Boix, CarlesMarsh, Alexa G.2025-08-042025-08-042025-04-04https://theses-dissertations.princeton.edu/handle/88435/dsp01jm214s596Populist radical right parties (PRRPs) have transformed from marginal to mainstream players in European politics. As PRRPs continue to grow in popularity and secure political representation at the national and European levels, they can exert greater influence over the direction of foreign policy. This thesis explores the foreign policy positions of far-right parties toward the People’s Republic of China (PRC). EU-China relations have become increasingly politically salient and contentious in recent years. Intensifying US-China hostilities and efforts by the PRC to strengthen its political and economic influence in Europe have forced European leaders to formulate coherent policy responses to China. This paper analyzes far-right party discourse on a range of China-related issues and finds considerable heterogeneity in policy positions both within and across far-right parties. It finds that PRRP positions on Chinese trade are determined by country-specific economic conditions, including the intensity of Chinese import shocks and whether party leaders perceive economic relations with the PRC as beneficial or detrimental to national interests. On non-economic issues, including human rights, Taiwan, and China’s partnership with Russia, PRRP positions appear to be mediated by their attitudes toward America and transatlantic partnership. The findings problematize the understanding of radical right parties as predictably inward-looking and uniform in their international agendas, instead indicating a more complex and nuanced approach by PRRPs to foreign policy. While these parties are often depicted as inherently isolationist and myopic, the heterogeneity in positions across parties and China-related policy areas demonstrates the different strategic and ideological calculations that PRRPs consider as they formulate their foreign policies.en-USSino-Sympathy or Skepticism? Far-Right Foreign Policy toward ChinaPrinceton University Senior Theses