Opinion Media must stop normalizing the far right - Every uncritical mention of far-right rhetoric is an editorial decision with political consequences.

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Media must stop normalizing the far right
POLITICO (archive.ph)
By Georgios Samaras
2026-03-04 03:00:00GMT

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Zia Yusuf (right) has been laying out his far-right vision in plain sight, getting it amplified nonstop. | Carl Court/Getty Images

Georgios Samaras is an assistant professor of public policy at the School for Government, King’s College London.


I’ve spent more than a year examining the media’s habit of using substitute labels instead of calling the far right what it is — and this practice is now everywhere.

Newsrooms cycle through a growing list of alternative descriptors, usually in search of language that feels safer or less likely to trigger backlash: hard right, alt-right, new right, religious right, national conservative, traditionalist… The list keeps growing.

This would matter less if any of these terms added clarity, but most do not. They’re vague, they aren’t grounded in political science research, and they blur ideology rather than naming it, only to leave readers with softer language that hides what these actors truly stand for. And there are grave consequences to this mainstreaming.

Of course, none of this is new. Scholars of far-right mainstreaming, such as Katy Brown and Aurelien Mondon, have shown how buzzwords — especially “populism” — helped produce this kind of journalistic ambiguity. The far right understood this dynamic long ago and has been exploiting it with discipline. Many of these actors now routinely deem being described as “far right” as defamation, treating accurate political description as if it were a form of vilification.

Instead, these parties— from Reform UK and France’s National Rally to Brothers of Italy and Alternative for Germany — are selling a self-proclaimed conservative vision that is wrapped in the language of common sense. Paired with promises of order and national renewal, this is the standard trick for presenting racist politics as natural, and smuggling some of the darkest ideas of the 1930s back into public life under the cover of murky policy language.

Let’s take, for example, the concept of “remigration.” In political science, remigration refers to the forced removal of minorities, especially those of African and South Asian descent, through coercion, exclusion and mass displacement — it’s ethnic cleansing dressed up in bureaucratic language. But today this term is appearing across Western media with far too little scrutiny, often treated as just another hardline immigration policy in the far-right playbook.

We can observe the same pattern being applied to the “great replacement” conspiracy theory, which which purports that political and cultural elites are deliberately engineering demographic change by encouraging immigration and higher birth rates among non-white, non-Christian populations to displace white Christian Europeans. Claims that whole cities are being “lost” to Islam, “no-go zones” and “two-tier policing” myths; distortions around grooming scandals; and blatant lies about crime statistics are turning the conversation around migration into a permanent moral panic.

While the effects of this are visible all across Europe, Britain’s Reform UK presents one of the clearest cases — not least because the party has been at the front of the line when it comes to legal threats and public pressure against media outlets for using established terms to describe its ideology.

Alas, much of the media has also handed Reform UK an absurd amount of airtime. This party, with just eight members of parliament, is routinely given a platform to push extreme ideas with a free pass, while its figures pose as a government-in-waiting more than three years ahead of the U.K.’s next general election.

This is exactly how someone like Reform UK policy head Zia Yusuf has become such a central figure. Not even an MP, Yusuf has been laying out his far-right vision in plain sight, getting it amplified nonstop. He has threatened mass deportations on a staggering scale — floating figures approaching 300,000 people a day — called for an end to “Indefinite Leave to Remain” when it comes to Brexit, and proposed an enforcement agency akin to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to carry it out. He has also boasted that Reform UK wouldn’t just leave the European Convention of Human Rights, but “derogate from every international agreement” standing in the way of its deportation agenda.

But while these slogans play well on X and rack up thousands of likes, the second a journalist pushes back and calls this ideology what it is, the whole act falls apart — as when BBC presenter Victoria Derbyshire pressed Yusuf to name even one protected characteristic his party wanted to remove from the Equality Act, and he couldn’t name a single one.

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The ecosystem now has a global engine it would be naïve not to name — U.S. President Donald Trump. | Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images

This interview showed exactly how little substance sits behind the political performance — and the vital importance of proper scrutiny. The problem is that moments like this are growing increasingly rare.

The BBC’s reporting style, for example, is all too often shaped by internal guidelines and a collapsing vision of performative neutrality. This was clearly demonstrated in coverage of the death of 23-year-old Quentin Deranque in France two weeks ago, with a report that described Deranque as a “far-right feminist” — a phrase that invents a political category no serious politics course anywhere in the world would recognize. Far-right politics and feminism come from fundamentally different traditions and pursue fundamentally different aims.

But this isn’t a one-off example. These aren’t isolated editorial lapses. They reflect a political climate that rewards euphemism and intimidation. And that ecosystem now has a global engine it would be naïve not to name — U.S. President Donald Trump.

Last year I wrote in POLITICO that Trump wants to poison global political culture. What we’ve seen since is an effort to export a style that thrives on bullying journalists and steadily lowering standards, including those of political language.

It’s a lesson that travels fast. His European counterparts are catching up. They now understand that these practices can pressure media organizations into softening their language and normalizing their presence. And with far-right parties topping the polls across so much of Europe, we’ve already passed the mainstreaming stage.

Every uncritical mention of far-right rhetoric is an editorial decision with political consequences. Every headline, every clip, every click adds weight. This is how the line gets crossed. And how some media are no longer just covering the far right but helping it speak.

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https://gsamaras.io/ (archive.ph)
https://freight.cargo.site/m/M2822264528381510026637312686787/Georgios-Samaras-CV.pdf (archive.org)
 
Are these people schizophrenic? Seriously, every single day I am bombarded against my will with messages about how dangerous the far-right is and how we're all gonna die because of it. I have literally never seen the media glorify it, normalize it, or even just mention it without giving us a whole monologue about how they're only talking about it because it's super bad and serious. Ever. Not even once in my entire life. What are these people watching?
Extreme far right here, how you doing?

You have a family? then do right by them, protect them, love them.

Wife? do the same.

Sorry to disappoint you.
 
I wholly endorse this article. As communists are wont, it advocates doing what has already failed, but harder. The increase in media characterization of the right as fascist Nazi threats to our sacred democracy is not only correlated, it is also causative in the electoral success of the right in dozens of countries in the last decade. Thanks for the help!
 
I've said it many times: 2024 was bigger than Trump. It has shattered the smug, smarter-than-thou liberal's delusions of popularity and infallibility.

Censorship, weaponized government, dismissive arrogance, and snarl words failed them. They must now reckon with and accept that MAGA is not some fringe ideology that made it into power by a fluke, but a major voting bloc.

We're not in this country with them. They're in this country with us.
 
"Remigration" has been completely redefined by the far left since 2024.

You can see it for yourself. Go google "remigration definition" or "remigration what does it mean" and do it two ways. First, just a normal Google search. It'll tell you that "remigration" is a far right term, etc., here are some examples...but they're all from the last 2 years.

Top results look like this:

Ver archivo adjunto 8662518
Ver archivo adjunto 8662535

Then, click the "Tools" icon and go to "Any time," then click "custom range."

Ver archivo adjunto 8662521
Ver archivo adjunto 8662523

If we're looking at pre-2024, this is what Google had to say about what "remigration" was:

Ver archivo adjunto 8662531

Ver archivo adjunto 8662533
I think occurred around the time Sweden discussed increasing the payout of its "we'll pay you to fuck off back home" policy, and it started getting echoed by English speakers soon after. Calling it "ethnic cleansing" was a brazen attempt to make it unpalatable, like how they tried to redefine "sexual preference," "racism," and "vaccine" in real time just to score cheap optics victories against their opponents.

Any word that requires the average person to look online for the "new" definition is doomed never to stick.
People have a problem with "migrants" to it logically follows that "remigrate" simply means to migrate them elsewhere. It's not a pogram or expulsion edict.

After these people lost their monopoly of information they've been seething and crying that public opinion is now longer meekly adhering to the shit they see in their echo chambers.
 
Última edición:
What are these people watching?
Could be anything.

Any presence of the "far right" (normal people) in any context in anything they ever see is normalizing/glorifying/etc the "far right."

So, no platform—which means not only that we must not be allowed to speak for ourselves, but that we cannot be known to exist in anything like the form or number we actually do.
 
I don't think the 'media' understands the more you portray something as a 'forbidden fruit' the more the people want to partake in it. This is a mess all caused by their ignoring people telling them to stop doing X because it's causing an increase in X.
 
Not my fault you morons keep on reporting on anyone and everyone who isn't down to suck globohomo's dick. Like Andrew Tate with Bongistan.
 
This would matter less if any of these terms added clarity, but most do not. They’re vague, they aren’t grounded in political science research, and they blur ideology rather than naming it, only to leave readers with softer language that hides what these actors truly stand for. And there are grave consequences to this mainstreaming.

Not like the clarity of being unable to define the terms 'woman' or 'man'. I like that bit about not being grounded in poli-sci research, as if that matters.

Newsrooms cycle through a growing list of alternative descriptors, usually in search of language that feels safer or less likely to trigger backlash: hard right, alt-right, new right, religious right, national conservative, traditionalist… The list keeps growing.

Deal with it, asshole. You just call us all fascists anyway.

Scholars of far-right mainstreaming, such as Katy Brown and Aurelien Mondon, have shown how buzzwords — especially “populism” — helped produce this kind of journalistic ambiguity. The far right understood this dynamic long ago and has been exploiting it with discipline.

Oh, no, two people I've never heard of don't like the right wing. Populism was great back when you could point to polls about tranny acceptance being on the rise. These faggots just can't deal with the fact that most of what the right in this country wants is insanely popular with the general population. And if communist authoritarianism polled well, you'd point to that, wouldn't you. But no one really likes either trannies or commie faggots.

This whole article is ridiculous. As if journo-swine and editors are monitoring/modifying their language to make the far right more palatable.
 
Matt Walsh is playing both sides
 
I think occurred around the time Sweden discussed increasing the payout of its "we'll pay you to fuck off back home" policy, and it started getting echoed by English speakers soon after. Calling it "ethnic cleansing" was a brazen attempt to make it unpalatable, like how they tried to redefine "sexual preference," "racism," and "vaccine" in real time just to score cheap optics victories against their opponents.

Any word that requires the average person to look online for the "new" definition is doomed never to stick.
People have a problem with "migrants" to it logically follows that "remigrate" simply means to migrate them elsewhere. It's a pogram or expulsion edict.

After these people lost their monopoly of information they've been seething and crying that public opinion is now longer meekly adhering to the shit they see in their echo chambers.
It's always delightful to flip the left's own "decolonize" rhetoric back on them:

"Remigration isn't 'ethnic cleansing', it's decolonization. It's respecting the rights of the indigenous peoples of Europe to self-determination and ownership over their ancestral lands, including the right to control who gets to settle there and who gets access to their cultures, institutions, identities, and resources.

Remigration is simply the native people of Europe expelling the hostile foreign populations who were mass settled on their land without their consent, and who have made their lives and livelihoods worse in every conceivable way -- socially, economically, politically, culturally -- and systemically damaged an entire generation of indigenous Europeans with violent crime, stochastic terrorism, ethnic nepotism, political gridlock and sectarianism, civil unrest, theft of resources via mass welfare dependency and fraud, and deliberate and malicious infiltration and distortion of their institutions, languages, histories, and cultures in order to justify and perpetuate their continued destruction of European peoples and nations.

Remigration will continue to be pushed for until Islamic supremacy and anti-White racism have been eradicated from Europe. From the (Rhine) river to the (Mediterranean) sea, Europe will be free!"
 
with a report that described Deranque as a “far-right feminist” — a phrase that invents a political category no serious politics course anywhere in the world would recognize.

I wonder how often this jurnoscum encounters the word "TERF" and how often it's described in a way that means exactly that.
 
Yo, Samaras.

Eat shit.

It was just fine when the far-left was normalized by the media, right? Turnabout is fair play, then.

Got it, bitch?
 
We can observe the same pattern being applied to the “great replacement” conspiracy theory, which which purports that political and cultural elites are deliberately engineering demographic change by encouraging immigration and higher birth rates among non-white, non-Christian populations to displace white Christian Europeans. Claims that whole cities are being “lost” to Islam, “no-go zones” and “two-tier policing” myths; distortions around grooming scandals; and blatant lies about crime statistics are turning the conversation around migration into a permanent moral panic.
It's not happening and it's a good thing that it is.
 
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