Germany’s
Intelligence Agency Labels Far-Right AfD as Extremist
The
designation is certain to inflame debates over whether the party should be
banned, though some polls show it to be the most popular in the country.
Christopher
F. Schuetze
By
Christopher F. Schuetze
Reporting
from Berlin
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/02/world/europe/germany-afd-far-right-extremist.html
Published
May 2, 2025
Updated May
3, 2025, 2:11 a.m. ET
Germany’s
domestic intelligence service has classified the far-right Alternative for
Germany, which some polls show as the most popular in the country, as an
extremist party, the German authorities announced on Friday.
The decision
intensifies a quandary for Germany about what to do about the party, known as
the AfD, whose leaders have trivialized the Holocaust, revived Nazi slogans and
denigrated foreigners, all the while expanding their political base.
The
designation is certain to inflame a long-running debate over whether German
lawmakers should move to ban the party altogether. Such a step could cast
Germany into a political crisis, without necessarily resolving how to bring the
estimated 25 percent of the electorate that supports the AfD into the
mainstream political fold.
The American
secretary of state, Marco Rubio, labeled Germany’s “deadly open border
immigration policies” as extremist, rather than the AfD, in a statement
published on X.
“Germany
just gave its spy agency new powers to surveil the opposition. That’s not
democracy — it’s tyranny in disguise,” he said in the post.
The issue
now threatens to become a distraction for Friedrich Merz, whose standing has
fallen as the AfD’s has risen in recent weeks, even before he is sworn in as
chancellor, which is expected on Tuesday.
Though the
AfD finished second in elections in February, with 20.8 percent of the vote,
Mr. Merz and his conservative Christian Democratic Party joined other
mainstream parties in a pledge to shun the AfD as too extreme to govern.
Instead, Mr. Merz turned to the center-left Social Democrats as a coalition
partner, increasing the sense of disenfranchisement among AfD voters.
AfD leaders
condemned the announcement on Friday as a politically motivated attempt to
undercut their party, and said they would challenge it in court. The AfD now
forms the biggest threat to Germany’s establishment parties, which have seen
their decades of dominance over politics eroded as the country’s political
landscape has fractured.
Among other
things, the AfD pointed to the timing of the decision, characterizing it as a
parting shot by the interior minister, Nancy Faeser, a left-wing Social
Democrat, just days before she is to be replaced in Mr. Merz’s new government
by Alexander Dobrindt, a mainstream conservative.
“This
decision by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution is complete
nonsense in terms of substance, has nothing to do with law and justice, and is
purely political in the fight between the cartel parties against the AfD,”
Stephan Brandner, an AfD leader, told D.P.A., a German news agency, referring
to the mainstream parties.
Nonetheless,
the domestic intelligence agency made its determination after thoroughly
monitoring the AfD for years, and based its decision on the findings of a
1,100-page report compiled by the Office for the Protection of the
Constitution.
The office
was specifically created in 1950 to monitor domestic threats to Germany’s
democracy and prevent any takeover of the Parliament and government by
extremist actors. It was an attempt by modern Germany’s founders to avert the
kind of rupture that took place in 1933, when the Nazis seized control of
Parliament and the government.
While the
office is under the aegis of the interior ministry, which is responsible for
domestic security, it is designed to operate independently from the government,
to insulate it from the political pressures that the AfD alleges were behind
the decision.
“The AfD
advocates an ethnic concept of the people that discriminates against entire
population groups and treats citizens with a migrant background as second-class
Germans,” Ms. Faeser, the departing interior minister, said in a statement,
noting that such discrimination runs afoul of Germany’s Constitution.
Much of the
evidence for the designation lay in plain sight.
Alice
Weidel, the party’s most visible leader, has railed against “headscarf-wearing
girls” and “knife-wielding men on welfare,” in reference to Muslims.
Alexander
Gauland, who once led the party, described the Holocaust as a speck of “bird
poop” — he used a more vulgar word — on 1,000 years of successful German
history.
Another
lawmaker, Maximilian Krah, told an Italian newspaper interview last year that
members of the S.S., the notorious Nazi paramilitary storm troopers who, among
other things, ran Nazi concentration camps, were not criminal per se.
Björn Höcke,
a party leader in Thuringia State, was twice convicted and fined last year for
using a banned Nazi slogan during a campaign stop.
“The AfD is
a magnet for domestic extremists and poses a threat to democracy from within,”
Matthias Quent, a sociology professor who has spent years studying the extreme
right, said in an email exchange.
Party
members have also been implicated in a plot to overthrow the state by a group
that does not recognize the legitimacy of the modern German Republic. That case
is still going through the courts.
The party
has rarely penalized its leaders for controversial speech, though it has ousted
some members over particularly egregious infractions. Instead it has presented
itself as a victim of mainstream political parties and liberal media.
The AfD’s
political allies from abroad have done the same. Despite the long and public
history of extreme statements by AfD leaders, the party received an endorsement
during the last election campaign from Elon Musk, the billionaire adviser to
President Trump.
In February,
Vice President JD Vance chastised European leaders for trying to isolate
far-right parties, and challenged their commitment to democracy.
Mr. Vance’s
speech at the Munich Security Conference stunned and angered his German hosts,
drawing stern rebuke from Chancellor Olaf Scholz. German officials accused him
of interfering in domestic politics and failing to understand the sources of
Germany’s strict limitations on extremists, given its calamitous Nazi past.
Before
Friday’s announcement, the domestic intelligence agency had classified the
AfD’s youth wing as extremist in 2023. The party has since disbanded it.
The new
classification gives domestic intelligence more tools to monitor the AfD. It
also opens a legal avenue to have the Constitutional Court ban the party, a
step that Germany’s top court has taken only twice in the 76-year history of
Germany’s modern Constitution, both times with parties far less popular than
the AfD.
Germany’s
foreign ministry responded to Mr. Rubio’s statement late on Friday, affirming
on X that the “decision is the result of a thorough & independent
investigation to protect our Constitution & the rule of law.”
“We have
learnt from our history that rightwing extremism needs to be stopped,” the
ministry wrote in its post.
Christopher
F. Schuetze is a reporter for The Times based in Berlin, covering politics,
society and culture in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário