Germany’s Far-Right AFD Nominates Chancellor Candidate For Election

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Germany’s Alternative for Germany (AfD) will nominate on Saturday its first chancellor candidate in its 11-year history ahead of a snap election set for February as the far-right party increasingly sets its sights on power.

The party, which ranks second in opinion polls behind the main opposition conservatives but well ahead of Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats, is expected to nominate co-leader Alice Weidel as chancellor candidate.

The court said the election, due to conclude on Sunday and with voting already underway in polling stations abroad, would have to be re-run.

The AFD, which authorities suspect of pursuing anti-democratic goals, is not likely to form part of a governing coalition any time soon given other parties have ruled out working with it.

But the AfD’s electoral successes are increasing pressure on the conservatives in particular to drop their firewall with the party and consider a right-wing coalition, especially given the weakness of their erstwhile traditional partner, the neoliberal Free Democrats (FDP).

Far-right parties have gained traction across Europe in recent years, also coming to power in Italy, Sweden, the Netherlands and Finland.

“There is a claim to power to assert and the best way to do that is to nominate a chancellor candidate,” said Hans Vorlaender, political scientist at Dresden’s Technical University.

“It also gives you the opportunity to be present in the media because there are always debates held between the so-called chancellor candidates.”

Unlikely Candidate 

Weidel, 45, who has co-led the party since 2022, is an unlikely public face for a male-dominated, anti-immigration party that depicts itself as a defender of traditional family values and ordinary German working people.

She is raising two sons with a Sri Lankan-born woman, a filmmaker, and speaks fluent Mandarin, having done her PhD in economics in China. She worked for Goldman Sachs and Allianz Global Investors and as a freelance business consultant before entering politics.

Weidel’s unusual profile, however, is precisely what makes her an asset to the AfD, according to political analysts who say she is more likely to appeal to more moderate Germans who would normally shun a far-right party.

In recent years the AfD has tapped into voter worries about high levels of immigration, a possible escalation of the Ukraine war and the crisis of Germany’s economic model as well as frustration with infighting within the ruling coalition, which fell apart last month.

The party wants to sharply curb immigration, particularly from Muslim countries, end arms deliveries to Ukraine, rebuild relations with Russia, turn the nuclear power plants back on and exit the European Union unless it carries out major reforms.

It has earned credibility with some voters for openly addressing hot-button topics before mainstream parties did.

The party came first in two state elections in September, despite mass anti-AfD protests and a string of scandals which included a senior figure declaring that the SS, the Nazis’ main paramilitary force, were “not all criminals”.

 

 

 

 

Reuters/Ejiofor Ezeifeoma

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