Others, primarily Russian propagandists and their apologists in the West, have gone even further, stating that Ukraines new government was not only illegitimate, but nationalist and fascist. To justify their blatant propagandistic rhetoric, the Kremlins advocates pointed to an alleged dominance of ultra-right political forces in the government, allegedly formed at gun-point by the radical leaders of the Euromaidan protests. The prime targets of the outbreak of fascism in Ukraine line of argument were the Ukrainian nationalist party Svoboda and the radical revolutionary movement Right Sector. Over the last six months both have been vilified and demonized largely unjustly by Putins propaganda and its western stooges. More importantly, the myth about Neo-nazis roaming and ravaging the streets of Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities was the main weapon of a mass-media campaign intended to delude the local population, and used by Putin in Russias illegal annexation of Crimea, as well as in Russias military subversion aimed at destabilizing the eastern Ukrainian regions of Donbass and Luhansk. All of Putins recent public statements about Ukraine, without exception, were peppered with insulting and inaccurate references to fascists and blood-thirsty Gestapo torturers in the illegitimate Ukrainian government, who torment and kill peaceful Russian-speaking citizens of Ukraine. The outcome of the early presidential elections, however, has blown Russian propagandists out of the water: the core, as Kremlin would have the world believe, of Ukraines new fascists Svoboda and Right Sector received a mere 1,9 percent of the votes nationwide. At the same time, far-right nationalist parties in other European countries are on the unprecedented rise. In the most recent European Parliament elections, which took place on the same day as Ukraines Presidential vote, right-wing forces have caused what some commentators have described as a political earthquake or a tsunami. Nationalist parties claimed astonishingly high results in such countries as France (25 percent), Denmark (23 percent), Austria (20 percent) and Belgium (30-32 percent). These are results Ukrainian fascists could only dream of. Ukraines Presidential elections, therefore, pose an awkward challenge for Putins propagandists: how to explain, at least to their domestic audience, the absence of fascists in Ukraine, the crusade against whom was used by Putin as a justification for most of his recent internationally-recognized crimes against the Ukrainian people.
One must remember that to the average eurocrat or their fellow travelers, anyone who is not a transnational progressive and WEIRD (look it up)is a right winger if they give voice to their political or social beliefs. This is not to say that some of them are not fascist or socialist. Some of them are just nationalist, both left and right. But to the cosmopolitans, anyone who does not agree with them is an evil right winger nut.