In the UK, the far-Right British National party has claimed to be the “only true green party” in the country due to its focus on migration. In Spain, Santiago Abascal, leader of the populist Vox party, has called for a “patriotic” restoration of a “green Spain, clean and prosperous.” In the US, a lawsuit by the Republican attorney general of Arizona has demanded the building of a border wall to prevent migrants coming from Mexico as these people “directly result in the release of pollutants, carbon dioxide, and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere”. Representatives of this line of thought around the world are, in many cases, echoing eco-fascist ideas that themselves are rooted in an earlier age of blood-and-soil nationalism. Whatever his intent, Johnson was following a current of Rightwing thought that has shifted from outright dismissal of climate change to using its impacts to fortify ideological, and often racist, battle lines. This wrapping of ecological disaster with fears of rampant immigration is a narrative that has flourished in far-Right fringe movements in Europe and the US and is now spilling into the discourse of mainstream politics.