
"Farage was an early supporter of Trump's strikes on Iran, but as anger at the war - and at the president - grows among Britons, he is backtracking."
"Pro-Trump politicians from London to Rome - who were already squirming around the Europe-bashing president's punitive tariffs, threats to seize Greenland and surprise attack on Iran - have found starker red lines in his conduct of the war."
"Tino Chrupalla, co-chair of Germany's ascendant right-wing populist Alternative for Germany party (AfD), accused the Trump administration of potential 'war crimes' in targeting civilian infrastructure in Iran."
"Fifteen months in, the symbiosis between Trump's MAGA and Europe's nationalist parties has reached a potential breaking point."
Nigel Farage, once a staunch supporter of Trump, is now backtracking as discontent grows in Britain over rising prices linked to the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran. His party, Reform UK, has seen a decline in support, attributed to the 'Trump effect.' Nationalist leaders across Europe are also retreating from their previous endorsements of Trump, facing backlash over his conduct in the war and controversial statements. This shift indicates a potential breaking point in the relationship between Trump's MAGA movement and European nationalist parties.
Read at The Washington Post
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