AfD embraces mass deportation of migrants as German election nears
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Germanyâs far right is in a buoyant mood.
On Saturday, while its conference was under way in the eastern town of Riesa, in Saxony, Alternative fĂŒr Deutschland (AfD) laid out ambitions to close Germanyâs borders, resume buying Russian gas and, in effect, dismantle the EU.
German media reported that partyâs agreed manifesto includes plans to quit the Paris climate deal, exit the Euro currency and create a new confederation of states.
The AfDâs leader, Alice Weidel, even publicly embraced the term âremigrationâ â a word thatâs widely understood to mean the mass âreturnâ or deportation of people with a migrant background.
Thousands of anti-AfD protestors swarmed the streets in Riesa on Saturday, seeking to obstruct access to the conference venue.
When Alice Weidel eventually took to the stage, she described the activists outside as a âleft-wing mob.â
And, in front a delighted conference hall of delegates, spoke of âlarge-scale repatriationsâ.
âAnd I have to be honest with you: if itâs going to be called remigration, then thatâs what itâs going to be: remigration,â she said.
Itâs a striking departure from just a year ago when she sought to distance herself from a scandal that centred on the highly controversial concept.
There were nationwide anti-AfD demonstrations after it emerged that senior party figures had been among those at a meeting where âremigrationâ was allegedly discussed with Martin Sellner, an Austrian far-right activist who has a neo-Nazi past.
Sellner has written about âremigratingâ asylum seekers, some foreigners with residency rights and ânon-assimilatedâ citizens.
A buzzword in Europeâs far-right, some claim legal residents wouldnât be forced to leave. Critics say âremigrationâ is simply a euphemism for an overtly racist mass deportation plan.
But Alice Weidelâs decision to personally coin the term, weeks out from a snap federal election, demonstrates her partyâs growing radicalism and confidence.
She also pledged to tear down wind farms which she called âwindmills of shameâ, leave the EUâs asylum system and âthrow outâ gender studies professors.
The AfD is consistently polling second in Germany and made gains in recent regional elections in the countryâs east â where the party is strongest.
However, itâs highly unlikely to win power because other parties wonât work with the AfD.
Sections of the AfD have been classed by domestic intelligence as right-wing extremist.
In 2024, a talisman of the AfDâs hard-right â Björn Höcke â was fined twice for using a banned Nazi SA paramilitary phrase, âAlles fĂŒr Deutschlandâ (âeverything for Germanyâ).
Heâs called it an âeveryday sentenceâ and denied being aware of its origins, despite formerly being a history teacher.
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Reports that members of the conference in Riesa this weekend chanted âAlice fĂŒr Deutschlandâ drew quick comparisons in German media.
However, AfD figures have frequently complained that they are demonised and persecuted by a biased media and establishment.
And Alice Weidelâs party â of which she is the co-leader and now Chancellor candidate â has ridden out repeated storms to now hover around or even above 20% in national polls.
The 45-year-old economist, who previously worked for Goldman Sachs and is in a same-sex relationship, has sought to polish the rougher edges of her party.
But for those strongly opposed to the AfD she is a fig leaf or â as one Social Democrat put it â a âwolf in sheepâs clothingâ.
Regardless, sheâs enjoying a new spotlight after being invited by tech billionaire â Elon Musk â for a live talk on his X platform last week, where he wholeheartedly endorsed the party.
Her declaration during this discussion that Adolf Hitler was, in fact, a communist sparked condemnation, given the Nazi leaderâs well-known anti-communism.
Critics warned of Nazi revisionism â something the AfD has been accused of before.
Björn Höcke once called for a â180-degree turnaroundâ in Germanyâs handling of its Nazi past while a former co-leader, Alexander Gauland, described the Nazi era as âjust a speck of birdâs muck in more than 1,000 years of successful Germany historyâ.
Nevertheless, the AfDâs anti-establishment, anti-immigration and anti-âwokeâ agenda is finding followers in Germany who go to the polls on 23 February.