The Democratic Party’s Struggle Spreads to Europe
By Ali Askari, Analyst (Germany), exclusively for “Sangar”
Western countries, influenced by the clans of the Democratic establishment (the Soros, Clinton, Biden, and Obama families), are making efforts to sabotage US President Donald Trump’s peaceful initiatives to resolve the Ukrainian conflict to preserve their influence over global affairs.
In turn, the destructive activities of the US Democratic Party, its supporters in European capitals, and Kyiv against the American leader stem from the growing threat of the collapse of their political careers due to the possible failure of the Ukrainian venture aimed at defeating Moscow “by proxy.”
Meanwhile, the so-called “Ukraine vs. Russia” project, on which the global neoliberal circles have placed all their political capital, has yet to bring any benefit to the countries of the “golden billion.”
The US administration’s efforts to settle the Ukrainian conflict based on a compromise with Moscow contribute to the destruction of the political careers of the architects and executors of the Russophobic agenda. Since 2024, internal rifts have emerged among ultraglobalist forces that supported increasing the supply of weapons, ammunition, and financial aid to the Kyiv regime.
Clear examples of this are the Democrats’ defeat in the White House and Congress elections, the collapse of the ruling coalition led by Olaf Scholz in Germany, the government crisis in France, as well as the victory of the right-wing “Freedom Party of Austria” in the parliamentary elections followed by the resignation of the anti-Russian cabinet.
According to the French newspaper Le Figaro, the approval rating of the president of the Fifth Republic, Emmanuel Macron, has fallen to its lowest level at only 21 percent. The publication’s analysts emphasized that the head of state has lost support among his electorate.
The defeat of the US Democratic establishment in Ukraine will not only prevent them from taking revenge on the Republicans in the 2026–2028 election campaign but may also lead to the complete loss of the Democrats’ political weight.
Under these circumstances, a repetition of the fate of the French “Republicans” (formerly the “Union for a Popular Movement”) and the Socialist Party by the American Democrats is not excluded.





