2026–2030: A Bayesian Analysis of Strategic Risk
Executive Summary: The New Illiberal Internationale
As of March 2026, Europe's political landscape has been fundamentally restructured by the consolidation of far-right and sovereigntist movements. No longer fringe formations, these parties have undergone what political scientists term 'path-dependent radicalization': they have abandoned the Brexit-era 'exit' strategy in favour of 'reform from within,' systematically dismantling EU integration from inside the institutions rather than from without. The emergent coalition — loosely termed the 'New Illiberal Internationale' — now holds over a quarter of seats in the European Parliament and holds executive power or kingmaker positions in seven EU member states.
The current juncture is defined by a convergence of two historically rare events: a deepening energy supply crisis of generational magnitude precipitated by the Iran-US-Israel war beginning February 28, 2026 and the resultant Strait of Hormuz blockade; and a period of maximum electoral vulnerability for mainstream parties across the G7's European members. The International Energy Agency has characterised the Hormuz disruption as 'the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market,' with Brent crude surpassing $100 per barrel by March 13, 2026. This supply shock has created an acute political opportunity for far-right parties whose core electoral proposition — that climate commitments are economically incompatible with household welfare — has been viscerally validated in the minds of millions of European voters.
This report provides G7 policymakers with a structured Bayesian analysis of strategic risks across four scenarios, examines current party status, maps the geostrategic consequences for Ukraine, trade, and energy governance, and concludes with six prioritised, actionable recommendations calibrated to the present crisis window.
I. Introduction: A Political Science Theoretical Framework
I.i. The Populist Radical Right — Conceptual Foundations
The phenomenon addressed in this report is best understood through the theoretical lens of comparative populism studies, drawing on three complementary traditions. First, Cas Mudde's 'minimal definition' of populism as a 'thin-centred ideology' that pits a virtuous 'people' against a corrupt 'elite' provides the ideational core of far-right mobilisation in Europe. When coupled with nativist and authoritarian features — as in the case of the Rassemblement National, AfD, and Fratelli d'Italia — this produces the 'populist radical right' archetype that now dominates right-wing competition across the G7's European partners.
Second, Herbert Kitschelt's 'supply-and-demand' model of far-right electoral success is indispensable. Kitschelt identified that far-right parties succeed not merely due to voter demand (economic anxiety, cultural threat perception) but also due to supply-side variables: elite convergence in the centre-left and centre-right that forecloses issues voters care most about. The German SPD-Greens-FDP coalition's failure on energy pricing was a textbook supply-side failure: mainstream parties collectively owned an energy transition that produced among the highest industrial electricity prices in the OECD, gifting the AfD a permanent mobilisation resource.
Third, David Art's organisational sociology of the far right — emphasising internal party discipline, leadership charisma, and strategic rebranding — explains the successful 'de-demonisation' (dédiabolisation) of the RN under Le Pen and Bardella. This process of mainstreaming involves shedding extreme positions to access broader coalitions while retaining the core sovereigntist, nativist agenda. The result is a party family capable of both opposition and governance, as demonstrated by Giorgia Meloni's Fratelli d'Italia and the Austrian FPÖ's entry into federal government following its September 2024 electoral victory.
I.ii. The Energy-Populism Nexus: Theoretical Linkages
The relationship between energy price shocks and far-right electoral success follows a well-documented mechanism in the political economy literature. Energy price spikes act as a 'grievance accelerator': they transform latent resentment about inequality and elite mismanagement into acute, spatially concentrated political mobilisation, particularly in rural, deindustrialised, and energy-poor regions. Three linkages are theoretically operative in the current crisis.
The first is the 'pocketbook politics' mechanism: voters experiencing concrete, immediate declines in household welfare update their electoral preferences toward parties promising rapid, tangible relief — regardless of whether those remedies are economically credible. The far-right's promise to suspend the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) or recommit to fossil fuels maps perfectly onto this mechanism.
The second is 'blame attribution politics': energy shocks require political scapegoats. The far-right has consistently pre-positioned the EU Green Deal, climate regulation, and 'globalist' energy policy as the causal agent of household energy insecurity. As Euronews documented in March 2026, AfD MEP Tomasz Fröhlich explicitly linked the Hormuz-driven energy shock to European governments' decisions to side with 'US-Israeli adventurism,' framing recommitment to coal and nuclear power as the patriotic response.
The third is 'negative partisanship and elite accommodation': as mainstream parties converge on crisis management responses (subsidies, market interventions), far-right parties differentiate by attacking the institutional foundations of climate governance — the ETS, the Green Deal, EU climate law. This is not economically coherent, but it is politically rational within a Downsian spatial competition model: it occupies the policy space vacated by converging centrists.
II.iii. The Spatial Theory of Electoral Competition and Bayesian Updating
The Bayesian framework employed in this report extends standard spatial voting theory by modelling how exogenous shocks — energy crises, migration waves, geopolitical disruptions — shift the distribution of voter preferences in real time. In classical Downsian models, parties converge to the median voter. However, energy shocks shift the median voter's ideal point: voters whose primary concern becomes energy cost will update their preference toward the party perceived as most credible on energy price relief, which research consistently identifies as the far right during crises.
The prior probability P(S) — the baseline far-right success probability — is anchored in current polling (20–36% across key member states). The conditional probability P(H|S) — that a far-right energy sovereignty narrative will be perceived as credible — is elevated by the Hormuz crisis, which has validated the far-right's long-standing argument that dependence on international energy markets is strategically hazardous. The marginal probability P(H) — the overall likelihood of a sustained energy shock — is now extremely high given that the IEA has confirmed at least 8–10 million barrels per day in supply disruption as of March 2026.
The result, per Bayes' theorem, is a systematic and rapid upward shift in far-right electoral support probabilities during the crisis window. The quantitative estimates in Section III should be read as point estimates with wide confidence intervals, reflecting both model uncertainty and the genuine volatility of the current geopolitical situation.
II. Current Far-Right Party Status (March 14, 2026)
The table below presents the current strategic profile of principal far-right parties in G7 and key EU member states, with updated polling and leadership status as of March 2026.
A structural shift merits particular emphasis. The European Parliament data as of January 2026 shows far-right groups — the Patriots for Europe (PfE), European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR), and Europe of Sovereign Nations (ESN) — collectively holding 191 seats (27% of the total 720). While a slight decline from the autumn 2025 peak was recorded in January 2026 polling, analysts caution this may reflect statistical noise rather than a genuine trend reversal. More significantly, the EPP's increasing willingness to form majorities with far-right groups has permanently blurred the cordon sanitaire that previously contained far-right influence. The EPP-ECR-PfE-ESN coalition's dilution of the EU Deforestation Regulation in November 2024 and the establishment of an NGO funding scrutiny working group in summer 2025 demonstrate that far-right influence now extends into mainstream legislative outcomes.
III. Bayesian Game-Theoretic Framework: Predicting Electoral Outcomes
III.i. Formal Model
To predict the probability of far-right electoral success P(S) following an energy shock, this analysis employs a Bayesian updating framework with the following parameters:
Prior Probability P(S): Base far-right support, currently 20–36% in key G7 European states.
Likelihood P(H|S): The probability that the far-right's 'sovereign energy' narrative — pro-nuclear, pro-fossil fuel, anti-ETS — is perceived as the credible response to a high-price shock (H).
Marginal Likelihood P(H): The overall probability of a sustained energy shock. As of March 14, 2026 — with the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed and Brent crude above $100 — this probability is estimated at 0.85 for a disruption lasting more than 8 weeks.
Under Bayes' theorem, the posterior probability P(S|H) — the probability of far-right success given an energy shock — updates substantially from the prior. Goldman Sachs modelling published March 12, 2026 indicates that each 10% sustained increase in crude prices increases European core inflation by approximately 0.3–0.5 percentage points, a magnitude historically associated with a 4–8 point shift in governing party disapproval ratings. The median voter update toward the far-right proposition is estimated at 15–18 percentage points above baseline in scenarios where the shock is attributed to Green Deal or climate policy.
III.ii. Scenario Probability Matrix (March 2026)
IV. Geostrategic Consequences (2026–2030)
IV.i. The Iran-US War and European Strategic Autonomy
The conflict that began February 28, 2026 — when the United States and Israel conducted joint military strikes on Iran, including strikes that killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei — has produced a geopolitical stress test that directly implicates far-right political behaviour. The Strait of Hormuz crisis, which caused tanker traffic to fall by approximately 70% within days and subsequently to near-zero, has disrupted roughly 20% of global oil supply and roughly 20% of global LNG exports — the single largest supply disruption in the history of oil markets, according to the IEA.
Europe's position is structurally vulnerable. European gas storage levels began 2026 at 46 billion cubic metres — substantially below the 60 BCM level of February 2025 and the 77 BCM level of 2024 — meaning storage refill operations under current crisis conditions will be exceptionally costly. Europe turned to seaborne LNG to replace Russian supplies after 2022, leaving it directly exposed to the Hormuz closure. Qatar's gas production was also halted after Iranian drone attacks on Qatari energy facilities on March 2, 2026, compounding the shock. European benchmark Dutch TTF gas prices nearly doubled over 48 hours before partially retreating after diplomatic signals of possible Iranian-US back-channel contacts.
The Soufan Center assessment of March 10, 2026 captures the central strategic dilemma: Europe is being progressively drawn into a war it did not choose, with US pressure for European military base access for offensive operations, while the economic fallout threatens to accelerate the very domestic political instability — far-right electoral gains — that most undermines European cohesion and Ukraine support capacity.
IV.ii. The Far-Right and the Iran War: A Crisis of Alignment
The Iran conflict has produced an unexpected internal crisis within the European far-right. Parties that had positioned themselves as enthusiastically pro-MAGA and anti-Islamic now face a severe framing problem: they cannot endorse a US-Israeli war that produces the energy price spikes and potential refugee flows most threatening to their own voters. Euronews documented in March 2026 that the loudest initial silence came from Hungary's Fidesz, while AfD MEP Tomasz Fröhlich explicitly called the conflict 'catastrophic' for European stability and demanded recommitment to coal and nuclear power.
This internal contradiction — pro-Trump ideological alignment vs. anti-war energy populism — creates a strategic opportunity for mainstream parties to occupy the 'European strategic autonomy' space, provided they move decisively and do not allow far-right parties time to resolve the framing contradiction through energy-price scapegoating of the Green Deal.
IV.iii. Ukraine: The Frozen Conflict Risk
The far-right Patriots for Europe group, together with aligned national parties, has progressively shifted its rhetorical posture on Ukraine from 'supporting defense' to 'demanding a ceasefire on current lines.' This trajectory risks producing a Bayesian Nash equilibrium in which Russia perceives sufficient European disunity to continue holding out against meaningful peace terms, producing a 'frozen conflict' that leaves Ukraine structurally exposed and rewards territorial aggression.
The current institutional architecture partially mitigates this risk. The EU's commitment of a EUR 90 billion loan to Ukraine for 2026–2027, codified in February 2026, and the Paris Declaration on Security Guarantees of January 6, 2026 — backed by 35 countries — provide multi-year financial insulation against the near-term electoral turbulence likely to follow the Hormuz energy shock. The 'Coalition of the Willing,' led by France and the UK, has committed to establishing military hubs in Ukraine upon any ceasefire agreement.
However, the Iran crisis has directly complicated Ukraine support: the EU Defence Commissioner's assessment of March 6, 2026 warned that US military resource commitments to the Iran operation are creating shortfalls in key missile stocks, reducing capacity for Ukraine-directed military aid. NATO intercepted Iranian missiles over Turkey on multiple occasions, raising the prospect of NATO entanglement. Far-right parties are already leveraging this resource competition to argue that Europe cannot simultaneously fund rearmament, energy crisis response, and Ukraine support — a framing that, if uncontested, will erode political support for multi-year Ukraine commitments exactly when they are most needed.
IV.iv. International Trade and Protectionism
Far-right economic nationalism intersects with the energy crisis through a demand for 'strategic reshoring' that prioritises national industries over EU-wide supply chain efficiency. With US baseline tariffs at 10–15% under Section 232 and Section 122 authority, European far-right parties are promoting analogous protectionism as a logical extension of 'energy sovereignty' into 'industrial sovereignty.' The consequence for G7 trade architecture is a risk of cascading bilateral deals that bypass EU single market discipline, increasing costs for G7 partners and fragmenting the regulatory coherence that underpins Western economic coordination.
The BASF CEO's statement that Europe 'is losing industrial capacity at a speed we have never seen before,' and Versalis's plant closures in Italy, provide far-right parties with visceral evidence for their deindustrialisation narrative. The energy shock amplifies this dynamic: energy-intensive industries facing both ETS compliance costs and spot gas prices driven by Hormuz disruption will accelerate investment deferrals and capacity relocations, each of which feeds the far-right's industrial decline narrative.
IV.v. Energy and Climate Governance
The ETS confrontation — the most acute immediate battleground in European energy-climate policy — has escalated dramatically in the two weeks preceding this report's publication. On February 26, 2026, Italy's Industry Minister Adolfo Urso called formally for suspension of the EU ETS, backed by a coalition of eleven 'Friends of Industry' governments including France, Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, and Poland. Giorgia Meloni, addressing Italy's upper house on March 11, 2026, directly linked ETS suspension to the Iran energy shock, stating the system accounted for approximately a quarter of Italian consumer energy bills and calling for suspension 'at least until global fossil fuel prices return to pre-crisis levels.'
Eight member states — Denmark, Finland, Luxembourg, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and the Netherlands — signed a counter non-paper on March 12, 2026 defending the ETS as the 'cornerstone of EU climate policy.' Commission President von der Leyen proposed on March 11 that the EU should explore separating natural gas cost pass-through from power pricing, an acknowledgement that the political pressure is real. The European Council meeting of March 19–20, 2026 will be decisive: a commitment to fast-track ETS reform could relieve pressure; a suspension would represent a fundamental rupture in EU climate architecture and a historic far-right political victory.
V. Strategic Recommendations for G7 Leaders
The following recommendations are calibrated to the March 2026 crisis window and the 2026–2030 electoral cycle. They are prioritised by urgency and political leverage.
VI. Conclusion: The Decisive Window
The convergence of the Strait of Hormuz energy crisis and the peak of the far-right's institutional consolidation creates a decisive strategic window of approximately six to twelve months — from March to approximately October 2026 — during which the trajectory of European politics for the remainder of the decade will be substantially determined.
The Bayesian analysis presented in this report suggests that, absent decisive G7 policy intervention, the probability of far-right parties achieving scenario-A-level political success (72%) is uncomfortably high. The mechanisms are clear: energy price shocks trigger voter preference updating that disproportionately benefits parties offering immediate-relief narratives, the far-right's pre-positioned critique of the Green Deal has been viscerally validated by the Hormuz crisis, and mainstream parties face a structural disadvantage in offering credible short-term counter-narratives.
The window for intervention remains open, however, for three reasons. First, the far-right is itself internally divided over the Iran war, creating a period of rhetorical vulnerability. Second, the institutional architecture of the EU — the EUR 90 billion Ukraine commitment, the ETS reform process, the Coalition of the Willing — provides durable scaffolding that can be reinforced before electoral shocks materialise. Third, the framing of the energy transition as a sovereignty and security project — rather than a climate project — remains largely untested as a mainstream counter-narrative and may have significant electoral potential.
G7 leaders entering the next summit cycle should treat the energy-security-populism nexus not as a background risk but as a first-order strategic challenge equivalent in urgency to the Ukraine conflict itself. The two crises are, in fact, structurally linked: a Europe destabilised by far-right electoral gains cannot sustain the security guarantees, defence spending, and Ukraine support on which European and transatlantic security depend.