The just-concluded European Union elections were yet another milestone for far-right parties on the continent. They racked up gains across many of the EU's 27 countries, and the surprising scale of their victories is rattling the political establishment there and drawing attention in the United States.
The parties' success embarrassed German Chancellor Olaf Scholz by outpacing his party and prompted French President Emmanuel Macron to call snap legislative elections.
While votes were still being tallied Tuesday, the gain for the right is just the latest example of how discontent with globalization and immigration have fueled a conservative, populist backlash in affluent Western democracies. Former President Donald Trump's 2016 win was the strongest example of this, but it's unclear whether the trends that powered the right in Europe will enable him to win another term in November.
That's because, along with the striking parallels, there are key differences between the dynamics in Europe and the U.S. And even with the right's gains in the most recent European elections there, the political center still is likely to retain control of the EU parliament.
''We're clearly at one of those points where the wind can blow in either direction,'' said Charlies A. Kupchan, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
WHAT FUELED THE RIGHT IN EUROPE?
All of the EU's countries have different political dynamics, and the EU parliamentary elections are often an opportunity for voters in each country to take a symbolic vote against those in power in their own nation, since they're voting for people who will take office in Brussels rather than their own capital. There's also been a global backlash to incumbents that doesn't seem to have any ideological basis.
But the right's resurgence in Europe is more than symbolic or random. It's been powered by frustration at the migrant crisis in the EU — frustration the right has been eager to amplify in online platforms — as well as regulations on climate change and other issues that have been seen as hitting rural, less-educated residents harder. Economic growth in much of Europe has been stagnant since the 2008 global recession, further powering discontent with the status quo.