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We make a clear case for Remigration: why Europe matters, why its future is worth defending, and how steady political will can restore order and secure a homeland for our children. This piece argues from a practical, conservative perspective that cultural continuity and rule of law matter, and that policy must align with those priorities. Expect direct language about identity, the need for legal clarity, and a call for pragmatic steps that prioritize citizens and legal residents.
This is Europe, the greatest civilization to have ever existed. But above all, it is our home. We have no other, and we are not willing to lose it. That conviction drives a policy approach that puts citizens first and treats migration as a sovereign matter, not a moral blur.
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This is Europe, the greatest civilization to have ever existed.
But above all, it is our home. We have no other, and we are not willing to lose it.
That’s why, for the sake of our children, we will make Remigration happen.
See you at @RESUM26. pic.twitter.com/kFTKYWwHHS
— Eva Vlaardingerbroek (@EvaVlaar) March 9, 2026
We face a simple political choice: enforce borders and ensure integration, or accept fragmentation and slow cultural decline. Conservatives believe strong nations are built on shared values, secure borders, and respect for the rule of law. Remigration is framed here not as harassment but as a long-term strategy to restore balance, enforce legal frameworks, and prioritize those who built our communities.
Policy must be sensible and legal, leaning on transparent procedures and accountability. That means clear deadlines, legal support for returns, and coordinated international agreements that respect human rights while defending national interests. The aim is orderly transitions, not chaos, with dignified processes and strict enforcement where laws are broken.
Economic realities matter: public services, housing, and jobs are finite, and voters expect policymakers to manage resources responsibly. Prioritizing citizens and legal residents does not require cruelty; it requires triage and common sense. Redirecting funds toward integration programs for those legally entitled to stay, while ensuring returns for those who do not meet legal criteria, protects public trust and fiscal stability.
Culture and cohesion are often overlooked in policy debates, but they drive everything from education to neighborhood safety. When leaders defend a shared civic framework, communities feel secure and children grow up with a clear identity. Remigration policies, when designed carefully, seek to restore that cohesion without resorting to unlawful methods or vigilante justice.
Implementation will be political and administrative, not mystical. Elected officials must push for laws that close loopholes, speed up case processing, and provide resources for voluntary return programs. Law enforcement and border agencies need the tools and backing to do their jobs, and citizens need reassurance that laws apply equally to everyone.
Finally, this is about responsibility to the next generation more than revenge or exclusion. We want stable neighborhoods, proper funding for schools, and a future where children inherit a functioning, confident nation. Remigration, handled through transparent policy and robust legal frameworks, is presented here as a pathway to that kind of future without abandoning basic decency.
