Spain and Portugal: A chilling glimpse of our borderless future?



The Iberian Peninsula is on fire. Both Portugal and Spain are grappling with a flood of illegal immigration that has ignited political polarization, public unrest, and a surge in nationalist sentiment.

While these movements are often dismissed as "far-right" (whatever that means in 2024), the truth is far more nuanced. They stem from a basic, instinctual drive to protect one’s homeland, culture, and community from absolute chaos.

Spain and Portugal stand on the brink, staring into the abyss. Their leaders, in repeated patterns of recklessness, have opened doors that no one may ever be able to shut.

In Portugal, the rise of the Chega party captures this dramatic shift in public sentiment. Aptly named "Enough!," it reflects the utter disdain for a government that not only failed to regulate migration but actively embraced an open-border agenda. Chega's surge in electoral support is no accident. It makes complete sense. After years of watching their communities transform, grappling with rising crime, and enduring social tensions fueled by uncontrolled immigration, the Portuguese have had enough.

The damage, however, may already be beyond repair.

Colonizers now colonized

Former Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Costa, now president-elect of the European CouncilHoracio Villalobos/Getty Images

For nearly a decade, Prime Minister António Costa was at the helm, implementing some of the most liberal immigration policies in Europe. From his rise to power in 2015 until his recent ousting, Costa’s government promoted lax registration for foreign workers, even those entering the country illegally, and accelerated pathways to citizenship.

The media hailed it as a progressive stance, but it left the country vulnerable to a massive influx of migrants, particularly from economically disadvantaged nations like Angola. The result was brutal. Within just five years, the immigrant population surged by 70%. By 2022, over 780,000 foreigners were legally residing in Portugal — more than double the number than when Costa first took office.

And this figure only includes the documented population. To put this in perspective, Portugal has a population of roughly 10 million. This mass influx is the equivalent of 26 million foreign nationals flooding into the United States — three times the population of NYC. Let that sink in for a second.

The strain on Portugal is obvious to anyone with a functioning brain. Recent demonstrations in Lisbon, with banners demanding the expulsion of immigrants who commit crimes, reflect a growing sense of fear and resentment among ordinary citizens.

Costa’s government, in its eagerness to appear progressive, failed to anticipate or manage the long-term consequences of its decisions. Now, the social unrest rippling through the country is the direct fallout from these disastrous missteps. Though Costa is gone, the damage from his suicidal policies lingers. In truth, the damage will continue to unravel, likely with tragic consequences, for years to come.

Adiós, España

Across the border in Spain, the situation is even more dire, as immigration reform specialist Michael McManus has observed. In 2023 alone, nearly 57,000 migrants entered Spain illegally — almost double the number from the previous year. The Canary Islands, geographically isolated and economically fragile, have borne the brunt of this surge, with record numbers of boats arriving from West Africa.

North African and sub-Saharan migrants arriving in the Canary Islands last monthEuropa Press News/Getty Images

Spain’s vulnerability, as McManus cautions, lies in its geography. It is separated from Africa by just nine miles of sea at its narrowest point, making it an easy target for human smugglers and traffickers.

The Spanish government's response has been, for lack of a better word, atrocious. The ruling PSOE (Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party) has doubled down on its open-door policy, prioritizing an expansive amnesty program for undocumented immigrants.

It is worth noting that the PSOE has dominated modern democratic Spain longer than any other political party. From 1982 to 1996 under Felipe González, from 2004 to 2011 under José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, and again since 2018 under Pedro Sánchez, the PSOE has shaped Spain’s trajectory for decades.

In other words, the Spanish people have repeatedly entrusted their future to a party that has presided over — and inarguably accelerated — the country’s gradual decline. The tragic reality is that the electorate, through continued support of the PSOE, bears some complicity in Spain's demise.

As McManus points out, this is not Spain’s first brush with mass amnesty. In 2005, the country granted amnesty to 800,000 illegal migrants following the devastating Madrid terrorist attacks that killed 191 people. Rather than curbing illegal immigration, the amnesty sent a clear message to the world. Specifically, migrants could enter Spain illegally and, if undetected long enough, benefit from future legalization schemes. The result was a surge in illegal crossings. Between 2005 and 2009, over 55,000 undocumented migrants entered one of Europe’s most celebrated countries.

The future looks bleak

Spain and Portugal stand on the brink, staring into the abyss. Their leaders, in repeated patterns of recklessness, have opened doors that no one may ever be able to shut. The demographic tides sweeping across these nations are not just altering their character — they are erasing it. The Iberian Peninsula, once famed for its sun-drenched shores, now lies under an ominous shadow.

What’s unfolding in Portugal and Spain reflects a grim reality gripping Europe at large. This is not the birth of multicultural societies but the slow, agonizing death of nations too blind, too complacent to recognize the mortal danger. Europe's heart beats weaker, and soon, I fear, it may stop altogether.

Establishmentarians weep, clutch their pearls over European Parliament's rightward shift



Voters across the Atlantic Ocean sent a message to the political establishment Sunday night, driving the European Parliament rightward and humiliating parties whose policies have radically transformed the continent with unchecked migration, failed assimilation, costly climate alarmism, and globalist tendencies.

The election results will reverberate for weeks and months to come. One country's prime minister has already resigned, and other leaders now face potential ousters in their respective nations.

Italy

As of Monday morning, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's national conservative Brothers of Italy party had gained 14 seats and secured nearly 29% of the vote. Reuters indicated the party's success Sunday more than quadrupled its showing in the 2019 European Union election and exceeded the 26% it secured in the 2022 national ballot.

"I am proud that Italy will present itself to the G7, to Europe with the strongest government of all. This is something that has not happened in the past but is happening today, it is a satisfaction and also a great responsibility," said Meloni.

"What we need is a Europe that will listen to citizens, that will look more to the centre-right and has more pragmatic and less ideological policies," added the Italian prime minister.

This victory has made Meloni one of the most powerful figures in the EU.

Meloni's Brothers of Italy party is part of a coalition in the parliament called European Conservatives and Reformists, which now holds 73 seats in the 720-seat parliament. ECR is set to gain the support of the National Popular Front of Cyprus, which secured 11% of the vote Sunday, largely on a message to address the problem of immigration.

Just as ECR made headway Sunday, so did the right-wing Identity and Democracy coalition, which nabbed nine seats for a total of 58. ID's gains were driven in large part by the success of France's National Rally.

France

Marine Le Pen's National Rally party ran circles around French President Emmanuel Macron's pro-European Renaissance Party, more than doubling its votes with 31.37%. The Need for Europe coalition, which includes Macron' Renaissance Party, secured only 14.6% of the vote.

This result was so embarrassing as to prompt Macron, who already lacks a majority in the French parliament, to call snap national elections on June 30 and July 7 and to call for the dissolution of the National Assembly in a few weeks.

After the French people largely kicked his party to the curb, Macron tweeted, "I have confidence in the ability of the French people to make the fairest choice for themselves and for future generations."

Axios highlighted that Macron leaned in to old scare tactics following his humiliation.

"The rise of nationalists and demagogues is a danger for our nation and for Europe," said the president. "After this day, I cannot go on as though nothing has happened."

"The French people have sent a very clear message to the Macronist power, which, vote after vote, is disintegrating," Le Pen noted on X, suggesting that such is the consequence of denying a people their history and curbing their "influence, identity and freedom."

Following Macron's announcement of the National Assembly's dissolution, Le Pen said, "I call on the French to come and join us to form a majority around the RN [National Rally] in the service of the only cause that guides our steps: France."

Macron's government is not the only one left tottering after Sunday's election.

Germany

Despite its vilification by the liberal media and the German political establishment, and a member's pre-election stabbing, Alternative for Germany gained six seats and placed second with 15.9% of the national vote. The top spot was firmly held by the center-right Christian Democratic Union and the Christian Social Union, which took 30.2% of the vote.

Extra to its 5% gain over its showing in the 2019 EU election, Alternative for Germany managed to beat German Chancellor Olaf Scholz's establishment Social Democratic Party, which is expected to finish third with less than 14%.

According to the German publication Bild, 76% of Germans think the SPD-led (Social Democratic Party) government is not governing successfully. 570,000 voters who cast votes for the SPD in 2019 instead cast votes for AFD on Sunday.

Social Democratic Party politician Lars Klingbeil doubled down on his party's ineffective rhetoric after its trouncing, stating, "I believe that the result of the European elections will wake many people up to the fact that the Nazis have become stronger in this election."

The Telegraph indicated that less than a third of German voters cast ballots for the ruling parties combined. Joining Scholz's party in humiliation was the Green Party, which hemorrhaged roughly 9%, and Scholz's coalition partners, the Free Liberals, which netted 5%.

Migration and refugees were far and away the top concerns for Germans going into the election — more so than energy, climate, the economy, pensions, and the war in Ukraine.

The poor showing of Scholz's ruling coalition has prompted some to suggest the government has lost legitimacy.

The AFD reportedly seeks to join the ID coalition, sacrificing its scandal-plagued candidate Maximilian Krah to sweeten the deal. That would mean that between the ID and ECR, rightists in the European Parliament would control over 131 seats in the chamber, not including the seats held by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz party, by the Polish Confederation party, and other right-leaning groups.

Elsewhere

In Spain, the center-right People's Party overtook leftist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's Spanish Socialist Workers Party. The PP took 34.2% of the vote and gained nine seats, ending up with a total of 22 of Spain's 61 seats in the European Parliament. Sanchez's radical party lost a seat and now only has 20 seats.

The right-leaning Vox party came third with six seats, having secured an additional two seats Sunday and 9.6% of the vote.

Dutch politician Geert Wilders' Party for Freedom gained six seats and 17.7% of its nation's total vote, placing second in the Netherlands. The Party for Freedom campaigned primarily on two issues: immigration and health care, reported the NL Times.

"The Greens and Liberals are the big losers, they will lost many seats in the European Parliament," Wilders tweeted Sunday. "On the other hand, the PVV is winning big, just like our friends in France, Belgium, Austria, Portugal and many other countries. It was a very beautiful election day!"

In Austria, the Freedom Party, whose members will join the ID coalition, placed first with 25.7% of the vote, gaining three seats for a total of six in the parliament. According to EuroNews, the Freedom Party largely campaigned on an anti-immigration, anti-Green Deal, and Euroskeptic platform.

Ahead of the vote, the Freedom Party wrote on X, "Asylum crisis, corona chaos, warmongering and eco-communism – are you fed up with all of this? Then ABSOLUTELY VOTE FOR THE FPÖ today! Together we will STOP the EU madness!"

A weepy Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo announced his resignation Sunday after his Flemish Lierals and Democrats party was crushed by right-leaning and nationalist parties. Croo's party lost a seat, such that it placed last with only one seat in the parliament.

"For us, it's a particularly difficult evening. We lost. As of tomorrow, I will resign as prime minister," said Croo, reported the Guardian.

The nationalist right-wing New Flemish Alliance placed first. Its leader, Bart De Wever, will likely become the country's next prime minister. The anti-immigration Vlaams Belang Party came second.

Unsuccessful concern-mongering, continued

Ursula von der Leyen, a member of the centrist European People's Party — the biggest coalition in the new legislature — vowed to serve as a check on the ascendant right, reported Reuters.

"We will build a bastion against the extremes from the left and from the right," said von der Leyen. "But it is also true that extremes and on the left and the right have gained support and this is why the result comes with great responsibility for the parties in the center."

Von der Leyen's continued presidency over the European Commission will rely upon the backing of the EU's national leaders.

Days ahead of the election, the BBC warned that a rightward shift might mean "more power for nation states, less 'Brussels interference' in everyday life"; less power for the European Commission; tougher EU legislation on migration; and a pushback against climate alarmist policies.

Upon seeing the results pour in, the Washington Post sounded the alarm that the "'cordon sanitaire' erected by more mainstream parties against the putative descendants of Europe's fascist movements had collapsed" and that "a new age of right-wing politics in the West" had arrived.

The New York Times noted that right-wing parties "have gained across the continent as voters have grown more concentrated on nationalism and identity, often tied to migration and some of the same culture-war politics pertaining to gender and L.G.B.T.Q. issues that have gained traction in the United States," then warned the result could "hearten kindred political forces loyal to former President Donald J. Trump as he seeks a return to office."

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Woke gaming company Sweet Baby Inc. blames 'far-right' conspiracies for backlash from DEI projects



Video game writers accused of injecting diversity, equity, and inclusion narratives in mainstream titles have blamed backlash from their projects on the "far-right."

The company, called Sweet Baby Inc., has dominated headlines in tech circles after a community of gamers formed a group to point out which projects the company has worked on.

The gripe among video game players has been that Sweet Baby Inc. painfully adds DEI storylines into popular games like Spider-Man 2 and God of War Ragnarok.

At the same time, cofounder David Bedard has declared that backlash from the gaming community is part of a far-right harassment campaign.

"For the past 4 months, my company (Sweet Baby Inc) has been targeted by a far-right harassment campaign / conspiracy theory," Bedard wrote on LinkedIn. "This is a tough situation for me, my co-founder Kim Belair, our entire team, and our collaborators. More than the frustrations caused by the harassment, and the precautions we’re putting in place as a result of that, the toughness comes from the fact that this entire campaign is based on misinformation. Misinformation so wild and left-field (or right-field, I guess) that it’s impossible to even engage with it to combat it," Bedard added.

The misinformation, the company has alleged, comes in the form of claims that Sweet Baby Inc.'s predominant work is pushing DEI narratives. Cofounder Belair argued that "people can’t imagine that we might do anything else but DEI. ... They can’t imagine that we’re just talented writers."

"We spoke with press to clear things up about exactly what we do, and how we do it," Bedard continued, as first reported by That Park Place. "Adding our voices to this conversation felt necessary, because what is happening to us is something that has happened before in this industry, and will happen again. It happens to not just us, but also to countless other devs, players, journalists, and creators."

Sweet Baby Inc Co-Founder, David B\u00e9dard speaks out on LinkedIn post. \n\nI would love for the opportunity to interview them on their processes and mission.
— (@)

This consistent position is a peculiar one for the self-described "inclusion-focused narrative and consultation company."

The company's site notes that its consultation process includes a "multitude of perspectives" while bringing in "diverse voices to solve diverse problems." Its website also states that the company provides "Cultural Consultation, Sensitivity And Inclusivity Reading, Risk and Opportunities Assessment, and more."

In addition to boasting that it can "assemble and lead" teams of "new and marginalized voices," the company also provides resources for "new and marginalized talent" with the potential to "change [the] industry if given the proper support."

While individual cases of misconduct toward the company are likely present, and of course inexcusable if elevating to illegal harassment, the overall sentiment from the gaming community is that they simply don't like DEI-infused video games.

The company has even seen criticisms from X owner Elon Musk and recent UFC middleweight champion Sean Strickland.

"Sweet Baby Inc is an evil blight on the gaming industry. All they do is make games terrible and try to cancel people. They cannot go broke soon enough!" Musk stated.

"Sean why aren't you in the UFC game"\nYears later being a top contender\n"Wow your stats are so low"\n\nWell you guys, the video game industry is leftist cesspool. I am the definition of what these people hate....\n\nBUT! I I take it as a compliment:) thanks.
— (@)

"Check in on your marginalized colleagues, and friends in this industry," Bedard said. "Make sure they're okay. Let them know that they are loved, that they are appreciated, that they are welcome and that they are talented. Tell them you're not going to let this kind of hate push them out of this industry. Tell them that things like this won't scare all of their community away — that they are protected, and that they have a place here, now more than ever," he concluded.

Bedard later edited his post to note that he had locked the comments section due to the presence of a "hate mob."

Sweet Baby Inc. and its employees have declined several requests for comments on a range of issues related to the ongoing topic.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Meet The Violent Anarchist Behind DHS’s ‘Pyramid Of Far-Right Radicalization’ Scandal

The Biden administration has weaponized the Department of Homeland Security to target political opponents.

CROWDER: Old black woman berates slightly younger white women at dinner



Intellectual honesty is honesty in how we communicate ideas and pertains to any communication that involves transmitting information or persuading. Intellectual honesty means seeing and speaking the truth so others hear the truth. Steven Crowder shared a video on Tuesday's episode of "Louder with Crowder" that demonstrated the opposite of intellectual honesty.

In this video, Crowder shines a light on a Canadian documentary called "Deconstructing Karen." The film features an older black woman and slightly younger Latino woman berating slightly younger white women for their "white lady" racism—video below.

Would you trade places with a black person? That's one question posed to guests sitting around the dinner table. Crowder explains why he believes Regina Jackson and Saira Rao's RACE2DINNER — a movement to inspire white women to confront themselves and to acknowledge their racism and complicity in white supremacy — could be the most racist thing you've seen today. Video below.


Download the podcast here.


Would you trade places with a Black person? That's one question that @Race2D founders ask their guests. They host dinner parties where the main course is an honest conversation about racism — with white women.

Watch 'Deconstructing Karen' on The Passionate Eye next Friday. pic.twitter.com/HrQRKGuPCz

— CBC Docs (@cbcdocs) September 17, 2022

Want more from Steven Crowder?

To enjoy more of Steven’s uncensored late-night comedy that’s actually funny, join Mug Club — the only place for all of Crowder uncensored and on demand.

Facebook Is Now Identifying And Reeducating You And Your ‘Extremist’ Conservative Friends

Facebook users started receiving notifications in a new campaign to curb "extremism," warning them they may have been "exposed to extremist content."

RANT: What white-supremacists and the far-Left have In common



Steven Crowder wrapped up the week with a rant on how the modern far-left and white-supremacists have more in common than you think. In this Louder with Crowder clip, Crowder broke down his views on the socialist commonalities between the two groups calling them "distinctly anti-people." Watch the clip for more from Steven.

Can't watch? Download the podcast.


Use promo code LWC to save $10 on one year of BlazeTV.

Want more from Steven Crowder?

To enjoy more of Steven's uncensored late-night comedy that's actually funny, join Mug Club — the only place for all of Crowder uncensored and on demand.