Political scientist Nathalie Tocci says the issue of migration alone doesn’t fuel far-right support, but it does when it falls into the same timeframe of an economic crisis.
Category
🗞
NewsTranscript
00:00And there's very obviously a nexus between the economy and migration.
00:06So migration itself, actually, migration flows in Europe, go up and down, up and down.
00:12And there isn't actually a correlation between the level of the flow and the support for the far right.
00:18What there is a connection with is the economic situation, the way in which that interlocks with the perception of migration.
00:27And that nexus basically is what leads to a support for the far right.
00:33So this is actually quite a heterogeneous story.
00:36Let's take one example for Spain.
00:39Spain is actually a country which has very high levels of migration, but the economy is doing rather well.
00:45This explains why actually the far right in Spain is not doing particularly well.
00:51So I think we really need to look at this data, as I said, both as it evolves over time, but also as it plays out in different countries.
01:00The final thing that I wanted to say is that this is not just a European story.
01:04It's not just a European story.
01:06It's not just a story in the United States, but it's also a story in countries that are at very different stages of their development.
01:14But of course it will be something that says,