Germany's AfD forecast to win 20% of the vote
24/2/2025 6:04
For the first time since the
Second World War, a far-right party has come second in a German
national election, a result that will keep it outside government
but make it a fearsome opponent of the ruling parties.
The Alternative for Germany, which has morphed since it was
founded in 2013 from a party of libertarian economists to an
anti-immigration, pro-Russia group, is forecast to have won the
backing of one-in-five Germans.
The AfD has little chance of joining the government as the
other parties maintain a "fire wall" to keep it out of office,
but leader Alice Weidel implied in her victory speech that it
was only a matter of time before that changed.
"Our hand remains outstretched to form a government," she
told supporters, adding that it would be tantamount to
"electoral fraud" if the first-placed conservatives chose to
govern with left-wing parties rather than them.
If that happened, she said, "next time we'll come first."
Weidel, the leader of a nativist party that preaches
traditional family values while raising her children with a
Swiss-based woman of Sri Lankan background, said the AfD was now
"a mainstream party".
Once internationally isolated, it now has an ally in the
White House, where Donald Trump's adviser Elon Musk, the world's
richest person, regularly posts his support.
"It's the most amazing feeling. I've been here since its
founding and to see it on 20% is amazing. We'll be kept out of
coalition, but as you can see, the conservatives are taking all
of our positions," said Gilbert Kalb, an AfD member celebrating
at the party's headquarters.
If cheers were slightly muted, that was because, although
its vote share doubled since 2021, the result fell short of the
more optimistic expectations.
Traditionally a pensioners' party, the AfD made inroads
among the young, many of whom have experienced years of sluggish
economic growth. Exit poll data indicated 22% of
25-to-34-year-olds voted for the party, compared to 10% of those
aged 70 and over.
Ahead of the result, young men in close-fitting suits milled
around at the headquarters, drinking beer and eating bratwurst.
The AfD has undergone successive waves of radicalisation
since its founding and is today under surveillance by security
services as an anti-democratic threat to Germany's
constitutional order.
Policies include drastically restricting migration,
disbanding the European Union and dropping support for Ukraine
in its war with Russia.
One leading figure is regional boss Bjoern Hoecke, twice
convicted for shouting slogans of Adolf Hitler's Nazis. Honorary
chairman Alexander Gauland has described the Nazis' genocide of
Europe's Jews as a lone stain that could not disfigure the
glorious sweep of German history.
It became the largest party in Hoecke's home state of
Thuringia last year, and did sufficiently well elsewhere that
only improbable and tricky coalitions of centre-right and far
left could keep them out of office.
Even outside government it reshaped debate away from the
"welcome culture" under which former Chancellor Angela Merkel
let a million refugees settle in 2015, with all mainstream
parties now pledging to tighten immigration controls.
STILL ISOLATED?
Forecasts suggest it will have 23% of seats in parliament,
just under the number needed to set up parliamentary committees
of inquiry that can summon witnesses and set the news agenda.
In a sign of quite how far outside Europe's mainstream it
is, other far right parties, including Marine Le Pen's National
Rally, have refused to work with a party that reminds many
Europeans of Germany's Nazi past.
Some legislators nurture close ties with Russia and China:
one European Parliament member, Petr Bystron is under
investigation for taking payment from a Russian-backed
disinformation outlet. Another, Maximilian Krah, was suspended
after prosecutors said one of his assistants was spying for
China.
There are still formidable barriers in its way: its
headquarters, next to an African restaurant on a side street in
a distant suburb, is far removed from the other parties'
imposing central offices because the stigma surrounding the
party is so great that no landlord agreed to let to them.
But there are signs its political isolation is crumbling:
Weidel received an invitation to Budapest to see Viktor Orban,
who praised her as a "brave woman" after she lambasted a
journalist for describing her party as far-right.
Other populists such as Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo
Salvini and Dutch anti-Islam nationalist Geert Wilders offered
congratulations on Sunday.
A year ago, the party seemed to be at a low ebb, buffeted by
revelations by investigative journalists that several of its
most senior members had met at a secret conference outside
Berlin to discuss "remigration" - the deportation of non-ethnic
German holders of German citizenship.
Nationwide protests followed, and the party briefly slipped
in polls, but with the economy in crisis and a population
disconcerted by war, it scored record results in four successive
regional elections in the autumn.
The president of Germany's Central Jewish Council, Josef
Schuster, told Welt newspaper he was shocked at the strength of
the AfD's result.
"This should worry all of us, that a fifth of German voters
have voted for a party that in at least some of its policies is
far-right, and which in its language and ideology seeks clear
links with the radical right and neo-Nazism ...," he said.
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