Björn Höcke
Springtime for Europe’s fascists
You haven’t seen this movie before. This time
Germany’s sharp lurch to the right is the phenomenon to watch.
BY MATTHEW
KARNITSCHNIG
AUGUST 20,
2023 10:00 PM CET
BERLIN —
These are heady times for Europe’s far right.
Illegal
immigration is spiking, the economy is anemic and the war in Ukraine has kept
the conspiracy mill churning at capacity. Those developments have vaulted the
parties to new heights — and in some countries into government — fueling fears
in some quarters of a tectonic rightward shift in Europe’s political landscape.
Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy are already in power, while France’s
National Rally is only 1 percentage point from being the country’s top party in
the polls.
It’s
tempting to dismiss this as a seen-this-movie-before moment. Europe’s most
successful far-right parties, whether in the Netherlands, Austria or
Scandinavia have a long history of electoral success followed by internal
division and spectacular implosion.
Yet there’s
a fundamental difference this time around that should give anyone who cares
about Europe’s political stability pause: Germany’s at the center of the storm.
It’s one
thing for Finland or Belgium (the Flemish separatist Vlaams Belang party heads
the polls) to veer onto a far-right rail. When it begins to happen in Germany,
however, it’s time to start plotting an escape route.
Over the
past year, support for the anti-immigrant, pro-Russian Alternative for Germany
party (AfD) has nearly doubled to more than 20 percent in POLITICO’s Poll of
Polls, a record.
The party
is now in second place, just five percentage points behind the center-right
Christian Democrats. Over the summer, the AfD has also succeeded in widening
its lead over the Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats.
Much of
AfD’s recent popularity can be attributed to persistent infighting and disarray
in Scholz’s coalition with the Greens and liberal Free Democrats. Alliance
members have been at odds (and at times at one another’s throats) over
everything from climate policy to child welfare subsidies since they took
office in late 2021.
That said,
the primary driver of the AfD’s success is the same issue that has defined
far-right parties across Europe for a generation: migration.
A dramatic
surge in illegal immigration has accompanied the AfD’s rise, fueling concerns
among many in the country that the governing class has completely lost control
of Germany’s borders. German police have arrested about 43,000 migrants seeking
to enter German illegally so far this year — an increase of more than 50
percent over the same period last year. It’s a safe assumption that many more
make it through. The rise, first reported by German daily Bild, was
particularly strong on Germany’s border with Poland, where crossings were up
more than 140 percent.
“We’ve lost
control over illegal migration,” Michael Stübgen, the interior of Germanys’
eastern Brandenburg state said last week.
At the same
time, Germany has seen a marked rise in violent crime, which rose more than 20
percent last year. Many Germans see a connection between the rising crime
levels and migration. According to police statistics, foreigners, who make up
about 16 percent of Germany’s population of 83 million, accounted for about
one-third of all crime suspects registered in 2022.
The
perception that migrants pose the biggest threat to public security is fueled
by almost daily reports of horrific crimes in which foreigners are the primary
suspects, such as two recent gang rapes in Berlin.
Though the
connection (real and perceived) between crime and migration has long been a
mainstay for the AfD, what’s different now is that the current iteration of the
debate is happening as Germany faces its worst economic downturn in years, one
that some economists worry could herald a fundamental decline in the country’s
industrial core.
That’s
where Russia’s war on Ukraine comes in. Though the party has always had a soft
spot for Russian President Vladimir Putin, its main talking point regarding its
opposition to the war is that it’s throttling Germany’s economy, due both to
the loss of Russian gas imports and the impact of western sanctions on German
exports to Russia.
While the
reality is more complicated, the AfD’s rhetoric resonates in large swathes of
the country, especially in the former communist east, where the party has a
comfortable lead in many areas.
One
explanation for why the AfD never managed to break through the way similar
parties have elsewhere in Europe is that despite the allure of its
anti-establishment, nativist message, Germany’s economy has proved extremely
resilient in recent years. In other words, while many voters might not have
liked former Chancellor Angela Merkel’s migration policy, they were still well
off and didn’t gravitate to the AfD. But now, Germany’s economic downturn
threatens to change that dynamic for the first time since the AfD was founded
in 2013.
What’s
particularly striking about the AfD’s surge is that the party lacks the main
ingredient that drives most far-right parties to success: a charismatic leader.
In fact,
one could argue the party has no leader at all, much less anyone of the caliber
of Meloni or Marine Le Pen. The duo at the top of the party — Alice Weidel and
Tino Chrupalla — serve more as administrators than standard bearers. Weidel
regularly ranks last in a ranking of Germany’s 10 “most important politicians.”
Chrupalla doesn’t even make the cut.
That
weakness has given rise to fears in Germany’s political establishment that one
of the party’s most extreme figures — Björn Höcke, the leader of the AfD in the
eastern state of Thuringia — will emerge as its dominant figure.
Unlike most
of the populist leaders who have risen to power in Europe in recent years, such
as Hungary’s Viktor Orbán or Austrian rightist Heinz-Christian Strache — Höcke
is not a political opportunist.
A former
teacher who studied history and is steeped in German philosophy, Höcke is a
true ideologue whose views on race and migration recall the fascist rhetoric of
the 1930s. In fact, a German prosecutor in Hesse determined last month that
demonstrators were well within their rights to call Höcke a “Nazi.” That
follows a 2019 ruling by a German court that Höcke could reasonably be referred
to as a “fascist” during an organized protest.
While Höcke
isn’t particularly popular with the general public, his hold on the party’s
base is significant. At a recent party congress, for example, Höcke succeeded
in installing one of his acolytes atop the AfD’s candidate list for next year’s
European parliamentary election. Höcke’s message that day: “The EU must die for
the true Europe to live.”
For a sense
of where the AfD might be headed, it’s useful to look farther south, to
Austria.
There, the
far-right Freedom Party (FPÖ), which was founded by former Nazis in the 1950s
and served as a model for the AfD, has been leading national polls since
November. After scoring major gains in a string of recent regional elections,
the Freedom Party is the odds-on favorite to win next year’s general election.
That’s
notable not only because its platform mirrors the AfD’s, but because at this
time last summer, the Austrians were exactly where its German cousins are now
in the polls.
Freedom
Party leader Herbert Kickl, who like Höcke is a true believer in his party’s
nativist philosophy, has left little doubt about his intentions: “The goal is
to ensure that a two-party coalition is only possible with the FPÖ — naturally
with Freedom Party chancellor.”

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