Monday, February 23, 2026

Dutch Populist Leader Hospitalized After Violent Attack Days Before Election.

Thierry Baudet, leader of the Dutch right-wing populist “Forum for Democracy” Party, was rushed to hospital on Monday after being attacked with a glass bottle in the city of Zwolle two days before the Dutch general elections.

Baudet, 40, was treated by a trauma surgeon following the attack, which saw someone hit him on the back of the head and next to the eye with a beer bottle. His security guard also sustained facial injuries in the incident.

A spokesman for the Dutch police, Thijs de Jong, told the press authorities had apprehended someone on suspicion of involvement in the attack on Monday evening. “What we can say at the moment is that Mr. Baudet was hit on the head, possibly with an object,” he explained, though refusing to provide any further information as to the potential motive of the attacker.

“It looks like everything will all be alright,” Forum for Democracy announced after the event.

Baudet’s party claims to be anti-mass immigration, proudly nationalist, as well as skeptical of the European Union. Forum for Democracy is projected to receive between four of five seats in the Dutch parliament in the election.

The attack follows a number of other violent assaults on populist politicians in Europe, including Alternative for Germany’s deputy leader being smeared with dog excrement and the party’s Augsburg chairman being hospitalized with two black eyes and a leg brace earlier this year.

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Thierry Baudet, leader of the Dutch right-wing populist "Forum for Democracy" Party, was rushed to hospital on Monday after being attacked with a glass bottle in the city of Zwolle two days before the Dutch general elections. show more
germany afd

Germany Defunds the Nation’s Populist Party.

The populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) Party will be deprived of hundreds of millions of euros to which other political parties will remain entitled after the country passed a new law requiring parties to have been represented in the German parliament three times in a row before they can receive federal cash.

The AfD was first elected to the German parliament in 2017 and was re-elected in 2021, meaning its affiliate foundation, called the Desiderius Erasmus Stiftung, will receive nothing, despite the party currently polling second nationally, above German Chancellor Olaf Scholz‘s Social Democrats (SDP).

The Desiderius Erasmus Stiftung’s chairman, Erika Steinbach, argued the decision “quite openly demonstrated an oppressive contempt for democracy that would do credit to any authoritarian country.”

The decision was similarly denounced by AfD Member of Parliament Mariana Harder-Kühnel, who said, “the establishment of an instrument to weaken the opposition could become a problem in a free, democratic constitutional state.”

The law comes after a series of attempts by the German establishment to attack the AfD following its electoral gains over the past several years. Several high-ranking politicians – including German President Frank Walter Steinmeier – have floated the idea of banning the party, while its members have been repeatedly physically attacked.

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The populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) Party will be deprived of hundreds of millions of euros to which other political parties will remain entitled after the country passed a new law requiring parties to have been represented in the German parliament three times in a row before they can receive federal cash. show more

German Globalists Are Plotting Legislation to Ban the Populist ‘AfD’ Party.

Members of Angela Merkel‘s so-called “conservative” Christian Democrats (CDU) have begun drawing up legislation that would ban the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) Party.

Marco Wanderwitz, a Member of the German Bundestag and former Eastern Commissioner of the Federal Government, who is currently drafting the legislation, requires 36 other Bundestag members to support the proposal to ensure the parliament votes on the motion later this year.

If banned, the AfD would be forced to forfeit all administrative and political positions it has already secured across the country and the European continent, with  the government also permitted to seize all the party’s assets and resources.

“We are dealing with a party that seriously endangers our free democratic basic order and the state as a whole,” Wanderwitz told a German broadcaster last week before adding: “that’s why it’s high time to ban them.”

Much of the German establishment, including Chancellor Olaf Scholz, has already begun proposing a ban on the party as it began rising in the national polls. It is currently in second place behind the CDU with 22.5 percent support.

There has also been a surge in violence against a number of the party’s members, with one of the AfD’s co-chairman recently hospitalized after supposedly being stabbed with a needle at a political event and the other forced into hiding following credible death threats, among many other incidents.

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Members of Angela Merkel's so-called "conservative" Christian Democrats (CDU) have begun drawing up legislation that would ban the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) Party. show more

German Populist Leader Says He Was Stabbed With Syringe Before Going Into Shock.

Tino Chrupalla, a member of the German parliament and co-chairman of the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD), was rushed to intensive care after being reportedly “stabbed with a syringe” at a political event in Ingolstadt on Wednesday afternoon.

Chrupalla – who only last week was “debanked” – was taken to hospital after he reportedly went into an anaphylactic shock just moments before he was due to give a speech.

It is believed upon feeling sick, Chrupalla pointed to two men in the crowd who were subsequently arrested, though many details of the attack remain unclear. The Bavarian police have opened an investigation into the incident.

The attack comes just hours after the AfD’s other co-chairman, Alice Weidel, was forced into hiding with her family after authorities found credible evidence of a planned assassination attempt on her life. Weidel was due to give a speech at an AfD event celebrating the German Day of Unity on Tuesday and instead spoke via a video message.

There have been a number of attacks on AfD politicians in recent months, with the Bavarian-based party member Andrea Jurca receiving two black eyes and being forced to walk on crutches after a random attack in August. The party’s deputy leader, Beatrix von Storch, was similarly attacked after she was smeared with dog faeces while giving a talk last month.

Meanwhile, the German establishment’s anti-AfD rhetoric is becoming increasingly inflammatory, with multiple senior politicians and lawmakers attempting to ban the party.

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Tino Chrupalla, a member of the German parliament and co-chairman of the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD), was rushed to intensive care after being reportedly "stabbed with a syringe" at a political event in Ingolstadt on Wednesday afternoon. show more

German Populist Leader ‘Debanked’.

Tino Chrupalla, a member of the German parliament and co-chairman of the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, says he has been “debanked” due to his political affiliations and status.

Chrupalla claimed in an interview last week “on Friday, my account was terminated by Postbank because I am an AfD member,” before going on to explain that it further proves “how [the AfD] are excluded, discredited” and that people are no longer able to express their opinions freely.

Postbank’s decision to remove Chrupalla’s account would be in contravention of German federal law, which, according to a landmark case adjudicated by the Federal Court of Justice, refers to the practice as an “inadmissible interference in the private sphere.”

One German news outlet further explains that “conservatives, right-wingers, and identities have had their bank accounts canceled for years… Left-wing networks and journalists are already working diligently to nationalize repression.”

Debanking came into the political mainstream across the world after Brexit leader Nigel Farage had his private bank accounts terminated by Coutt’s bank in the summer because of his friendship with former President Donald Trump and Tennis player Novak Djokovic, among other trivial reasons.

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Tino Chrupalla, a member of the German parliament and co-chairman of the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, says he has been "debanked" due to his political affiliations and status. show more
populist leader

SMEAR CAMPAIGN: Populist Leader Attacked With Dog Feces.

Beatrix von Storch, the Deputy Leader of the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) Party, was attacked over the weekend when a young political opponent smeared dog excrement on her stomach in front of a large audience. The incident occurred after von Storch gave a lecture in the town of Daun in the Rheinland-Palatinate on Friday evening. The attacker pretended to want a photograph with the politician before he reached into his pocket with his bare hand and smeared the excrement on her. He was quickly apprehended by the German police and is now under investigation for insult and attempted bodily injury.

Addressing the incident on X (formerly Twitter) von Storch said, “We fight with arguments, those who hate the AfD fight with feces, we oppose their hate with persuasion and the love of our country. The love has always been stronger than the hate.”

Von Storch held another event on Saturday in Hesse, which almost ended disastrously after a man tried to smuggle three knives into the discussion but was caught by the event’s security.

This was the second time in recent weeks that an AfD politician was attacked following the vicious beating of the Romanian-born chairman of the party’s Augsburg branch, Andreas Jurca, who was called a “f***ing Nazi,” and suffered two black eyes, scratches, multiple bruises, and was unable to walk without crutches.

The political rhetoric against the AfD is becoming increasingly extreme as the party continues to surge in the national polls. The German establishment is considering a ban on the party as a result.

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Beatrix von Storch, the Deputy Leader of the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) Party, was attacked over the weekend when a young political opponent smeared dog excrement on her stomach in front of a large audience. The incident occurred after von Storch gave a lecture in the town of Daun in the Rheinland-Palatinate on Friday evening. The attacker pretended to want a photograph with the politician before he reached into his pocket with his bare hand and smeared the excrement on her. He was quickly apprehended by the German police and is now under investigation for insult and attempted bodily injury. show more
afd

‘F**king Nazi!’ – Lawmaker Brutally Beaten During Media Demonization Campaign.

Alternative for Germany (AfD) politician Andreas Jurca was rushed to hospital after being brutally attacked in Bavaria as Germany’s political and media establishment – including the country’s President Frank-Walter Steinmeier – continued demonizing his party as “far right” and threatening to ban them.

The campaign of dehumanization from Germany’s political classes appears to be paying off, with AfD politicians now being routinely attacked or smeared. Romanian-born Jurca was left with two black eyes, scratches, multiple other bruises, crutches, and a leg brace. He claims to have been approached by two “foreign males” before being punched and kicked to the ground as the men shouted “f***ing Nazi.”

Jurca announced that the assault would only encourage him to redouble his political efforts in an interview after the event. The Bavarian police have subsequently launched an investigation on suspicion of dangerous bodily injury.

This is not the first instance of an AfD politician being assaulted. Frank Magnitz, former leader of AfD Bremen, was beaten almost to death by left-wing activists in 2019. Since then, anti-AfD rhetoric has only risen following the party’s increase in popularity.

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Alternative for Germany (AfD) politician Andreas Jurca was rushed to hospital after being brutally attacked in Bavaria as Germany's political and media establishment – including the country's President Frank-Walter Steinmeier – continued demonizing his party as "far right" and threatening to ban them. show more
germany afd

Germany Considers BANNING Right-Wing Populist AfD Party.

Germany is considering a ban on the country’s right-wing, populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) Party, with a number of high-ranking politicians and NGOs ironically suggesting the measure could be used in an effort to ‘defend democracy.’ The party has made a number of electoral gains in recent years, culminating in a recent landmark victory which saw the party take over its first district council this summer.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz‘s Social Democrats (SPD), now polling behind the AfD, has called upon the Federal office for the Protection of the Constitution to recognize the AfD as right-wing extremists and, therefore, have the party banned. German president Frank-Walter Steinmeier told the country’s domestic intelligence agency: “…we all have it in our hands to put those who despise our democracy in their place”.

The German Institute for Human Rights (GIHR) also claimed that “the AfD have reached a degree of dangerousness that they can be banned according to the constitution” and suggested this was due to the party’s right-wing extremist goals and ethno-nationalist positions.

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Germany is considering a ban on the country's right-wing, populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) Party, with a number of high-ranking politicians and NGOs ironically suggesting the measure could be used in an effort to 'defend democracy.' The party has made a number of electoral gains in recent years, culminating in a recent landmark victory which saw the party take over its first district council this summer. show more

Editor’s Notes

Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.

RAHEEM J. KASSAM Editor-in-Chief
In July 1933, Hitler’s cabinet passed the Law Against the Formation of Parties, which rendered the Nazi Party the only political entity in the country
In July 1933, Hitler’s cabinet passed the Law Against the Formation of Parties, which rendered the Nazi Party the only political entity in the country show more
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Germany’s Populists Landed a Massive Victory This Weekend.

The ‘Alternative for Deutschland’ (AfD) party has achieved a landmark victory in the German state of Thuringia, winning a district council election for the first time in a moment not dissimilar to the first UK Independence Party (UKIP) council win of 2015.

The AfD’s candidate, Robert Sesselman, ousted Jurgen Köpper of the leftist Christian Democrats (CDU) – the party of the former German Chancellor Angela Merkel – receiving 52.8 percent of the vote in Thuringia’s Sonneberg district.

The victory demonstrates the party’s recent momentum, argued Björn Höcke, leader of the AfD in Thuringia, adding, “[a]nd then we’ll prepare for the state elections in the east, where we can really create a political earthquake.”

The populist party is currently polling at 20 percent nationally, making it the second most popular party, and beating German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats (SDP).

The AfD is Germany’s only significant right-wing party, having been originally founded by a small group of disenfranchised CDU voters and academics in 2013. The party was first elected to the German parliament – the Bundestag – in 2017. It is is known for its Euroscepticism, anti-immigration, and anti-vaccine mandate policies, campaigning under the motto: “Germany. But normal.”

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The 'Alternative for Deutschland' (AfD) party has achieved a landmark victory in the German state of Thuringia, winning a district council election for the first time in a moment not dissimilar to the first UK Independence Party (UKIP) council win of 2015. show more

Editor’s Notes

Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.

RAHEEM J. KASSAM Editor-in-Chief
A victory in a single district may not seem like a big deal, but you have to remember that the UK Independence Party (UKIP) took control of its first council in 2015
A victory in a single district may not seem like a big deal, but you have to remember that the UK Independence Party (UKIP) took control of its first council in 2015 show more
for exclusive members-only insights