BFF-07, 08 Germany’s far-right AfD elects new leaders as radicals rise

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Germany’s far-right AfD elects new leaders as radicals rise

BRAUNSCHWEIG, Germany, Nov 30, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Germany’s far-right AfD
party will elect new leaders on Saturday, with its increasingly influential
radical wing seeking to tighten its grip on the group after a series of
electoral victories.

The anti-migrant party’s extremists have the upper hand following a series
of electoral gains in eastern regions in September and October that have
caused widespread domestic and international consternation.

Underlining the polarising effect the party has on Germany, up to 12,000
protesters are expected to gather outside the congress hall in the city of
Braunschweig to demonstrate against what they call a racist party.

On Friday night around a thousand protesters, all dressed in black, marched
through the center of the city, heeding the call of an anti-fascist group.

Volkswagen, whose name is on the hall used by the AfD, has requested for
its logo to be covered up.

Within the hall, tensions are also set to run high as 78-year-old Alexander
Gauland is expected to step down from his co-chairman role, while 58-year-old
Joerg Meuthen is set to defend his seat against a challenge from party
radicals.

Bjoern Hoecke, the leader of the radical Fluegel (“Wing”), has not directly
put forward his name for Gauland’s spot.

But anyone seeking the post would have to get the backing of his faction,
which is known for its criticism of Germany’s culture of remembrance.

One likely candidate who might please all sides is Tino Chrupalla, a 44-
year-old MP and former house-painter from the eastern state of Saxony.

Chrupalla, who met with former Donald Trump advisor Steve Bannon in Berlin
earlier this year, can count on the support of Hoecke’s Fluegel.

At the same time, Gauland has also tacitly given him his backing by
pledging to stand aside if Chrupalla went for his post.

– Compromise candidate –

The AfD, which was only established six years ago, is riven with personal
and ideological rivalries.

Yet Chrupalla is widely seen as the compromise candidate, palatable to the
party’s moderates and radicals alike.

His main challenger will be fellow AfD MP Gottfried Curio, a fiery orator
whose parliamentary speeches have made him a far-right social media star.

MORE/SSS/1002 hrs

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Chrupalla has presented himself as a more serious candidate, but he too has
prompted outrage with his rhetoric.

Last month, he was booed in parliament after accusing Chancellor Angela
Merkel of treating her voters as “underlings” with “micro-aggressions against
everything German”.

He has also called the “Islamisation of the West” a “reality”, saying that
one could qualify it as a replacement of the population.

Unlike most German MPs, Chrupalla does not hold a doctorate, and has railed
against perceived intellectual snobbery in Germany’s political class.

He is also seen as a representative of the former East Germany, where the
AfD took over 20 percent of the vote in three recent state elections.

Hoecke recently described Chrupalla as “one of the AfD’s great
representatives in the East”.

Meanwhile one of the Fluegel’s number, 49-year-old MP Nicole Hoechst, is
now also plotting to unseat co-leader Joerg Meuthen, according to reports in
the Welt and Taz newspapers.

Meuthen, a university professor from western Germany, represents the more
moderate wing of the party.

– Protests –

With 91 MPs, the AfD is now the third political force in the German
parliament after the CDU and SPD.

But its support in opinion polls has stagnated at around 13 to 15 percent.

The AfD started out as a eurosceptic party but became increasingly anti-
migrant and opposed to Merkel after the chancellor welcomed around one
million asylum-seekers in 2015 and 2016.

Mainstream parties have refused to work with the AfD and therefore
prevented it from holding executive power on a national or regional level.

“The Wing” in particular has drawn scrutiny as it has attacked one of the
foundation stones of Germany’s post-war political culture — atonement for
its Nazi past.

Hoecke notoriously described Berlin’s Holocaust Memorial as a “memorial of
shame”, while his colleague Andreas Kalbitz has been accused of association
with neo-Nazi organisations.

Such accusations have failed to frighten off voters, but they have drawn
the attention of the secret services to the party’s activities.

BSS/AFP/SSS/1014 hrs