Should
Germany ban AfD? What impact could this have?
By Giulia
Carbonaro
Published on
14/06/2023 - 10:44 GMT+2•Updated 22/01/2024 - 12:02 GMT+1
https://www.euronews.com/2023/06/14/should-germany-ban-afd-what-impact-could-this-have
Protests
against the far-right party swept through Germany over the weekend. But should
the AfD be banned?
More than
800,000 people took to the streets of Germany's major cities this weekend to
denounce Alternative for Germany
The demos
followed news last week that some members of the far-right party had attended a
secret meeting last November where they allegedly discussed plans for mass
deportations of immigrants and Germans with a migrant background.
With slogans
such as "ban the AfD now", "all against fascism",
"united against hate" or "never again", referring to the
genocide of European Jews during the Second World War, Germans have been
protesting since the investigative media Correctiv published the story.
"I want
to say it loud and clear: right-wing extremists are attacking our
democracy," German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Friday in a video
message to the more than 20 million German citizens with a migrant background.
Growing
concern about AfD
For its
part, the AfD has dismissed the report as a "fairy tale" and said the
media had "inflated" the meeting.
But the
scandal has revived a row on whether the far-right party should be banned.
Last month,
AfD won its first mayoralty in a town in Saxony. At the national level, the AfD
is on 22%, just behind the Christian Democratic Union and its partner, the
Christian Social Union of Bavaria, on 31%.
There is
concern in the country about the rise of the far right, which has 78 seats in
the Bundestag, Germany's parliament.
The party
has been declared 'demonstrably extremist' by the Office for the Protection of
the Constitution in Saxony and 42% of Germans are in favour of banning it,
according to an Ipsos poll.
But could
AfD be banned?
In June, a
study by the German Institute for Human Rights on the possibility of banning
AfD put the issue in the spotlight.
The study
said the AfD poses such a danger to the country's democratic order “it could be
banned by the Federal Constitutional Court.”
AfD can be
legally banned because its explicit goals are “to eliminate the free democratic
basic order” and “abolish the guarantee of human dignity” enshrined in
Germany’s constitution, claims the institute.
Set up in
2013, the AfD has been accused of harbouring anti-democratic tendencies, though
it officially supports democracy in Germany.
Banning the
AfD has been floated in Germany before. A court last year ruled the party
should be considered a potential threat to democracy, paving the way for it to
be put under surveillance by national security services.
In 2023,
Germany decided to label AfD’s youth wing, the Young Alternative for Germany,
as an extremist group. The formal accusation of extremism is as far as the
country can go without issuing an outright ban.
Domestic
intelligence services have also labelled the Thuringia state chapter of the
party a right-wing extremist group. Earlier this week, its leader Björn Höcke
was accused of purposefully using a Nazi slogan at a May 2021 campaign event.
But while
the Germany Institute for Human Rights’ study reignited a debate around banning
the party in Germany, AfD took advantage of the situation, turning their
condemnation into a call to arms for supporters.
The
far-right party - which opposes Islam, immigration and the EU - is worrying
Germany's political class, with support climbing in recent months.
Proposals to
ban AfD have “backfired massively because the AfD took it upon themselves to
paint a different picture in the media,” according to Una Ivona Titz, a
journalist and researcher at the Amadeu Antonio Foundation, a group focused on
extremism and the far-right.
“Right now,
they’re garnering a lot of support on Telegram because they’re rallying their
supporters and they’re painting themselves as a persecuted party within an
unjust system which they’re fighting from within,” she told Euronews.
While the
study aimed to increase awareness over the threats posed by AfD, “what we’re
seeing is that it has emboldened them and actually helped them bolster the
image of AfD,” Titz explained.
Previous
attempts at banning an elected party in Germany have failed and backfired
against its organisers -- with a tentative ban on far-right party NPD in 2017
being rejected by the second Senate of the Federal Constitutional Court.
Politicians
also appear to be cautious about suggesting to ban AfD.
“The study
has gained traction as an online debate and has then subsequently been picked
up by politicians from the entire political spectrum,” Titz said. “So you had
politicians from the CDU, from SBT, and from the left boycotting the proposal
of a ban or being sceptical towards the ban because they saw it as a misplaced
attempt.”
“For
example, Sebastian Hoffmann [from SPD] talked about the AfD as an
anti-constitutional party, but, on the other hand, he sees the primary goal of
politics as putting the AfD in a sort of political limbo where it becomes no
longer electable and thus avoiding a ban.”
An
impossible dilemma
The idea of
banning a party is not only politically fraught, but also poses a moral dilemma
for many. As Princeton professor Jan-Werner Mueller put it in a 2013 article,
democracies are “damned if they do, damned if they don’t” ban extremist
parties.
While
forbidding a popular party can undermine the pillars of democracy, he says
leaving a country exposed to the threat of extremism can be dangerous and
“ultimately leave no democracy to defend.”
That’s why
countries have generally avoided banning extremist parties, and have explored
different approaches.
“There’s a
spectrum of how deep the state can go to act against extremist groups,” Lorenzo
Vidino, Director of the Program on Extremism at George Washington University,
told Euronews. “And that is based on different histories, different
constitutional, different social and cultural approaches."
"There’s
no right or wrong way.”
On one end
of the spectrum, Vidino pointed to the US approach, which is based “on an
extreme tolerance of the intolerant”, meaning domestic groups that are
considered extremist can be tolerated.
“The Ku Klux
Klan is legal in America," he said. "They can hold rallies, burn
crosses - they occasionally do that. That’s for a variety of reasons based on
the Constitution and freedom of speech.”
These groups
are still monitored by the state, “but it’s basically impossible to ban a
domestic extremist group in America,” Vidino said.
At the other
end of the spectrum, he points to countries like Germany. “There’s very low
tolerance of extremist groups, even if not directly violent."
"That
of course stems from German recent history.”
Even in
countries where extremist parties can be banned, the decision “is never one
that’s taken lightly, for a variety of reasons,” Vidino said.
“First of
all, there’s a complicated legal process. But there’s also a political side to
it, that leads to the question of whether we would also then ban extremist
groups on the left, like environmental ones.”
There’s also
a practical issue, Vidino said. “If you ban a group, it doesn’t just disappear.
AfD has millions of supporters - the problem it poses isn’t solved after you
ban the party. In fact, you might lose the control you have over it by
dissolving the party.”
What to do
then?
Vidino said
the best tool to counter extremist parties is monitoring.
But there
are others.
According to
Titz, one solution that has proven effective in weakening the appeal of
extremist far-right parties like AfD is to strengthen media literacy towards
democracy, especially in areas like the former DDR, in eastern Germany.
“You have a
high level of scepticism towards democracy as a whole, and what really helps,
statistically, is to invest in programmes right there, and keep them [AfD] on
their toes with regard to their rhetoric,” she said.
“Everything
that the AfD puts out has to be documented and monitored and counterbalanced.”
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