Bardella embodies its potent package (Credit: Stephane de Sakutin/AFP/Getty)

Earlier this year, I predicted that 2024 would be the year of Zoomer race politics. At the time, I didn’t suspect that the first and most marked electoral evidence of this shift would come from France. But over the weekend the hard-Right French party Rassemblement National (RN) won some 32% of the total French vote in the European elections: a sharp increase on their 2019 score. Macron’s centrist Renaissance party, meanwhile, scored less than half of that number — prompting him to dissolve France’s National Assembly and call a snap national.
The sharp Rightward tilt was by no means confined to France. Social democrats and liberals across Europe took a hammering. But in a round of elections whose three most salient features were the mainstreaming of Right-wing youth radicalism, the political impact of TikTok, and the generalisation of anti-immigrant sentiment, the French result was the starkest. No wonder: its principal figurehead brings all these developments together in one unsettlingly potent package.
Jordan Bardella is the 28-year-old President of the RN, after taking over from Marine Le Pen in 2022. Bardella boasts 1.5 million followers on TikTok, where he posts clips of himself making the kind of statements that, in the UK, would be confined to anonymous Twitter accounts, and yet in France seem only to propel him to ever greater fame.
His account is far from the only one on TikTok that feels politically decisive, at least for Right-wing insurgents. Trump’s sole TikTok post garnered him over 6 million followers. And a six-second TikTok clip of Nigel Farage in a shopping centre, saying “lovely melons”, currently has over 2 million views. Whether this phenomenon is a reflection of, or an effort to encourage, the political participation of Gen Z is hard to say. But whichever way the causality runs, the tilt from written to video communication is empowering a new kind of politician.
TikTok, when applied to political discourse, takes the already-hyperactive 24-hour news cycle, then sticks it on radically crowdsourced, swivel-eyed ADHD fast-forward. In this breakneck, breathless, reckless environment, no one makes waves without that indefinable magic that causes people to remember you. The kids call this “rizz”; in old money, it’s box office power, the magnetism of a saint or celebrity.
Boris had it; so does Farage, and — outside Europe — the controversial Nayyib Bukele, in El Salvador. As does Bardella. And what’s striking about the new TikTok politics he exemplifies is how it both conveys less, but also more. Policy platforms are simplified; long-form thinking or debate are nigh-on impossible. But where it’s about identity and belonging, a video can convey more visually in a few seconds than I could in a thousand written words.
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