Europe | The battle on the right

Young men in Spain love the hardline Vox

They find the rough populism of the hard right appealing

Participants from the far right political party Vox are seen marching during the demonstration
Franco would be gladPhotograph: IMAGO/ZUMA Press Wire
|MADRID|4 min read

This has already been quite a year for Santiago Abascal, the leader of Vox. In January he was the only Spanish politician (and one of very few Europeans) to be invited to Donald Trump’s inauguration. The next month, as president of the Patriots for Europe grouping, he hosted in Madrid a gathering of hard-right leaders from across Europe, including Viktor Orban of Hungary and Marine Le Pen of France. And after years of gently declining support from a peak of 15% in a general election in November 2019, since September Vox has steadily revived in the opinion polls from around 10.5% to over 14% (see chart). Among Spanish men aged under 25 Vox is now the leading party, and among males under 45 it enjoys more support than the mainstream conservative People’s Party (PP).

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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Battle on the right”

From the April 19th 2025 edition

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