White Papers Policy Institute: Remigration vs. Mass Immigration: A Fault Line At the Heart of the European Union

The European Union (EU) has been in perpetual crisis for decades. The Great Financial Crisis (GFC), the Eurozone crisis, the Greek debt crisis, the slow growth in Southern Europe, the post-COVID debt crisis, the 2015 migrant crisis (which is still ongoing), the crisis and split over Ukraine, and on and on it goes. Crises in the EU never seem to end. At the heart of all of these crises is the deeply set neoliberal vision and construction of the union. Today European politics has shifted from grappling with a crisis of mass immigration and border control into a new and deeply polarizing debate over immigration policy that pits advocates of “remigration”—the return of non-European immigrants and their descendants—against proponents of continuing the liberal love for mass immigration.
This clash is ultimately rooted in divergent visions of numerous issues that plague Western civilization: our identity, the sovereignty of our nations, and whether or not immigrants are really an economic necessity. Whether countries choose nationalism and a coherent identity or whether they chose the path of continued self-abolition has the potential to fracture the EU’s already fragile unity.
Remigration has several definitions, generally un-generously provided by left wing (which are also mainstream) outlets and platforms but ultimately remigration (sometimes called repatriation in Europe such as in Sweden) refers to the deportation or incentivized return of non-European/non-Western immigrants and their non-integrated descendants to their ancestral homelands.
Those Who Want to Go: A More Expansive Great Repatriation

Austria’s Freedom Party (FPÖ) recently won the 2024 election on a platform calling for national “homogeneity”—party leader Herbert Kickl said “We need remigration” when he presented the party platform in August of 2024 in the lead up to the election victory.
Austria’s Freedom Party Embraces Remigration—”Conservatives” Need to Stand Aside
Herbert Kickl: As People’s Chancellor I will. do everything I can on Day One to return Austrians their freedom, prosperity, safety and joy of living.
Liberalism and Continued Mass Immigration:
On the other side, proponents of liberal-inspired mass immigration argue a plethora of positions. These range from migration being essential for economic growth, that immigrants are necessary to do certain jobs that Europeans “just won’t do”, to opponents of mass immigration being simple bigots or racists who can’t stand the sight of a Black or Brown person. The more intellectual on the pro-mass immigration side often argue that Europe’s aging population and low fertility rates (themselves a result of liberal policy-making) create a demographic crisis that immigrants can address. A 2024 IMF study estimated that the 2020-2023 migration surge, including 4 million Ukrainian refugees, boosted the euro area’s potential output by 0.5% by 2030, filling two-thirds of new jobs created since 2019. Countries like Germany, which pledged to resettle 13,000 UN-screened refugees in 2024-2025, supposedly rely on migrants to sustain pensions and economic growth. The lie to this position was recently proven (again) by the very-mainstream Center of Economic and Policy Research which shows that mass immigration leads to greater welfare spending and economic burden on the German people.
Humanitarian arguments also underpin liberal immigration policies. The EU’s 2015-2016 migration crisis, when 1.3 million so-called asylum seekers arrived, highlighted the bloc’s commitment to international asylum laws. Leaders like Germany’s Angela Merkel, who accepted over 1 million refugees in 2015, framed open borders as a moral duty, though she was noticeably less concerned about her moral duty to protect the German nation from predation. A 2018 report by Germany’s own interior ministry titled “Criminality in the context of immigration” examined crime committed by asylum seekers, illegal immigrants, and other tolerated irregular foreigners in Germany and found that these groups are 2% of the population but are responsible for 8.5% of all crime in Germany. They were suspects in 14.3% of murders, 12.2% of sexual assaults, 11.4% in thefts, and 9.7% of suspects for assaults that resulted in bodily injury.
Ultimately liberalism’s love of mass immigration policies is rooted in its post-nationalist ideology. This ideology is quite literally written into the EU’s founding documents and was inspired by the 1941 Ventotene Manifesto, which rejected nationalism in favor of universalism and open borders. It’s worth noting that the manifesto was written by avowed Italian communist Altiero Spinelli who would later go on to be a member of the European Parliament and a European Commissioner. Mr. Spinelli, like the EU today, was deeply contemptuous of democracy and viewed it as “dead weight” in a hindrance to his “revolutionary crisis” that is meant to bring about the end of the nation-state.
The European Union considers Spinelli as one of its ‘founding fathers’.
The EU’s Fracturing Unity:
The clash between remigration and liberal mass immigration policies is already contributing to fractures in the EU’s facade and is likely to drive a very large wedge between EU member states, political elites, and their publics in the coming years. Nationalist and national-conservative parties continue to gain ground with each passing election. In the 2024 European Parliament elections, right-wing parties secured over 25% of seats, forcing mainstream center-right groups like the European People’s Party to adopt tougher stances. In Germany, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) broke a post-WWII taboo by voting with the AfD in 2025 to restrict family reunification, signaling a mainstream shift toward restrictionism.
Eastern European states, like Hungary and Poland, openly defy the EU’s migration policies. Hungary’s Viktor Orbán called the 2024 Migration Pact “another nail in the coffin of the EU,” rejecting relocation quotas. Poland’s Donald Tusk, despite seeking better EU relations, vowed to block migrant relocations altogether. This resistance undermines the Pact’s “mandatory solidarity,” risking its collapse. Meanwhile, southern states like Italy, overwhelmed by arrivals (e.g., 7,000 migrants in two days on Lampedusa in 2023), demand greater burden-sharing, exacerbating north-south tensions.
Public opinion further complicates the divide. A 2024 Eurobarometer survey ranked immigration among the top two issues for EU citizens, with 66% of French respondents supporting remigration of illegal immigrants and foreign criminals. The EU and the left have been reduced to relying on the ever-less-important mainstream media to make protests against so-called far-right remigration plans, such as those in Germany following a 2023 AfD meeting exposed by Correctiv,(which called the supposed plans a Secret plan against Germany) seem significant and important when they in truth are not.
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