
AfD Leads by Wide Margin in Key German State
The surge in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern underscores the party’s growing dominance in eastern Germany

The surge in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern underscores the party’s growing dominance in eastern Germany

Disturbing new federal data reveals that ethnically motivated crimes against Germans have nearly tripled since 2019.

The ruling centers on a campaign poster deemed to resemble a banned salute–a decision critics call selective.

A Bavarian court intervened overturning a lower-level ruling against the AfD state chairman, prompting large far-left demonstrations in Lindenberg.

Statistics show that 45% of the suspected attackers on rail staff do not have a German passport.

AfD lawmakers complained of severe space shortages, while smaller parties continue to enjoy larger facilities.

AfD local chairman Willy Klinger described the attack as part of a wider pattern of aggression targeting the right-wing populist party.

The accompanying message invoked a communist resistance fighter executed by the Nazis and called for the AfD to be banned.

Report shows a total of 1,026 injuries were recorded among federal officers in 2025—approximately 51% of suspects were non-German nationals.

Rejecting political firewalls, the initiative calls for open AfD participation in public discussions.