Elon Musk
is boosting the AfD. But why is Germany’s mainstream helping him?
Hanno
Hauenstein
After years
of politicians and media figures normalising far-right ideas, the billionaire’s
meddling is falling on fertile ground
Wed 8 Jan
2025 07.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jan/08/elon-musk-afd-germany-mainstream-far-right
When Elon
Musk endorsed the far-right Alternative für Deutschland on X as the only party
that could “save Germany”, followed by an opinion article in Die Welt promoting
the AfD in the forthcoming federal elections the backlash was swift. “Germany
must not tolerate Musk’s transgressions,” declared the publisher of the liberal
newspaper Tagesspiegel. “How did Elon Musk’s election propaganda for the AfD
make it into Welt?” asked another commentator, accusing Welt’s publisher, Axel
Springer, of betraying its own principles. The Spiegel columnist Marina
Kormbaki labelled Musk’s intervention the “breaking of a taboo”.
The outrage
was justified. Musk’s apocalyptic rhetoric and alignment with forces often
labelled extremist are deeply unsettling in a country still grappling with the
weight of its 20th-century atrocities. His political meddling – from the US to
the UK and now Germany – follows a disturbing pattern of self-aggrandisement
cloaked in dangerous ideology.
His immense
wealth and global influence, magnified by his acquisition of the social media
platform X, as well as his strong ties to authoritarian figures including
Donald Trump, make this interference a brazen intrusion that strikes at the
heart of democratic integrity. In Germany, where foreign meddling in domestic
politics is anathema, this audacity rightly struck a nerve. As the
vice-chancellor, Robert Habeck, put it: “Hands off our democracy, Mr. Musk!”
At the same
time, Musk’s views are hardly a surprise. His rightward drift has been years in
the making, culminating – some might say, logically – in his support for a
party that mirrors some of his core obsessions: nationalist salvation
fantasies, natalism, austerity dogmatism. His endorsement aligns with a broader
shift in Germany’s public discourse, where far-right narratives have been
steadily normalised in both conservative and liberal circles.
Musk’s
argument in the article itself was so simplistic it sparked speculation about
whether it might have been AI-generated. His reasoning hinged on praising the
AfD’s “political realism” and deregulatory agenda, coupled with the claim that
the party couldn’t really be “far right” because its co-leader, Alice Weidel,
has a same-sex partner from Sri Lanka. A superficial logic that chips away at
the carefully cultivated aura of Musk as a brilliant, if eccentric,
entrepreneur.
What’s even
less surprising than Musk’s positions is Die Welt handing him the microphone.
Axel Springer, Europe’s largest publishing house, has long played a role in
normalising far-right ideas in Germany. Springer, which publishes the Bild
tabloid and the Welt daily, reaches millions and actively shapes German public
opinion. Over the years, Springer’s German outlets have steadily amplified
anti-immigrant narratives which in turn has arguably helped legitimise the far
right.
Take Bild,
Springer’s infamous tabloid powerhouse and Germany’s most widely distributed
newspaper. In 2023, it published a 50-point manifesto demanding that immigrants
respect “German values”, claiming: “We are experiencing a new dimension of
hatred in our country – against our values, democracy and Germany.” The text
leaned heavily on anti-Muslim tropes, painting immigrants as knife-wielding
savages who scorn women, education, nudity and law enforcement.
These
narratives have seeped into mainstream discourse. The chancellor, Olaf Scholz,
famously promised mass deportations. After a suspected Islamist knife attack in
Solingen, leading political figures from the Greens to the Social Democratic
party suggested that deportations were necessary for domestic safety, an
argument alarmingly similar to the AfD’s ethnonationalist agenda. Liberal
outlets such as Zeit published essays questioning whether immigrants could
“civilise”. Today, the AfD’s cultural essentialism resonates far beyond its
voter base.
Musk’s
influence obviously surpasses that of any ordinary commentator in Germany. Yet,
within the Axel Springer ecosystem, his intervention felt less like an outlier,
more like a blunt articulation of what many have gestured to for years. Just
days before Musk’s opinion piece, Welt’s publisher, Ulf Poschardt, penned a
perplexing column praising Musk’s admiration for Richard Wagner, Ernst Jünger
and German techno culture. Poschardt argued that Germany needs a figure like
Musk to combat its economic stagnation, while carefully distancing himself from
the tech magnate’s boosting of the AfD on X. This calculated tightrope act –
appearing to flirt with far-right ideas without explicitly endorsing the
parties that most openly embody them – has become emblematic of Axel Springer’s
approach.
Musk’s
personal relationship with Axel Springer’s CEO, Mathias Döpfner, adds another
dimension to the story. Döpfner has long admired Musk, calling him “the
greatest visionary on the planet” in a 2020 interview. According to Spiegel,
Döpfner also encouraged Musk to buy Twitter, offering to help transform it into
a “true platform for free expression”. In 2023, Musk was among high-profile
guests at Döpfner’s 60th birthday party, joined by Eva Vlaardingerbroek, a
Dutch far-right influencer known for promoting conspiracies such as the “great
replacement” theory. Such alleged entanglements between tech oligarchs, media
powerbrokers and politicians underscore the growing international networks
fuelling today’s global far-right resurgence.
Musk’s
opinion article also triggered dissent at Welt. Several journalists publicly
criticised the decision to publish it and Welt’s opinion editor Eva Marie Kogel
resigned in protest. This is commendable, but it also raises questions: where
was this kind of resistance when Welt platformed columnists who derided welfare
recipients as lazy or questioned Germany’s firewall around the AfD? Why did it
take Musk’s name to sound the alarm?
The affair
highlights the extent to which right-leaning media and politics operate in
tandem in Germany. In May 2024, after riot police violently dismantled a
pro-Palestinian student camp in Berlin, Bild vilified more than 100 academics
who signed a letter advocating nonviolence, branding them “Universitäter” (a
slur combining “university” and “perpetrators”). The then education minister,
Bettina Stark-Watzinger, wasted no time echoing the tabloid’s condemnation.
This pattern
– stoking outrage with rightwing agendas – reflects how Germany’s establishment
increasingly co-opts far-right rhetoric to undercut its appeal. But instead of
containing the AfD, this strategy has further legitimised its ideas, fuelling
its historic successes in states such as Saxony and Thuringia.
Musk and
Weidel are now poised for a live discussion on X billed as a conversation on
“freedom of expression and the AfD’s ideas for a sustainable Germany”. With the
AfD polling second nationally and eyeing up to 20% of the vote, its influence
on public discourse continues to grow. While Germany’s established parties
still formally reject coalition-building with the AfD, their increasing
adoption of AfD-style rhetoric tells a different story.
Against this
backdrop, fixating solely on Musk’s endorsement feels like a distraction. Yes,
his alignment with the AfD is alarming. As is his promotion of figures such as
the German rightwing influencer Naomi Seibt, whose positions Musk has
repeatedly endorsed. But the deeper issue is that many of the AfD’s core ideas
– anti-migrant culture wars and ethnonationalist alliances – are already
entrenched within Germany’s political mainstream.
Allowing
Musk to use his outsized influence and resources to meddle in German or
European elections would be a grave mistake. Yet focusing on Musk as an anomaly
is hypocritical. It allows Germany’s liberal establishment to avoid reckoning
with its own complicity in normalising reactionary ideas. With the election
just weeks away, Germany must face this challenge head-on. The stakes couldn’t
be higher.
Hanno
Hauenstein is a Berlin-based journalist and author
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