In the end Viktor Orbán didnât, as heâd promised, celebrate Donald Trumpâs win with âseveral bottles of champagneâ. He was in Kyrgyzstan, he apologised, âwhere they have different traditionsâ â so it was vodka. But it was still a âfantastic resultâ.
âHistory has accelerated,â Orbán crowed at an EU summit in Budapest last week. âThe world is going to change, and change in a quicker way than before. Obviously, itâs a great chance for Hungary to be in a close partnership and alliance with the US.â
Hungaryâs illiberal prime minister â and the EUâs disrupter-in-chief, lauded by Trump as a âvery great leader, a very strong manâ â was not the only figure on Europeâs nationalist right to hail the president-electâs larger-than-expected victory.
Geert Wilders, the Dutch anti-Muslim firebrand whose Freedom party finished first in last yearâs elections and is the senior partner in the ruling coalition, also posted his congratulations, jubilantly urging Trump to ânever stop, always keep fightingâ.
Italyâs prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, commended a âhistoric friendshipâ which âwill now grow even strongerâ, while Alice Weidel of Alternative for Germany (AfD) hailed a defeat for âwoke Hollywoodâ, adding that Trump âis a model for usâ.
Europeâs fast-advancing far-right parties, in power in eight EU member states and knocking at the doors in more, have long seen in Trump a powerful ally who shares their populist, nation-first, conservative, Eurosceptic and immigration-hostile views.
But what can they actually expect to gain from Trump 2.0? For all their enthusiastic words, analysts and diplomats say, Europeâs mini-Trumps will probably not get much â and may even find themselves worse off. Whatâs more, some appear to realise it.
Certainly, there may be some political upside to basking in reflected Trumpian glory. âThe coming Trump presidency will most probably embolden Europeâs far right and illiberal actors,â concluded experts at the Centre for European Reform thinktank.
âTrump will strengthen far-right parties not just by normalising and amplifying their ideas, but by boosting their electability.â His win legitimises their grievances and rubber-stamps their sovereigntist vision; history seems to be moving their way.
Besides Orbán, Meloni, Wilders and Weidel, Europeâs longstanding Trump admirers include Marine Le Pen of Franceâs National Rally (RN), Slovakiaâs prime minister Robert Fico, Austrian chancellor Karl Nehammer and Serbiaâs Aleksandar VuÄiÄ.
They may well be joined after elections next year by Andrej BabiÅ¡ in the Czech Republic, and â with both France and Germany, the EUâs traditional powerhouse, weakened by domestic political crises â their influence is plainly on the rise.
Some experts argue selected European far-right leaders could be strengthened personally by Trumpâs win: Meloni, for example, has put in the groundwork, praising his brand of politics as a model for Italy and regularly travelling to his rallies.
Common views on issues ranging from immigration to abortion, and her flourishing rapport with Elon Musk, could see her become Trumpâs âmain interlocutor in Europeâ, said Lorenzo Castellani of Romeâs Luiss University.
Hungaryâs foreign minister, Péter Szijjártó, expressed much the same ambition for Orbán. âWe can have a good hope that Hungarian-American political cooperation will return to its peak form,â he said: Orbán and Trump have âsimilar thoughtsâ.
But the dynamics are a lot more complicated than that. While Europeâs far-right leaders may align comfortably with Trump in their hostility to immigration and international institutions, there are also significant differences.
Meloniâs staunch support for Nato and continued international aid to Ukraine in its struggle against Russiaâs full-scale invasion, for example, will not be greeted with enthusiasm by the more isolationist voices in the incoming US administration.
Similarly, Orbánâs cosy âall-weather comprehensive strategic partnershipâ with China, which Hungary has welcomed with open arms as a key economic partner and foreign investor, is a long way from Trumpâs aggressively hardline approach to Beijing.
As US Republican Mitch McConnell put it, âwhen Chinese state enterprise says jump, Hungarian officials ask how highâ. Those words âcaution against any guarantee of deeper [US-Hungary] collaborationâ, foreign policy expert Zsuzsanna Szelényi said.
Trumpâs promised America first trade policies could also prove complicated to negotiate for Europeâs far-right parties. As members of the EUâs single market, they could not respond individually to US-imposed tariffs and a likely trade war.
Le Penâs lukewarm response to Trumpâs second triumph â in marked contrast to her joy at his first in 2016, which she hailed even before he had officially won â reflects widespread concern over the consequences of Trump 2.0 for EU industry and jobs.
âAmericans have freely chosen their president,â Le Pen said. âThis new political era should contribute to the strengthening of bilateral relations and the pursuit of constructive dialogue and cooperation on the international stage.â
Her protege, Jordan Bardella, even echoed French president Emmanuel Macron, saying that for âus French and Europeans, this US election should be a wake-up call ⦠an opportunity to rethink our relationship with power and strategic autonomyâ.
Far-right voters in Europe are far from uncritical of Trumpâs brand of politics, polls suggest: a pre-election YouGov poll found, for example, that people who backed Le Pen would rather have Kamala Harris in the White House than Trump.
âTrumpâs attitude towards Europe ⦠will be harmful to far-right partiesâ core electorate â think inflation, de-industrialisation, job losses,â said Catherine Fieschi of the European University Institute. âTrump is bad news for them.â
The idea that Trump himself âgives a damn about building relationships with these people strikes me as very very unlikelyâ, Fieschi added. âHe will think about them on a case-by-case basis, and see whether he can extract something.â
Faced with the concrete threats to the continent posed by a second Trump presidency that promises to be even more radical than the first, the EU that Europeâs far-right parties have so long reviled may start to look a little less unattractive.
Orbán may be strong at home, said Szelényi, âbut Hungary is small, deeply integrated in the EU, and its people like being Europeans. The countryâs progress and success is far more dependent on the success of the EU than on anything else.â
Like other far-right leaders, said Catherine de Vries of Bocconi University in Milan, Orbán has âtried to play both sides, be strategically ambiguous. The thing about Trump is, heâs not going to let you do that. Heâll force you to make a choice.â
Europeâs populists will continue to âsay Trumpian things, especially if they have an election coming upâ, De Vries said. âBut when push really comes to shove â Europeâs security in Trumpâs hands, Nato not guaranteed â then maybe quite a few are going to say, maybe we need to work on this in Europe.â
Far from uniting Europeâs far right in triumph, Trumpâs return could actually deepen the conflicts between them. Ultimately, concluded Fieschi, Trump âis going to make the lives of Europeâs far-right leaders, as Eurosceptics, a lot harder. Theyâre going to be caught between staying Eurosceptic, lining up with Trump and hurting their base â or lining up with the EU, shedding their specificity and losing voters. Theyâve been âout-populist-ed.ââ
Additional reporting by Angela Giuffrida in Rome