DIPLOMACY

Europe’s Tipping Point: The Centre is Holding- But For How Long?

In 2025, Europe is not collapsing- but it is convulsing. The continent is held together by a thin fabric of political compromise, emergency economic measures, and social programs trying to keep up with the churn of crises. From Berlin to Budapest, Paris to Brussels, there is a growing sense that Europe’s centre is holding, but only through increasingly desperate acts of improvisation.

Germany, the engine of the European Union, has entered an era of uneasy cooperation. A new coalition between the centre-right CDU/CSU and the centre-left SPD has emerged- not as a result of ideological convergence, but out of political necessity. Faced with the surging far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), which continues to gain ground with populist, anti-immigrant, and anti-system rhetoric, the traditional parties have banded together in what is being described as a “firewall coalition.”

Chancellor-designate Friedrich Merz has pledged a €1 trillion investment in defence and infrastructure, aiming to project strength at home and abroad. On paper, it’s a bold proposal. But beneath the surface, it reveals a central weakness: the coalition has little shared vision beyond blocking the AfD. There is unity in fear, not in purpose. The German public, meanwhile, is sceptical. Can this alliance do more than just delay the inevitable?

It’s not just Germany. Across the border, France is confronting its own democratic test. The conviction of Marine Le Pen for embezzlement has set off a storm. Her supporters claim the ruling is politically motivated- an attempt to dismantle the far-right by legal means. Critics of Le Pen see it as a necessary assertion of the rule of law. But in the minds of many ordinary French citizens, it adds to the perception that institutions are being weaponized in the service of political control.

The protests that have followed aren’t just about Le Pen. They reflect something deeper: a profound loss of trust in the neutrality of the state. Emmanuel Macron’s government finds itself boxed in. Any heavy-handed response to the protests risks confirming the far-right’s narrative. Any sign of weakness, on the other hand, emboldens it. The far-right’s grip is no longer confined to the fringes- it’s becoming an oppositional force with systemic influence.

Then there’s Hungary- no longer just a domestic story, but a mirror held up to the EU’s democratic crisis. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s new anti-LGBTQ+ laws, including the banning of Pride events, are a direct assault on civil liberties and EU values. But this isn’t a one-off. It’s the latest in a long pattern of calculated defiance by a leader who has learned how to push limits without consequence.

Brussels, as usual, responds with statements and warnings. Threats of cutting EU funds have been floated, but enforcement remains timid. Orbán’s message is clear: European values are optional when domestic popularity is at stake. And other countries are watching. The real danger is not Hungary’s isolation- it’s the silent imitation of its tactics elsewhere in the EU.

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External pressures are compounding internal instability. With Donald Trump back in the White House and unleashing sweeping tariffs, Europe is again forced to reconsider its economic and strategic dependencies. The temporary 90-day pause on most tariffs- except against China- offers little comfort. European leaders know the volatility of Trump’s trade doctrine. The transatlantic alliance, long taken for granted, is now a liability as much as an asset.

Still, it would be unfair to portray Europe as merely reactive. There are genuine efforts underway to address long-term issues. The expansion of the European Social Fund Plus is an attempt to soften the blow of industrial transitions and economic shocks. Cities across the continent are ramping up investments in green infrastructure, social housing, and digital inclusion. These may not grab headlines, but they are signs that some parts of Europe are still thinking beyond the electoral cycle.

But here’s the hard truth: these projects, however visionary, are being drowned out by louder, angrier voices. Populism is not receding; it is mutating. And Europe’s political mainstream still hasn’t figured out how to respond beyond tactical coalitions and crisis-management economics. The danger is not that populists win overnight- it’s that centrist parties hollow themselves out trying to stop them.

For Europe, the challenge now is existential. Can it transform short-term survival strategies into a renewed, long-term political vision? Can it articulate what it stands for, not just what it stands against? If it continues to treat democracy like a firewall- to be patched up every few years- it risks becoming one that can no longer keep the fire out.

Yes, the centre is holding. But unless it evolves, inspires, and delivers- not just to voters, but to future generations- it may find that holding the line is not enough. Europe needs more than equilibrium. It needs leadership.

Author

Marina Isabelle

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