Thousands took to the streets to protest against the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) on Friday and yesterday as the party held a convention to choose its candidates for European parliamentary elections next year. Protesters outside the conference venue in the city of Magdeburg waved banners with messages like “stand together against right-wing hate” or “Nazis out”.
Polling at 22% behind the opposition conservatives, the AfD denies it is a Nazi party. Analysts say it is tapping into voters’ fears about recession, migration and the green transition. The AfD last month won a vote for a district leader for the first time and is on course to win three upcoming state elections in east Germany. Its rise has drawn concern from the domestic intelligence service about extremism. “Germany has understood that the right is the future,” AfD’s leader Alice Weidel told Italian newspaper La Repubblica yesterday. “The voices are getting louder.”
The AfD says its vision of Europe is “one of sovereign nation states instead of an EU superstate” and it wants “free citizens instead of paternalism and bureaucratic control.”
But any temptation for the mainstream to join hands with the far-right can backfire.
People gather on the day of the European election assembly 2023 of the Alternative for Germany (AfD) in Magdeburg on Saturday. (Reuters)