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Date: Mon, 23 Jul 2018 01:51:58 +0200
To:
Subject: Re: Fw:
9th circle
On Mon, Jul 23, 2018 at 1:26 AM Steve Bannon ; wrote:
Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T
Date: Sun, 22 Jul 2018 22:01:54 +
To: Steve Bannon< ii
Subject: Re:
Bannon the European: He’s opening the populist fort in Brussels
The former Trump strategist arrives in Europe with "The Movement". Objective: an alliance
between right-wing leaders, from Salvini to Orban in view of the 2019 elections
NEW YORK. The invasion of Europe has begun. Steve Bannon, 65, the American far-right guru
who was Donald Trump’s right-hand man in the White House — but let go last summer following
the racist violence in Charlottesville — is preparing to march on Brussels. Launching, he told the
Daily Beast himself, a new non-profit foundation called The Movement, (Il Movimento), right in the
heart of Europe and its institutions. Through which he hopes to coordinate the populist right in view
of the European elections which will be held in spring 2019.
Objective: to compete with George Soros, the American billionaire of Hungarian origin, benefactor
of the Democratic party, who since 1984 with his Open Society has spent at least $32 billion in
support of NGOs dealing with human rights. And for this he became the bogeyman of the populist
right, accused of plots of all kinds: including that of wanting to replace Italians with immigrants in
order to have labour at low cost. A mantra repeated in the past on Twitter also by the current
Minister of the Interior Matteo Salvini.
The ambition of Steve Bannon, former director of the alt-right American site Breitbart — which in
the European campaign preceded him since the platform had already opened bureaux in London and
Rome — is therefore to become the coordinator of the one great “populist international” of which he
has long since been dreaming.
The Movement, in fact, intends to function as an extreme right-wing think tank: a source of strategic
advice to channel the not-so-politically structured discontent of the most extreme European
movements. Analysing data and giving strategic advice. But also by raising funds and channeling
funding.
The aim is to create a populist alliance, a sort of “super group” that if victorious can conquer up to a
third of the European Parliament in the elections next May.
Indeed — putting the common policy of the Old Continent in the hands of Bannon and his own. The
American strategist is very attached to the Freedom Caucus — the extreme right of the US Congress
— and in 2014 he was at the top of the Cambridge Analytica company, which in 2016 used data
stolen from Facebook to try to influence the presidential election from which Donald Trump
emerged victor. It is not a mystery that for a long time he courts nationalists of the right from East to
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| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019322.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 2,832 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:37:52.180606 |