
Prohibitions, Boycotts, Slander: 8 Ways To Destroy the AfD
With these measures, Germany’s establishment parties are trying to stop the rise of the increasingly popular rightwing opposition.
With these measures, Germany’s establishment parties are trying to stop the rise of the increasingly popular rightwing opposition.
The CDU politician pushing the ban has delayed introducing the bill, claiming to be waiting for a court decision.
A regional branch of Germany’s domestic spy agency has declared the Alternative for Germany (AfD) youth “right-wing extremists” allowing the government to actively covertly spy on the group’s membership as the AfD reached record highs in new polls.
Sources close to the situation have indicated that files have been brought to the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) and Krah’s immunity is likely to be lifted on the basis of the original investigation by the EU anti-fraud agency OLAF.
Interestingly—and perhaps not coincidentally—calls by Germany’s leftist-globalists to ban the AfD come days after polls revealed it to be the most popular party in East Germany.
In search of unity, the AfD elected a new federal board around co-chairmen Tino Chrupalla and Alice Weidel. But, a dispute over a resolution on the conflict in Ukraine shows that unity is still a long way off.
That a party—one which enjoys nearly 13% of the national vote—is unable to organize due to threats of violence from left-wing extremists is indicative of the decrepit state of democracy in Germany, according to the AfD.
Germany’s highly politicized domestic intelligence agency has been given the green-light to conduct mass surveillance against the non-conformist, anti-globalist Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), a move which is being viewed as a circuitous attempt to stigmatize and destroy the party.
Jörg Meuthen said that his decision to leave the AfD was prompted by a defeat in an intraparty power struggle with the Rightist, national-populist faction of the party.
Nikolaus Kramer, the AfD group leader for Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, condemned the attack on Michael Meister saying: “How did we reach a place in this country where MPs are attacked on the street because of their party membership?”