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Far-right narrative not the majority view in Ireland

  • Far-right narrative not the majority view in Ireland

    Here's the bad news:

    A report by the Hope and Courage Collective, which works to build resilience in communities against rising far-right hate and disinformation, has found a widening gap between public attitudes and political discourse [in the media]: a relatively small number of far-right actors disproportionately influence public political debate through online amplification, visible protests, and repeated narratives. Public attitudes are becoming steadily more inclusive, but political rhetoric risks legitimising scapegoating and that the far-right ... "is shaping the conversation".

    But on the other hand, these survey results are downright heartwarming:

    Year-on-year datasets tracking changes in public sentiment in Ireland between 2024 and 2025 show that 66% agree that immigrants contribute positively to Irish culture and community, which is up 2% up from 64% in 2024.

    79% believe working-class people are struggling due to systemic inequality which is also up 2% from 77% in 2024.

    Those who believe wealthy people are successful because they were given more opportunities than others has risen from 63% in 2024 to 69% in 2025.

    The number of people who support the freedom of transgender people to live their lives is up 5% up from 70% in 2024.

    80% agree that Black, Asian and minority ethnic communities face greater barriers to success than white people, up 5% up from 75% in 2024.

    Tags: ireland discourse far-right right-wing politics surveys culture culture-wars propaganda disinformation