At a far-right gathering hosted by Vox in Madrid last weekend, a stirring video tribute to Kirk wowed the audience. To loud cheers, Abascal told an estimated 8,500 people that the left “do not kill us for being fascists – they call us fascists in order to kill us”.
André Ventura of Portugal’s Chega said the killing showed “arguing over ideas” had given way to “hatred, persecution and murder”. Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, told the rally that Kirk’s “sacrifice … shows us once again which side the violence and intolerance are on … We will continue to fight tirelessly for our people’s freedom.”
In London, the 110,000 to 150,000 people who attended Tommy Robinson’s “unite the kingdom” protest on Saturday – including far-right figures from France, Belgium, Denmark, Poland and Germany – held a minute’s silence for their hero.
A continent on the march
This all might matter less if Europe’s far right were not already on the march. Populist and far-right parties are in government in Italy, Hungary, Belgium and Slovakia, and the most popular parties in France, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic and the UK.
In Finland and Croatia they are signed-up members of conservative-led coalitions, and in Sweden they are lending parliamentary support to another. In Spain, Vox is surging in the polls and in Portugal, Chega is in the lead ahead of local elections.
In German regional elections in North Rhine-Westphalia last Saturday, AfD was well beaten by chancellor Friedrich Merz’s centre-right CDU and his Social Democrat (SPD) coalition partners – but the far-right party succeeded in almost tripling its vote.
More insidiously, hardline far-right policies – on immigration, Islam, the green agenda, EU integration, traditional values – are becoming normalised across Europe as mainstream parties ape them in a vain attempt to maintain their vote shares.
Holding the line
In a passionate op-ed for Le Monde, the French MEP and former European affairs minister Nathalie Loiseau – who received death threats after objecting to the far right’s calls for a minute’s silence for Kirk – said that while Kirk’s killing was an abomination, he had “glorified racial segregation and slavery, demanded women return to the home, demonised homosexuality, blamed Jews for promoting immigration … and compared abortion to the Holocaust”.
She was, she said, the only one of 720 MEPs “to speak out and demand that a distinction be made between the unanimous condemnation we should all express in the face of a man’s assassination, and the refusal to endorse his ideas”.
In the present circumstances, Loiseau said, resisting the concerted call for Kirk’s martyrdom – “keeping our heads, remaining true to what we are” – is of paramount importance.
Because “it is not respect for the dead they demand; it’s the right to insult and hate the living who do not resemble them … It is not freedom of speech they defend, it is the normalisation of their extremism. In America, as in Europe.”
Until next week.