written by
Wang, Chendi ; Altiparmakis, Argyrios
What happened to Putin’s friends? The radical right’s reaction to the Russian invasion on social media – European Union Politics
14/03/2025
scritto da
Wang, Chendi ; Altiparmakis, Argyrios

Abstract

The Ukrainian crisis has significantly shifted public opinion against Russia and Putin, placing politicians with prior Russian ties in a precarious situation. This paper tracks how parties that had some affinity to Putin have pivoted after the outbreak of war. Through computational text analysis of a decade of Facebook posts from 11 European radical right parties, we investigate their stance evolution towards Russia and their strategic management of public sentiment and Russian relationships. The results show that most radical right parties, after the invasion, neither tried to remain pro-Russia nor focussed their attention on shifting their prior position. Instead, they engaged in blurring the issue, diverting attention away from the war and using the events in Ukraine to assert their anti-EU positions.

 

To cite this article:

Wang, C., & Altiparmakis, A. (2025). What happened to Putin’s friends? The radical right’s reaction to the Russian invasion on social media. European Union Politics, 26(2), 393-417. https://doi.org/10.1177/14651165251321802 (Original work published 2025)

#invasion of Ukraine #large language model #radical right party #Russia #Social media
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partners
This project is funded with a Synergy Grant by the European Research Council under Grant Agreement n. 810356. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Council. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.