GETTY The appeal of anti-establishment nationalism has struck a chord with younger voters

FREE now and never miss the top politics stories again. SUBSCRIBE Invalid email Sign up fornow and never miss the top politics stories again. We will use your email address only for sending you newsletters. Please see our Privacy Notice for details of your data protection rights.

All across Europe, the appeal of anti-establishment nationalism has struck a chord with younger voters who are looking for a change from the norm. Youngsters are now moving even further right on the political spectrum than their parents and grandparents, with many expressing distain for the European Union.

Studies have also revealed European youths are highly skeptical of traditional politics and instead are leaning towards more anti-establishment parties. Only five per cent of young voters in Hungary, six per cent in Poland and nine per cent in Slovakia believe that joining a political party would make a difference compared to an average of 12 percent across the EU on average, according to a Eurobarometer poll.

GETTY Youngsters are now moving even further right on the political spectrum

Migrant Crisis: Mass exodus from the migrant camp continues Tue, October 25, 2016 Hundreds of migrants are continuing to arrive in Europe as they flee the scenes of chaos and brutality of the Islamic State in the Middle East. Play slideshow 1 of 224

Hungary has been leading far-right sentiments in Europe, following its national referendum on the EU migrant quotas - which were almost unanimously rejected. While the extreme right and Eurosceptic Jobbik party remains a distant second to the ruling Fidesz - but it hugely popular among university students according to a 2015 poll. András Dániel, a Hungarian college graduate, said: “Under Jobbik, politics would work for the people. We see a future with this party. “We were promised that the standard of living would improve with EU membership … But we are now even more behind Austria than before.”

GETTY Students from Hungary, Poland and Slovakia have veered to the right

GETTY Hungary has been leading far-right sentiments in Europe

Under Jobbik, politics would work for the people. We see a future with this party. András Dániel, a Hungarian college graduate

Speaking after a meeting with the party’s vice-president László Toroczkai, one 18-year-old added: “The other parties don’t deal with young people.” In Poland, ultraconservative and anti-Brussels Law and Justice party garnered a third of votes from young people in last year’s election - as well as being the most popular option for first time voters. Tom Junes, a historian and visiting fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in Sofia, said: “There was always a strong Right current in Poland after 1989. “For more than a decade, Poland has seen a more or less two-party system. Now young people in Poland are voting against the establishment.”

GETTY Ironically, young people in the vicegeral countries are also more likely to fly the nest