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Germany’s AfD decides over moderate or extreme-right path

The right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) on Saturday opened a conference where it was expected that the party would decide on whether to tread a more moderate course or steer to the extreme right.

After a vote on Saturday evening, the relatively moderate candidate Jörg Meuthen emerged victorious in the party’s two-pronged leadership contest, as did compromise candidate Tino Chrupalla.

At a press conference after their victory, Chrupalla disputed the idea that the AfD used incendiary rhetoric to win votes, saying “we have used reason” to gain centrist voters, which “requires no drastic language.”

Meuthen used the moment to revel in the declining support for Germany’s traditional center-left SPD and center-right CDU, saying “we are experiencing the implosion of formerly dominant forces with the simultaneous strenghtening of new forces…I believe that government-building without us will become more and more difficult, until it does not work at all anymore.

Mass protest

The two-day gathering in the city of Braunschweig comes on the heels of state elections in eastern Germany in recent months that saw the AfD surge to second place in Saxony, Brandenburg and Thuringia with more than 20% of the vote. 

Read more: AfD: What you need to know about Germany’s far-right party

The opening of the conference was met with massive protests, with locals shouting “all of Germany hates the AfD” and “no place for Nazis.”

The protesters were estimated to number some 20,000, “a clear sign that no one in Braunschweig wants the AfD here,” said Udo Sommerfeld, a spokesman for the demonstration’s organizers.

Meuthen reelected

Despite recent successes at the ballot box, the AfD is riven by personal and ideological rivalries over which direction it should maneuver now that it is the third-largest party in parliament and represented in all 16 German states.

Internal power struggles are set to be put on full display in the halls of the conference center, where 600 party delegates, in addition to choosing co-chairs, will also vote on 13 members of the executive committee.

Alexander Gauland, a founding party member and co-leader, is preparing to step down, leading to a scramble to replace one of the most prominent leaders. The 78-year-old also heads the AfD’s faction in the national parliament, the Bundestag.

The party’s other national co-chief, Jörg Meuthen, is considered a moderate and sought to defend his post, a move which was ultimately successful as he secured 69% of the vote on Saturday evening.

An extreme-right faction known as the Wing (Flügel) had been hoping to boost its representation on the executive council and make a bid to swing the leadership in its direction.

The Wing’s influence in the party has been strengthened after two of its key figures — Björn Höcke and Andreas Kalbitz — scored significant electoral victories in regional elections in eastern Germany this year. By some estimates, up to 40% of party members are sympathetic to the Wing, giving them a prominent role choosing the executive council and co-leaders.


Read more: What drives the far-right AfD’s success in eastern Germany?

Founded in 2013, initially as an economically euroskeptic party, the AfD has drifted to the right as it seized on the 2015 refugee crisis to promote an anti-Islam, anti-foreigner and pro-family program. Despite scoring above 20% in eastern Germany, it has stalled nationwide at about 13-15%.

Moderates within the party want to appeal to a broader political base and disgruntled voters by shedding its far-right image in a bid to capture support from other parties, particularly the ruling conservative Christian Democrats and their center-left Social Democrat coalition partners.

The battle over the future direction of the AfD is not only a strategic question, but an existential one.

It comes as Germany’s domestic intelligence agency has put some local AfD offices under further scrutiny. There is great concern within the party that its national associations could be put under observation if it swings too far to the extreme right.

cw,es/rc (AFP, dpa)

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