ReportWire

Tag: Alice Weidel

  • Tens of thousands protest as far-right AfD forms new youth group

    [ad_1]

    The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) established a new youth organization called Generation Deutschland (GD) on Saturday at a founding congress accompanied by massive protests.

    More than 800 participants adopted a youth statute with rules on the role and work of the new organization, which, unlike its predecessor Junge Alternative, is to be closely linked to the AfD.

    Several people with minor injuries were treated at the city’s university hospital as protests raged against the group’s founding.

    Some 10 officers also suffered minor injuries, the police said.

    New group linked more closely to party

    The Junge Alternative (JA) disbanded in the spring after the AfD severed ties with it. As an independent association, the JA was only loosely affiliated with the AfD and its members, excluding the executive committee, did not have to be members of the party and acted largely independently.

    That gave the AfD little influence over the JA. As an association, the JA, which was classified as a proven far-right extremist group by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, also ran the risk of being banned.

    Now only those who are already members of the AfD can join the new AfD youth organisation. Violations of the rules or misconduct can be punished, up to and including expulsion from the party. The organization is to be open to all AfD members under the age of 36, in what AfD leader Alice Weidel called a training ground for the party.

    She said GD was primarily intended to produce capable young talent for the parent party, also with a view to next year’s state elections in Saxony-Anhalt and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, where polls suggest the party could come to power for the first time, meaning many positions would need to be filled.

    “So this is a training ground for government responsibility,’ said Weidel.

    Group delegates demand remigrations

    As delegates elected the executive committee of the new party youth organization, candidates struck staunchly far-right tones.

    Kevin Dorow, a young AfD politician from Schleswig-Holstein elected to the GD leadership committee, called on members not to distance themselves from the periphery.

    “Youth must be led by youth, and this principle must be our guiding star,” said Dorow. “This youth organisation, dear friends, will be the spearhead of the young right in Germany.”

    “Youth is led by youth” was the principle of the Bündische Jugend (German Youth Movement) in the Weimar period and later of the Hitler Youth.

    Mio Trautner, of Baden-Württemberg, demanded “that deportations in the state finally begin, that the runways in Germany glow.” Candidate Julia Gehrkens, who was also elected to the GD executive committee, who said, “Only millions of remigrations will protect our women and children!” to powerful applause.

    New board member Cedric Krippner was also loudly applauded when he called for “millions of remigrations.” “We must deport, deport, deport, until Germany becomes our home again,” said Helmut Strauf, also a member of the GD board.

    Protests delay arrivals at outset

    The event began with a 2-hour delay as the road blockades and protests prevented many of the roughly 1,000 planned attendees from reaching the venue.

    AfD leaders Weidel and Tino Chrupalla, and the designated head of the new youth group, Jean-Pascal Hohm, were also delayed, leaving numerous seats in the exhibition hall empty at the start of the assembly. They sharply criticized the blockades.

    Weidel said AfD lawmaker Julian Schmidt was “beaten up” on the sidelines of the protests. He confirmed the attack to dpa, saying he was attacked by around 20 people after parking his car near the hall and suffered bruises and red marks on his nose and cheekbone as a result. He called the incident a new level of confrontation.

    The police said that an AfD lawmaker had been injured nearby and that the suspected perpetrator had been arrested, and the investigation was ongoing. The police did not provide any further details or the name of the person involved.

    Most of the protests were peaceful, police said, with numbers reaching more than 25,000 people took to the city streets. The alliance Widersetzen, meaning Resist said there had been more than 50,000 participants.

    “The police do not have any reliable figures regarding injured participants in the gathering,” the police said.

    Police and demonstrators face each other at the slip road from the L3047 onto the B429. The slip road is blocked. Several thousand demonstrators protested against the founding of a new AfD youth organization on Saturday. Its predecessor, Junge Alternative, which had been classified as right-wing extremist, had dissolved itself. Lando Hass/dpa

    Participants from various organizations protest in Giessen against the founding meeting of the new AfD youth organization. The demonstration is accompanied by a massive police presence. Boris Roessler/dpa

    Participants from various organizations protest in Giessen against the founding meeting of the new AfD youth organization. The demonstration is accompanied by a massive police presence. Boris Roessler/dpa

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Mass protests, blockades in German town against new AfD youth group

    [ad_1]

    Large crowds in the central German town of Giessen on Saturday gathered to protest against the founding of a new youth organization by the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), successfully delaying the start of the meeting.

    Originally scheduled for 10 am (0900 GMT), the event was slow to get under way, with only about a quarter of the exhibition centre’s 1,000-seat hall occupied.

    Attendees travelling by car were largely unable to reach the venue, including Jean-Pascal Hohm, the designated chairman of the new youth organization and AfD co-leaders Tino Chrupalla and Alice Weidel, who were due to speak, according to party reports.

    The AfD plans to establish a successor organization to the now disbanded Young Alternative (JA) called Generation Germany.

    The JA was dissolved following a party conference decision in March, after it was listed as extremist by the federal intelligence agency.

    The new organization is to be led by Hohm, a politician from the state of Brandenburg, where the state-level domestic intelligence agency has listed him as a “confirmed right-wing extremist.”

    Police said groups of demonstrators were “massively” obstructing traffic on motorways and other roads around the town, including about 10 people who were abseiling onto a key motorway.

    They have used water canons to help clear one blockade of about 2,000 people “after the group did not respond to the verbal request to clear the road.”

    A large group attempted to break through a police cordon at a substation outside Giessen. Emergency services prevented them from advancing further, but one officer was slightly injured in the process. Some police officers were pelted with stones.

    Within the town, a bus with activists chained to it was used to block a roundabout as demonstrators began moving, according to a police spokeswoman, describing an “active situation with many different locations.”

    At a rally at the train station, protesters chanted “All together. Against fascism” and “Stop the arsonists” as they headed towards the town centre.

    Authorities expect up to 50,000 participants at around 30 registered protests, rallies and vigils in the university town of some 90,000 inhabitants, a third of whom are students.

    The police and interior minister of the state of Hesse, Roman Poseck, said earlier they were preparing for a “challenging large-scale situation” in Giessen.

    Thousands of police officers from several federal states were on site, partly because calls for violence from the left-wing scene had been circulating in advance.

    The Widersetzen (Resist) alliance said earlier that it would block access routes to the AfD meeting to prevent it from taking place.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Germany’s far-right AfD is soaring. Can a ban stop it?

    Germany’s far-right AfD is soaring. Can a ban stop it?

    [ad_1]

    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    BERLIN — As the far-right Alternative for Germany continues to rise — and its radicalism becomes increasingly pronounced — a growing chorus of mainstream politicians is asking whether the best way to stop the party is to try to ban it.

    The debate kicked off in earnest after Saskia Esken, the co-chief of the ruling Social Democratic Party (SPD), came out earlier this month in favor of discussing a ban — if only, as she put it, to “shake voters” out of their complacency.

    Since then, politicians from across the political spectrum have weighed in on whether a legal effort to ban Alternative for Germany (AfD), while possible under German law, would be tactically smart — or only further fuel the party’s rise.

    Like so much of German politics, the conversation is colored by the country’s Nazi past. In a society mindful that Adolf Hitler initially gained strength at the ballot box, with the Nazis winning a plurality of votes in federal elections before seizing power, a growing number of political leaders, particularly on the left, view a prohibition of the AfD — a party they view as a dire threat to Germany’s democracy — as an imperative rooted in historical experience.

    Others fear the attempt would backfire by allowing the AfD to depict their mainstream opponents as undermining the democratic will of the German people, desperate to ban a party they can’t beat.

    Indeed, the AfD appears to be trying to turn the debate to its tactical advantage.

    “Calls for the AfD to be banned are completely absurd and expose the anti-democratic attitude of those making these demands,” said Alice Weidel, co-leader of the party, in a written statement to POLITICO. “The repeated calls for a ban show that the other parties have long since run out of substantive arguments against our political proposals.”

    The debate is assuming greater urgency in a key year in which the AfD appears set to do better than ever in June’s European Parliament election as well as in three state elections in eastern Germany in September. The party is currently in second place with 23 percent support in national polls; across all the states of the former East Germany, not including Berlin, the AfD is currently leading in polls.

    Calls for a party ban grew louder this week following revelations that AfD members attended a secretive meeting of right-wing extremists where a “master plan” for deporting millions of people, including migrants and “unassimilated citizens,” was discussed. The news sent shockwaves across the country, with many drawing parallels to similar plans made by the Nazis. One of the people reportedly in attendance was Roland Hartwig, a former parliamentarian and now a close personal aide to Weidel, the party’s co-leader.

    In a post on X, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz suggested it was a matter for the German judiciary.

    “Learning from history is not just lip service,” he said. “Democrats must stand together.”

    Many of the AfD’s most extreme leaders operate in eastern Germany, where the party is also the most popular. In two of the three states where the AfD will be competing in state elections next year — Thuringia and Saxony — state-level intelligence authorities have labeled local party branches as “secured extremist” — a designation that strengthens legal arguments for a ban.

    Saskia Esken of the ruling Social Democratic Party (SPD) called for a ban on the AfD party to ‘shake’ up complacent voters | Michele Tantussi/Getty Images

    Germany’s constitution allows for bans of parties that “seek to undermine or abolish the free democratic basic order” — essentially allowing the state to use anti-democratic means to prevent an authoritarian party from corroding democracy from within.

    In reality, the legal hurdle for imposing a ban is very high. Germany’s constitutional court has only done it twice: The Socialist Reich Party, an heir to the Nazi party, was banned in 1952, while the Communist Party of Germany was prohibited in 1956.

    More recently, in 2017, the court ruled that a neo-Nazi party known as the National Democratic Party (NPD), while meeting the ideological criteria for a prohibition, was too fringe to ban, as it lacked popular support and therefore the power to endanger German democracy.

    Given the AfD’s poll numbers, however, an effort to ban it would pose an entirely different dilemma: How would politicians handle the backlash from the party’s many supporters?

    Germany’s postwar democracy has arguably never faced a greater test, and politicians — as well as the public — remain divided over how to respond.

    Center-right conservatives, who are leading in national polls, tend to view a ban attempt unfavorably.

    “Such sham debates are grist to the AfD’s mill,” Friedrich Merz, the leader of the center-right Christian Democratic Union, told the Münchner Merkur newspaper. In response to Esken, the SPD leader who favors exploring a ban, Merz added: “Does the SPD chairwoman seriously believe that you can simply ban a party that reaches 30 percent in the polls? That’s a frightening suppression of reality.”

    For the SPD, the stakes in terms of their political survival are much higher. The party has experienced a sharp decline in its popularity, and in two states in Germany’s east it is dangerously close to falling below the 5 percent hurdle needed to win seats in state parliaments.

    Even within the SPD —  a party whose history of resistance to the Nazis is a source of great internal pride —  there is sharp disagreement over whether a ban is a good idea.

    “If we ban a party that we don’t like, but which is still leading in the polls, it will lead to even greater solidarity with it,” Carsten Schneider, a social democrat who serves as federal commissioner for eastern Germany, told the Süddeutsche Zeitung. “And even from people who are not AfD sympathizers or voters, the collateral damage would be very high.”

    Peter Wilke contributed reporting

    [ad_2]

    James Angelos

    Source link

  • Germany’s far-right ‘firewall’ cracks

    Germany’s far-right ‘firewall’ cracks

    [ad_1]

    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    BERLIN — The political maneuver shaking Germany’s postwar democratic order involves a piece of legislation that is about as mundane as it gets.

    Center-right legislators in the eastern German state of Thuringia wanted to cut a local property tax by a small amount — and did so with the support of the far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD.

    The move broke with years of tradition in which mainstream parties have vowed to maintain a Brandmauer, or firewall, between themselves and the AfD, a party many in a country alert to the legacy of Nazism see as a dire threat to democracy. Even accepting the party’s support, the thinking goes, would legitimize far-right forces or make them salonfähig — socially acceptable.

    And so, when parliamentarians from the conservative Christian Democratic Union, or CDU, passed the tax reduction on a late afternoon in September with AfD votes, it sent tremors across the country’s political landscape that still are reverberating.

    “For me, a taboo has been broken,” Katrin Göring-Eckardt, a leader of the Greens who hails from Thuringia, said after the vote. “It shows me not only that the firewall is gone, but that there is open collaboration.”

    For mainstream parties, and the CDU in particular, the question of how to handle the growing presence of far-right radicals in governing bodies from federal and state parliaments to local councils is likely to grow only more vexing.

    That especially is the case in the states of the former East Germany, where the AfD now leads in polls at around 28 percent. Next year, the eastern states of Thuringia, Saxony and Brandenburg will all hold parliamentary elections. Polls show the party leading in all three states.

    The AfD is likely to expand its presence in the parliaments of Bavaria and Hesse when those states vote on Sunday. In Hesse, the AfD is coming close to overtaking German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s center-left Social Democratic Party, according to the latest polls.

    The dilemma facing mainstream parties is clear. To work with the AfD means to normalize a party that many believe seeks to subvert the republic from within. But to ostracize the party only alienates its many voters.

    The firewall also serves as an unintended political gift, allowing the AfD to depict itself — at a time of high dissatisfaction with mainstream parties — as the clear choice for those who want to send a burn-it-down message to the country’s political establishment.

    At the same time, the controversy over the latest vote in Thuringia seems to have played into the AfD’s hands, allowing the party to depict itself as seeking to uphold rather than undermine democracy.

    The “‘firewall’ is history — and Thuringia is just the beginning,” AfD party leader Alice Weidel posted on X, formerly Twitter, after the vote. “It’s time to respond to the democratic will of citizens everywhere in Germany.”

    Historic fears

    Germany’s political leaders are all too aware that the Nazi seizure of power began with democratic electoral success. In fact, it was in Thuringia where, in 1930, the Nazi party first took real governing power in coalition with conservative parties.

    The “‘firewall’ is history — and Thuringia is just the beginning,” AfD party leader Alice Weidel posted on X, formerly Twitter, after the vote. “It’s time to respond to the democratic will of citizens everywhere in Germany” | Christof Stache/AFP via Getty Images

    That fact was not lost on the CDU’s opponents.

    “German conservatism has already been a stirrup holder of fascism,” Janine Wissler, a head of the Left party, told the German Press Agency after the vote. “Back then, too, it started in Thuringia,” she added. “Instead of having learned from that, the CDU is going down a path that’s as dangerous as fire.”

    CDU leaders in Thuringia deny the vote on the tax reduction means the firewall is crumbling. They say there was no cooperation with the AfD ahead of the vote (though AfD members say there were discussions between lawmakers).

    “I cannot make good, important decisions for the state that provide relief for families and the economy dependent on the fact that the wrong people might agree,” Mario Voigt, the head of the CDU in Thuringia said after the vote.

    Friedrich Merz, the national leader of the CDU, has sent mixed signals on the firewall — or at least on what exactly the firewall means. Merz says the CDU will not form coalitions with the AfD but he’s been less clear on whether the CDU will work with the party in other ways.

    In a television interview over the summer, he seemed to suggest working with the AfD on the local level was all but inevitable.

    Friedrich Merz, the national leader of the CDU, has sent mixed signals on the firewall | Tobias Schwarz/AFP via Getty Images

    “We are of course obliged to accept democratic elections,” he said. “And if a district administrator, a mayor is elected there who belongs to the AfD, it’s natural that you look for ways to then continue to work in this city.”

    After an uproar ensued, Merz walked back the comment. “There will be no cooperation between the CDU and the AfD at the municipal level either,” he posted on X, formerly Twitter.

    After the vote in Thuringia, Merz stood by the CDU leadership of the state. “We don’t go by who agrees, we go by what we think is right in the matter,” he said on German television.

    Even some within his own party do not see things that way. Daniel Günther, the CDU premier of the northern state of Schleswig-Holstein, sharply criticized his party colleagues in Thuringia. “As a conservative, I must be able to say plainly and simply the sentence, ‘I do not form majorities with extremists,’” Günther said.

    ‘Cordon sanitaire’

    It’s not the first time Thuringia has been at the center of a controversy over the firewall. In 2020, a little-known politician in the pro-business Free Democratic Party, Thomas Kemmerich, was elected state premier with the support of the CDU and AfD. Then-Chancellor Angela Merkel weighed in to call the vote “unforgivable.”

    In the furor that followed, Kemmerich resigned as did the then-head of the CDU faction in the state. But given the AfD’s large presence in the local parliament, the issue was bound to resurface.

    It’s not the first time Thuringia has been at the center of a controversy over the firewall | Christof Stache/AFP via Getty Images

    The problem is far from Germany’s alone. Mainstream parties are under growing pressure due to the rise of the radical right across Europe.

    In France, parties from across the political spectrum have formed a cordon sanitaire, or sanitary cordon, to keep Marine Le Pen, a leader of the far-right National Rally, out of the presidency. But with Le Pen’s party now the biggest opposition group in the National Assembly, the cordon is getting harder to maintain.

    In the European Parliament, where a similar cordon has been erected, the center-right European People’s Party has been openly courting the European Conservatives and Reformists, home to Poland’s nationalist Law and Justice party and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s far-right Brothers of Italy party.

    In Thuringia, the stakes are even higher as the local branch of the AfD contains some of the party’s most extreme members. State-level intelligence authorities tasked with surveilling anti-constitutional groups have characterized the party’s local branch as extremist.

    The leader of the AfD in Thuringia is Björn Höcke, who is set to face trial for using banned Nazi rhetoric. (In 2021, he closed a speech with the phrase “Alles für Deutschland!” or “Everything for Germany!” — a slogan used by Nazi stormtroopers.)

    Höcke railed against Holocaust remembrance in Germany and warned of “Volkstod,” the death of the Volk, through “population replacement.” For such views, German courts have ruled that Höcke could justifiably be referred to as a fascist or Nazi.

    GERMANY NATIONAL PARLIAMENT ELECTION POLL OF POLLS

    For more polling data from across Europe visit POLITICO Poll of Polls.

    After the vote on the property tax in Thuringia, Höcke clearly was pleased, claiming the AfD had helped enact a pragmatic policy.

    “It’s simply a good day for Thuringia,” he said.

    Peter Wilke contributed reporting.

    [ad_2]

    James Angelos

    Source link