A Quarter Million Europeans are now supporting “The Save Europe Act,” and the Establishment is TERRIFIED.
Over 252,000 signatures, and climbing by the hour.
People are demanding remigration, and want their leaders to fight for the survival of Western civilization.
European culture should be preserved, not erased by an invasion of foreigners.
And here’s what makes it remarkable.
In parts of Europe, people have been arrested and prosecuted for what they post online about immigration.
They’re speaking out anyway.
That’s not extremism.
That’s a continent finding its courage.
The West is waking up.
♦ Bonus ♦

Grok: As of right now, the Save Europe Act petition has 257,458 signatures.
This is according to the official campaign site (save-europe-act.com), which shows it at 51.5% toward the next milestone of 500,000 (with an ultimate goal of 1 million).
It passed 100k in just a few days after launch, hit over 200k within the first week, and continues growing quickly. Recent X posts and reports from a couple of days ago mentioned around 250k+, so it’s still climbing steadily.
The Save Europe Act petition site: save-europe-act.com
This is a European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI) campaign focused on halting “replacement migration,” securing borders, promoting remigration, and protecting the ethnocultural identity of European nations. It aims to gather signatures to pressure the European Commission.
Countries with the Strictest Approaches
Hungary: Consistently one of the hardest lines in the EU. It has built border fences, refuses EU-mandated asylum seeker relocations, and maintains very low acceptance of non-EU migrants (especially from Africa/Middle East). It focuses on protecting “Christian roots” and has passed anti-immigrant laws.
Denmark: A pioneer of restrictive policies (even under center-left governments). It has pursued outsourcing asylum processing abroad, strict integration rules, and low asylum grants. It often serves as a model for other Nordic and EU countries.
Italy (under Meloni government): Offshore processing deals (e.g., with Albania), naval interceptions, faster deportations, and detention rules. It pushes back on Mediterranean arrivals while pursuing labor migration selectively.
Austria: Strong push for deportations and return hubs. It has suspended certain asylum processing (e.g., Syrians post-Assad in 2024) and participates in informal groups for tougher EU measures.
Poland: Strict eastern border controls, low acceptance of non-Ukrainian asylum seekers, and alignment with Hungary on opposing EU relocation schemes.

