President Donald Trump’s offensive behavior toward Christians and his unnecessary and unpopular war in Iran isn’t just splitting his political base at home — it’s also alienating his allies abroad. Right-wing nationalists in Europe are becoming more and more wary of association with Trump and growing inclined to keep him at a distance to protect their own political projects. The trend marks a blow to Trump’s aspirations of creating an international bloc of right-wing nationalist states that work in concert to quash the left.
This week, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni criticized Trump’s recent attacks on Pope Leo XIV as “unacceptable” and called it “right and normal for [the pope] to call for peace and to condemn every form of war.” Trump lashed back at Meloni for defending the pope, marking his first criticism of her. He did so even though he has few allies left in Europe.
The Trump administration has also been criticized by right-wingers in Europe for its aggressive, but failed, attempt to bolster Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who lost in a landslide in last week’s election. The Trump administration’s efforts — which included Vice President JD Vance campaigning for Orbán in the final days of the race — may have hurt Orbán more than it helped him.
Trump’s lack of discipline is at the core of his own unraveling.
Since then, multiple German lawmakers from the far-right Alternative for Germany party have openly criticized Trump as politically toxic for their movement. AfD parliament member Matthias Moosdorf said on X that the Trump administration’s close ties to Orbán “hung like millstones around [Orbán’s] neck” during his failed reelection attempt. Lawmaker Torben Braga said that in the context of elections, it’s “not a particularly promising approach” to keep close ties with Trump.
Diana Sosoaca, a far-right member of the European Parliament for Romania, said last week that it was “a big mistake” for Orbán to invite Vance to stump for him, particularly as Trump has become a source of great “disorder in this world” with his war on Iran.









