TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「Ex–White House chief strategist Steve Bannon on a rented private plane leaving Brussels to take him to London, where he would meet Nigel Farage, Vice Chairman of the pro-Brexit Leave Means Leave campaign. For years, proponents of the E.U. could rely on the fact that their opposition was hardly united. Europe’s far-right and nationalist parties tend to share little beyond concerns about illegal immigration and Islamist-inspired terrorism. But now Europe’s disrupters are trying to coax those big personalities to keep their eyes on a bigger prize: remaking the E.U. That was Bannon’s message when he opted to throw himself into the European campaign after leaving the White House. Inspired by Trump’s 2016 campaign, Italy’s Salvini–who has met with Bannon twice –has catapulted his anti-immigrant League party to the top of Italy’s polls with the slogan “Italy first!” In July, Bannon flew to London to meet right-wing Belgian politician Mischael Modrikamen. Over lunch, the two agreed to form an organization called the Movement, to bring together nationalist leaders across Europe ahead of the May 2019 elections. Bannon then darted around Europe, visiting right-wing leaders, as he attempted to knit together a coherent group. The idea, he told TIME, was to ready nationalist parties to win in the E.U. elections, through methods like data analytics and polling, honed during Trump’s campaign. “Europe is on fire right now with the populist movement,” he said last summer. “The centrist parties do not have the energy,” he said. “They do not have the youth, they do not have the ideas, they do not have the vigor.” Without a drastic fix, nationalism will increase its hold on the continent. “The status quo is not an option,” says France’s Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire. “The status quo will lead to the end of Europe.” Read more at link in bio. Photograph by @cedricgerbehaye—@maps.images for TIME」4月14日 1時47分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 4月14日 01時47分


Ex–White House chief strategist Steve Bannon on a rented private plane leaving Brussels to take him to London, where he would meet Nigel Farage, Vice Chairman of the pro-Brexit Leave Means Leave campaign. For years, proponents of the E.U. could rely on the fact that their opposition was hardly united. Europe’s far-right and nationalist parties tend to share little beyond concerns about illegal immigration and Islamist-inspired terrorism. But now Europe’s disrupters are trying to coax those big personalities to keep their eyes on a bigger prize: remaking the E.U. That was Bannon’s message when he opted to throw himself into the European campaign after leaving the White House. Inspired by Trump’s 2016 campaign, Italy’s Salvini–who has met with Bannon twice –has catapulted his anti-immigrant League party to the top of Italy’s polls with the slogan “Italy first!” In July, Bannon flew to London to meet right-wing Belgian politician Mischael Modrikamen. Over lunch, the two agreed to form an organization called the Movement, to bring together nationalist leaders across Europe ahead of the May 2019 elections. Bannon then darted around Europe, visiting right-wing leaders, as he attempted to knit together a coherent group. The idea, he told TIME, was to ready nationalist parties to win in the E.U. elections, through methods like data analytics and polling, honed during Trump’s campaign. “Europe is on fire right now with the populist movement,” he said last summer. “The centrist parties do not have the energy,” he said. “They do not have the youth, they do not have the ideas, they do not have the vigor.” Without a drastic fix, nationalism will increase its hold on the continent. “The status quo is not an option,” says France’s Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire. “The status quo will lead to the end of Europe.” Read more at link in bio. Photograph by @cedricgerbehaye@maps.images for TIME


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