No subject divides European societies today more than immigration. No other theme influences elections as much, shapes public debate as deeply, or contributes as heavily to the rise of populist parties. More than just a migration issue, immigration has become the true political test facing Europe.
For a long time, politicians approached the subject with caution, and sometimes with discomfort. Caught between humanitarian imperatives, economic needs, and security concerns, the debate has progressively become an ideological battlefield where each side accuses the other of irresponsibility.
Yet, reality now demands a clear-eyed examination. Europe is aging. Its labor market lacks manpower in many sectors. Its social systems rely on increasingly fragile demographic balances. At the same time, migratory flows continue to exert significant pressure on reception capacities, public infrastructure, and integration policies.
The real European failure is neither immigration itself nor cultural diversity. It lies in the inability of governments to construct a discourse of truth. For years, the legitimate anxieties of a portion of the population were ignored or caricatured. This mistake fed a sense of abandonment that the most radical movements are capitalizing on today.
Conversely, reducing immigration to an existential threat constitutes another dead end. European societies have always been shaped by exchanges, mobility, and external contributions. The question is therefore not to choose between openness and closure. The question is what rules, what limits, and what requirements can preserve national cohesion.
Integration is now the central issue. A democracy can manage diversity. It cannot survive long-term fragmentation. When groups live side by side without sharing a common foundation of values, duties, and belonging, tensions become inevitable.
Europe is reaching a moment of truth. Citizens demand humanity, order, and consistency all at once. They reject simplistic slogans as much as denials of reality.
The leaders who succeed tomorrow will be those who have the courage to confront the subject without ideology, without naivety, and without demagoguery.
For behind the migration debate, a much broader question is actually at stake: Europe’s ability to remain true to its principles while retaining control over its destiny.
By Isaac Hammouch


