In
Germany’s East, the Far Right Could Soon Take Power. This Is Its Plan.
In the
eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt, the Alternative for Germany could win control
of the government this fall. Once in power, it has a plan to overhaul German
society.
Jim
Tankersley Christopher F. Schuetze
By Jim
Tankersley and Christopher F. Schuetze
Reporting
from Magdeburg and Tangermünde, Germany
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/09/world/europe/afd-germany-saxony-anhalt-plan.html
April 9,
2026
Updated
9:51 a.m. ET
Since the
end of World War II, no far-right political party has held power in German
state or federal government. That could change this fall in a small pocket of
eastern Germany, as economic stagnation and voter backlash toward mass
migration batter the centrist political establishment.
Polls
show the Alternative for Germany party, or AfD, could win an outright majority
of seats in September in the state of Saxony-Anhalt, near Berlin. The party’s
agenda, if put in place, would give the country its first look at what the AfD,
the second-largest federal party today, hopes could ultimately be a cultural
and demographic overhaul of German life.
Leaders
of the party laid out their goals for the state in interviews and a 156-page
platform. They appear partly unworkable, far exceeding the power of a state
government. The more attainable elements amount to a vision for turning
Saxony-Anhalt, a relatively small state, into a magnet for large, German-born,
socially conservative families, and a hostile environment for many immigrants.
Under
their proposals:
Refugees
would be deported or moved into group homes.
Large
families would get tax breaks.
Child
care, already heavily subsidized by the government, would be free.
Public
broadcasters would lose funding.
Schools
would ban gay pride flags.
They
would also teach more Russian.
Some of
the proposals echo the conservatism of President Trump, while the family
welfare ideas evoke those of Zohran Mamdani, the liberal New York City mayor.
“I want
to give the citizens in Saxony-Anhalt their good, old, secure Germany back,”
Ulrich Siegmund, the AfD’s candidate to govern the state and a TikTok star,
told us in an interview. We met in the scenic, centuries-old heart of
Tangermünde, a town on the Elbe River popular with bicycle tourists.
“It will
be a very beautiful country with a very good spirit of optimism,” he added,
“certainly for the children, for the families.”
To its
critics, the policy platform exacerbates long-running concerns about the party,
which German intelligence has formally investigated for extremism, and whose
leaders have variously belittled the Holocaust, revived Nazi slogans and
maligned foreigners.
Eva von
Angern, a state lawmaker from the far-left party Die Linke, called the AfD’s
plans “a violation of human rights and unconstitutional” and predicted the
party would fall short of a winning majority.
“They
repeatedly demonstrate who, in their view, doesn’t belong in Saxony-Anhalt,”
Ms. von Angern said, including “people of different skin color, people with a
migrant background and L.G.B.T.Q.+ people.”
Saxony-Anhalt,
with about 2.2 million people in a country of more than 83 million, may seem an
unlikely place to root a political overhaul centered on expelling immigrants
and nurturing young families. It has the oldest population of any state and one
of the country’s smallest concentrations of migrants, according to German
census numbers. About one of every 13 residents has an immigration background,
compared with two of every five in Berlin.
But
Saxony-Anhalt combines several of the factors that have helped fuel the AfD’s
rise.
It lies
in the former communist East, where residents are less wedded to mainstream
parties that were founded in the West and more open to anti-establishment
messages. It is also one of Germany’s poorest states. The unemployment rate
there last year was 8.3 percent, 2 percent above the national average.
For those
reasons, “the politics of migration is a very strong factor, despite the low
visibility of migrants here,” said Marcel Lewandowsky, a political scientist at
Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg in Halle, the state’s second-largest
city.
In its
section about migration, the AfD’s governing platform for Saxony-Anhalt
contains 43 points. Some, like ending the right to asylum and barring some
immigrants from settling in the state, appear to violate federal law and could
prove impossible for a state government to enact.
Others
are more achievable, though contentious. They include converting a government
welcome center for migrants into a deportation detention facility and
segregating the children of asylum seekers into refugee-only schools.
We met a
lead author of the platform, Hans-Thomas Tillschneider, at the state capital
building in Magdeburg. He had a graying red beard, large round glasses, a
maroon turtleneck and tan slacks. He showed off his red MAGA mug.
Mr.
Tillschneider is an immigrant himself, born in Romania to ethnic Germans. His
parents fled that country’s dictatorship when he was young, and Mr.
Tillschneider grew up in southwest Germany. Vacationing in the Middle East as a
child, he told us, he grew fascinated with the sound of the Quran. At
university, he studied Islam.
Today, he
said, Saxony-Anhalt’s largest problems start with migrants who are slated for
deportation but remain in the state.
He said
the party would not deport anyone who was in the country legally. “We want a
new government here, we don’t want a revolution,” he said.
But, he
said, the party does want major changes in a wide range of other areas like a
removal of gay pride displays from schools, a moratorium on new wind turbines
and a rollback of other green policies.
It also
wants to normalize German relations with Russia after years of hostilities
related to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. It calls for an end to sanctions on
Moscow — another federal issue, not a state one — and more Russian language
instruction in schools.
Mr.
Tillschneider, who attended a birthday celebration for President Vladimir V.
Putin of Russia at the Russian embassy in Berlin last year, called the Russian
language and literature pillars of European culture. “When Biden still ruled
the U.S.A., I was very pro-Russian,” he told us, “because then Russia was, so
to speak, the only partner of values.” Now, he added, “I am also a big friend
of Trump.”
He is one
of a few AfD members named by German intelligence in a report that was the
center of its investigation into the party for extremism. The report, currently
under judicial review, criticized Mr. Tillschneider for accusing all mainstream
parties of helping “plunder” Germany. In our interview, Mr. Tillschneider said
the intelligence agency was “becoming more and more like the Stasi,” the former
secret police of East Germany.
If Mr.
Tillschneider is a policy brain behind the AfD’s plans, Mr. Siegmund, the
candidate for governor, is its smiling face. His social media posts are
relentlessly upbeat, whether he is explaining policy, hanging out with school
children or organizing a park cleanup. He has more than 600,000 followers on
TikTok and says he will use social media prolifically once he is in government,
explaining challenges and even admitting mistakes.
Mr.
Siegmund, wearing a Tommy Hilfiger sweater, met us at a bakery in Tangermünde.
He talked about improving hospital care and schools and reversing economic
decline. He was eager to emphasize the AfD’s plans to encourage native-born
Germans in “traditional families” — with a mother and a father — to have more
children. “I want to think long-term across generations,” he said.
Ms. von
Angern said that focus threatened to make life harder for working mothers. “For
the AfD, women are supposed to support men and, ideally, focus solely on
children and the household,” she said.
AfD party
leaders acknowledge that Germany needs workers and that it will need even more
if the party’s deportation agenda is successful. So they want to offer large
financial incentives for German families to grow — a three-child family, for
example, would receive a roughly $9,200 stipend.
We asked
if there was room in that future Saxony-Anhalt for new migrants.
“It
depends on the migrants,” Mr. Siegmund said, “whether they want to behave
themselves and whether they want to make a contribution.”
We left
the bakery and walked through town. Nearly everyone waved or smiled at Mr.
Siegmund as he passed. We came to a large church with a chimney, where a bird
had built a large nest. He asked if America had those.
The bird
stood up on long legs.
It was a
stork.
Tatiana
Firsova contributed reporting from Berlin.
Jim
Tankersley is the Berlin bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of
Germany, Austria and Switzerland.
Christopher
F. Schuetze is a reporter for The Times based in Berlin, covering politics,
society and culture in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.


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