Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán during a meeting with the Israeli Prime Minister, in Jerusalem, Israel, on March 11.ABIR SULTAN / POOL / EFE
A few days ago, the Hungarian Prime Minister announced the idea of a European right that brings together, openly, citizens who reject immigrants.
It is not an isolated or banal proclamation.
Because, compared to what traditional political currents tend to consider, the impact of the extreme right is not measured only by its electoral weight.
They are confident that there is no sufficiently strong pedestal of right-wing extremism today that could endanger European democracy.
The sis is also appealed ...
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