Europe of Sovereign Nations will now face a process that could see it stripped of its status as a European political party, losing funding in the process. Far-right MEPs from other groups opposed the decision. #EuropeNews
Wealth inequality effects everyone and so it changes how everyone votes, but it also causes certain “answers” to that problem to become more popular or tolerable. So what we’re seeing around the globe is the rise of the far right who are providing the “answer” that rising inequality and lowering standard of living is entirely the fault of immigrants, the loss of the “traditional family”, and pretty much any “answer” except for useful ones. So no, this typically starts by driving people to the right as the right will most easily attempt to maintain the status quo at the expense of the scapegoat.
The follow on effect is the rise of the “radical” left which provides the answer “tax the ultra wealthy, invest in public infrastructure, and strengthen worker rights” - all things that reduce wealth inequality or increase the standard of living.
We’re currently figuring out which side will win out in the long run or if the fundamentals will continue to not change and delay this issue further. For example Merz and the CDU in Germany making life better for the rich and worse for everyone else, delaying the inevitable decision of either the AFD winning or some party like Die Linke (hopefully) or Die Grüns winning. So Germans get to watch their lives get worse until they’re ready to vote in parties with real positive change on their mind (or the opposite, real terrible changes like AFD).
Wealth inequality effects everyone and so it changes how everyone votes, but it also causes certain “answers” to that problem to become more popular or tolerable. So what we’re seeing around the globe is the rise of the far right who are providing the “answer” that rising inequality and lowering standard of living is entirely the fault of immigrants, the loss of the “traditional family”, and pretty much any “answer” except for useful ones. So no, this typically starts by driving people to the right as the right will most easily attempt to maintain the status quo at the expense of the scapegoat.
The follow on effect is the rise of the “radical” left which provides the answer “tax the ultra wealthy, invest in public infrastructure, and strengthen worker rights” - all things that reduce wealth inequality or increase the standard of living.
We’re currently figuring out which side will win out in the long run or if the fundamentals will continue to not change and delay this issue further. For example Merz and the CDU in Germany making life better for the rich and worse for everyone else, delaying the inevitable decision of either the AFD winning or some party like Die Linke (hopefully) or Die Grüns winning. So Germans get to watch their lives get worse until they’re ready to vote in parties with real positive change on their mind (or the opposite, real terrible changes like AFD).