDF CITY 16 5 535 545 doi 10 1080 13604813 2012 720760 hdl 1871 1 a5f5f3bf 372b 4e1f 8d76 cbe25382a4d0 S2CID 143686910 Donadio Rachel Kitsantonis Niki 6 May 2012 Greek Voters Punish 2 Main Parties for Economic Collapse The New York Times Smith Helena 21 September 2019 After murder defections and poll defeat the sun sets on Greece s Golden Dawn The Observer ISSN 0029 7712 Retrieved 22 September 2019 Smith Helena 16 December 2011 Rise of the Greek far right raises fears of further turmoil The Guardian London Dalakoglou Dimitris 2012 Beyond Spontaneity Crisis Violence and Collective Action in Athens PDF CITY 16 5 535 545 doi 10 1080 13604813 2012 720760 hdl 1871 1 a5f5f3bf 372b 4e1f 8d76 cbe25382a4d0 S2CID 143686910 The use of the terms extreme Right neo Nazi and fascist as synonymous is on purpose Historically in Greece the terms have been used alternatively in reference to the para state apparatuses but not only pg 542 Xenakis Sappho 2012 A New Dawn Change and Continuity in Political Violence in Greece Terrorism and Political Violence 24 3 437 464 doi 10 1080 09546553 2011 633133 S2CID 145624655 Nikolaos Michaloliakos who established the fascistic far right party Chrysi Avgi Golden Dawn in the early 1980s Kravva Vasiliki 2003 The Construction of Otherness in Modern Greece The Ethics of Anthropology Debates and dilemmas Routledge p 169 For example during the summer of 2000 members of Chryssi Avgi the most widespread fascist organization in Greece destroyed part of the third cemetery in Athens Gemenis Kostas Nezi Roula January 2012 The 2011 Political Parties Expert Survey in Greece PDF University of Twente p 4 Interestingly the placement of the extreme right Chrysi Avyi does not seem to be influenced by this bias although this has more do with the lack of variance in the data 32 out of 33 experts placed the party on 10 Repoussi Maria 2009 Battles over the national past of Greeks The Greek History Textbook Controversy 2006 2007 PDF Geschichte fur Heute Zeitschrift fur Historisch politische Bildung 1 5 Grumke Thomas 2003 The transatlantic dimension of right wing extremism Human Rights Review 4 4 56 72 doi 10 1007 s12142 003 1021 x S2CID 145203309 On October 24 1998 the Greek right wing extremist organization Chrisi Avgi Golden Dawn was the host for the 5th European Youth Congress in Thessaloniki Xypolia Ilia June 2012 The rise of neo Nazism should not be underestimated PDF GPSG Pamphlet First Thoughts on the 17 June 2012 Election in Greece 26 Retrieved 4 March 2013 Henley Jon Davies Lizzy 18 June 2012 Greece s far right Golden Dawn party maintains share of vote The Guardian London Retrieved 25 June 2012 Parliamentary Elections January 2015 Ministry of Interior Retrieved 14 February 2021 Greek anti fascist rapper murdered by neo Nazi Golden Dawn The Independent 18 September 2013 Golden Dawn leader jailed ahead of Greek criminal trial The Guardian 3 October 2013 Retrieved 2 November 2013 Smith Helena 7 May 2015 Golden Dawn leaders trial adjourned until next week The Guardian Retrieved 17 June 2015 Gatopoulos Derek Becatoros Elena 7 October 2020 Greek court rules Golden Dawn party criminal organization Associated Press Retrieved 7 October 2020 Neo fascist Golden Dawn party crashes out of Greek parliament www aljazeera com Retrieved 3 April 2020 a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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