Tech mogul Elon Musk believes “Only the AfD can save Germany,” referring to the populist, anti-mass migration Alternative for Germany party. The Donald Trump and Nigel Farage ally offered this endorsement in response to a video posted by Naomi Seibt, a Geman conservative commentator previously dubbed “the anti-Greta Thunberg.”
“Dear Elon, thank you so much for your note,” said AfD co-chairwoman Alice Weidel in a video response to the statement by Musk, who is of partly German descent.
“The Alternative for Germany, the AfD, is indeed the one and only alternative for our country; our last option, if you ask me,” she continued, wishing Musk, President-elect Donald J. Trump, and the American people “a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.”
Currently, the AfD is polling well ahead of Germany’s ruling Social Democrats, their junior coalition partners, the Greens, and their former coalition partners, the neoliberal Free Democrats (FDP). However, the AfD is behind the notionally center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), formerly led by Angela Merkel. Additionally, all of Germany’s establishment and far-left parties enforce a so-called cordon sanitaire against the AfD, barring any cooperation with the populist party.
Tech mogul Elon Musk believes "Only the AfD can save Germany," referring to the populist, anti-mass migration Alternative for Germany party. The Donald Trump and Nigel Farage ally offered this endorsement in response to a video posted by Naomi Seibt, a Geman conservative commentator previously dubbed "the anti-Greta Thunberg."
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Germany‘s leftist coalition government has collapsed following a confidence vote in the Bundestag (federal legislature), with snap elections expected sometime in February next year. Chancellor (Prime Minister) Olaf Scholz of the Social Democrats (SPD) and his allies, the Greens, lost a vote of confidence, which was expected as the two parties do not have a majority of seats in the Bundestag.
The vote came after Scholz dismissed former Finance Minister Christian Lindner of the neoliberal Free Democrats (FDP) from the government. This effectively ended the governing legislative majority, with the FDP being the third pillar of a three-party coalition.
Prior to the vote, populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) parliamentary group leader Alice Weidel slammed Scholz’s migration and economic policies. She stated that the automotive industry was in free fall, and the country was still flooded with immigrants. She also called for Syrians to return to Syria now that the Assad regime has fallen.
Notionally center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) leader Friedrich Merz also criticized Scholz, saying, “It is embarrassing how you behave at the European level.” He also called out Green Party Economic Minister Robert Habeck, saying, “You are the face of the economic crisis of this country.”
Current polling puts Merz and the CDU, the former party of Angela Merkel, at 31 percent overall when combined with their Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) sister party.
The AfD is second in the polls at 20 percent. However, while the two right-leaning parties could have enough seats to form a majority, it is unlikely the CDU/CSU will form a government with the AfD, having vowed to cooperate with the leftist party to shut the anti-mass migration populists out of government.
The German confidence vote comes just under two weeks after the French government, led by former Brexit negotiation Michel Barnier, also collapsed after failing a confidence vote.
Germany's leftist coalition government has collapsed following a confidence vote in the Bundestag (federal legislature), with snap elections expected sometime in February next year. Chancellor (Prime Minister) Olaf Scholz of the Social Democrats (SPD) and his allies, the Greens, lost a vote of confidence, which was expected as the two parties do not have a majority of seats in the Bundestag.
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Germany’s far-left “traffic light” coalition collapsed just a day after Americans re-elected President Donald J. Trump, with Chancellor Olaf Scholz firing his Finance Minister, Christian Lindner. Lindner is head of the neoliberal Free Democrats, which prop up Scholz’s Social Democratic Party alongside the Greens.
Scholz claimed that he no longer trusted Lindner. The conflict between the coalition members occurred because Germany has seen an economic decline, looking at a second year with zero economic growth.
Lindner had refused a request from Scholz to allow more debt spending. Germany has a spending limit intended to keep the budget balanced. However, since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Germany’s economy has seen a severe downturn, with the loss of cheap Russian energy imports and net zero climate policies driving up costs. In addition, companies like Volkswagen have been threatening to close manufacturing plants in Germany for the first time ever.
Chancellor Scholz announced that he would seek a confidence vote in his government, now consisting of just his Social Democrats (SPD) and the Greens, in January.
IMMEDIATE ELECTION DEMANDED.
Friederich Merz, leader of the notionally center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Angela Merkel’s former party, has demanded that a vote of confidence be put forward immediately. Consequently, if Scholz loses the vote, a new election could be called in a matter of weeks.
The populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) is also pushing for new elections. Current polls put the anti-mass migration party at around 18 percent nationally, second to the CDU and its sister party, the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU).
Establishment parties have refused to cooperate with the AfD to form governments even when the AfD has won elections, such as the regional election in Thuringia this year.
Germany's far-left "traffic light" coalition collapsed just a day after Americans re-elected President Donald J. Trump, with Chancellor Olaf Scholz firing his Finance Minister, Christian Lindner. Lindner is head of the neoliberal Free Democrats, which prop up Scholz's Social Democratic Party alongside the Greens.
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A new survey suggests that German young people are gravitating increasingly to the right, with support among young men in particular surging. The Shell Youth Study 2024, which examined responses from 2,509 people born between 1998 and 2012, found that 25 percent of young men describe themselves as either ‘somewhat right-wing’ or ‘right-wing.’ This marks a rise from under 20 percent in 2019.
In contrast, only 11 percent of young women identified with the right, consistent with figures from the previous survey. The study also revealed that 72 percent of young women support a diverse society, compared to 56 percent of young men. Additionally, issues such as feminism and veganism showed higher concern among young women than among young men.
The shift towards right-wing views among young German men is aligned with increasing support for the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party. A survey earlier this year showed the AfD gaining popularity among the 14 to 29-year-old age group. Recent state elections in Thuringia and Saxony confirmed this trend, with the AfD attracting significant youth support.
In neighboring Austria, the populist Freedom Party (FPOe) is the most popular party among all age brackets. The Austrian youth vote helped the party win last month’s national election.
The Shell survey also found rising populist sentiments among young Germans. In total, 55 percent agreed that state policies do not personally benefit them, while 48 percent believe the government prioritizes migrants over native citizens in need.
Major concerns among young people include the fear of broader conflict in Europe and economic challenges, with 81 percent worried about war and 67 percent listing poverty as a concern.
The current left-wing coalition government has led Germany to a severe economic downturn. German business giants like Volkswagen are considering shutting down factories amid fears of a back-to-back recession.
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A new survey suggests that German young people are gravitating increasingly to the right, with support among young men in particular surging. The Shell Youth Study 2024, which examined responses from 2,509 people born between 1998 and 2012, found that 25 percent of young men describe themselves as either 'somewhat right-wing' or 'right-wing.' This marks a rise from under 20 percent in 2019.
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Members of several parties in the Germanparliament are set to introduce a motion to begin the process of banning the anti-mass migration Alternative for Germany (AfD), which is currently seeing success after success in regional elections. More than the 37 German lawmakers required to introduce the motion support it, including members of the ruling Social Democrats (SPD) and their Green coalition partners, the Left Party, and the notionally center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) formerly led by Angela Merkel.
The parliament cannot outright ban political parties by itself, so the motion calls on the German Constitutional Court to begin proceedings to ban the AfD. It also argues that the AfD should be cut off from all public party financing.
However, not all lawmakers support the motion. SPD politician Gesine Schwan warns the ban process could be “politically counterproductive” and actually increase public support for the AfD.
Sahra Wagenknecht, whose left-populist BSW party has also seen recent election success, called the move “the stupidest application of the year.” While economically left-wing, Wagenknecht shares some of the same concerns about mass migration as the AfD and is seen as socially conservative on many issues.
German politicians have been talking about banning the AfD for at least a year, with CDU lawmaker Marco Wanderwitz drafting legislation last October. Since then, the AfD has come second in state elections in Saxony and Brandenburg and finished first in Thuringia. Support among the German youth is surging for the party, with some polls showing it to be the most popular among young voters.
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Members of several parties in the German parliament are set to introduce a motion to begin the process of banning the anti-mass migration Alternative for Germany (AfD), which is currently seeing success after success in regional elections. More than the 37 German lawmakers required to introduce the motion support it, including members of the ruling Social Democrats (SPD) and their Green coalition partners, the Left Party, and the notionally center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) formerly led by Angela Merkel.
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The German federal government has announced it will enact controls on all its land borders for the next six months. This comes after promises to crack down on illegal migration following several radical Islamist terror attacks. Interior Minister Nancy Faeser announced Tuesday, September 10, that the new controls will take effect on Monday.
“We are strengthening domestic security and continuing our tough stance against irregular migration,” Faeser said.
In the last several months, Germany has seen several Islamic terror attacks, and all have been linked to migration, including the mass stabbing at a festival in Solingen the previous month, where a failed asylum seeker from Syria killed three people. It later emerged that the Syrian had not only pledged allegiance to the Islamic Stateterror group but was also supposed to have been deported last year.
Another attempted attack took place in Munich last week when police shot a migrant resident from Austria armed with a rifle. The individual was a suspected Islamist and traveled across the border into Germany under the open borders Schengen agreement. The Austrian was shot dead by German police in front of the Israeli consulate on the anniversary of the 1972 massacre of 11 Israeli athletes at the Olympic games by Palestinian gunmen.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and his government promised several measures in the wake of the attacks, including stricter knife crime laws and an increase in the deportations of illegals. Germany recently carried out its first deportation flight to Afghanistan since the Taliban took over the country in 2021.
The measures also come as the populist Alternative for Germany surged in elections. The party recently won the regional election in Thuringia and came a close second in Saxony. It is projected to win again in Brandenburg later this month.
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The German federal government has announced it will enact controls on all its land borders for the next six months. This comes after promises to crack down on illegal migration following several radical Islamist terror attacks. Interior Minister Nancy Faeser announced Tuesday, September 10, that the new controls will take effect on Monday.
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The right-populist, anti-mass migration Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has won state elections in Thuringia and near-tied the establishment Christian Democratic Union (CDU), formerly led by Angela Merkel, in Saxony. The AfD has won an enormous share of the youth and working-class votes, in particular.
Led by Björn Höcke, the AfD in Thuringia is projected to have won over 33 percent of the vote on Sunday, up around 10 points on their previous showing in 2019. The CDU looks to be far behind, at around 25 percent. The Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW), a new, left-populist party that opposes mass migration, is third, at around 15 percent.
Meanwhile, Chancellor Olaf Scholz‘s left-wing Social Democratic Party (SPD) is at around 6 percent. His party’s coalition partners, the far-left Greens and neoliberal Free Democrats (FDP), have a statistically zero percent share of the vote.
In Saxony, the AfD appears to have secured a near-tie with the CDU, with both coming in around 40 percent. The SPD seems to have secured around 7 percent—its worst-ever result in Saxony. The Greens and FDP have also fared poorly, with the latter dropping to under one percent—their worst-ever result in any state election.
While the AfD and the notionally right-wing CDU would enjoy legislative supermajorities in a coalition, the latter has refused to work with the former under any circumstances. Despite Merkel declaring multiculturalism had “utterly failed” in 2010, she opened the borders during the 2015-16 migrant crisis, with the SPD and its partners displacing her party after four terms in office in 2021.
However, the SPD has experienced a rapid collapse in support due to migrant crime worsening under their stewardship, and the Russia sanctions war and net zero policies driving up costs.
It will be difficult for the CDU to form governments without the AfD, given the level of support the populists achieved, and the unpopularity of attempting to form a “grand coalition” with the SPD and other left-leaning parties.
Germany’s establishment right, left, and far left also face long-term challenges, with the AfD winning a large plurality of the working-class vote in Thuringia and Saxony, and performing very strongly among younger voters. There are signs Germany’s youth are increasingly unhappy with mass migration and multiculturalism, with the viral song “Foreigners Out” spreading over the summer.
France’s President Emmanuel Macron faces a similar situation. The success of Marine Le Pen‘s populist National Rally (RN) in the recent European and national elections has left his faction in the legislature unable to form a government without the help of various far-left parties.
Preliminary final results show far-right AfD (ESN) winning 30.6% of the vote. This is the party’s best result ever at a Saxon regional parliament election.
The right-populist, anti-mass migration Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has won state elections in Thuringia and near-tied the establishment Christian Democratic Union (CDU), formerly led by Angela Merkel, in Saxony. The AfD has won an enormous share of the youth and working-class votes, in particular.
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Members of the left-extremist Antifa organization in Germany have called on supporters to carry out violent acts against properties associated with the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party and its supporters. The X (formerly Twitter) account Rote Flora, named for a well-known Antifa squat in Hamburg, posted a picture of a new billboard, which lists “13 things you can do against the AfD,” including attacking AfD members and links to a website suggesting additional violent actions.
“The AfD should not feel safe in public and should not be able to spread its agitation undisturbed,” the website “13:12 Things” states, while calling on supporters to disrupt political campaign booths. The site also provides a guide on how to attack and destroy properties associated with the AfD, including party offices, restaurants, and venues that allow the party to host events.
Along with smashing windows, the Antifa authors call for attacks with butyric acid. They also call for home invasions of AfD politicians, noting their addresses can be learned from research while warning against getting an address wrong. The political terrorist group also warns that while such actions can increase “repression,” they are “legitimate.”
The AfD is currently polling in the lead in two of three East German regional elections taking place next month. Antifa lists this as the reason for the website’s creation and call to action, with the authors admitting that much of what is on the website is illegal.
(1/3) Neue Plakatwand: “Vom Antifa-Tresen empfohlen: 13/12 Dinge – Antifaschistischer Werkzeugkasten. Die Faschist*innen von der AfD und ihre Netzwerke werden immer stärker. #nonazishh#antifapic.twitter.com/ElrPP6ycbN
— Rote Flora @Rote_Flora@systemli.social (@flora_rote) August 18, 2024
EUROPE’S ULTRA-VIOLENT ANTIFA MOVEMENT.
German Antifa extremists are known as some of the most violent far-left extremists in Europe, with one group known as the Hammerbande (Hammer Gang) carrying out maiming attacks with hammers across Germany and even abroad in Budapest, Hungary in 2023.
Hungarian authorities arrested an Italian national associated with the Hammerbande but the individual was later released and was elected to the European Parliament in May, granting her immunity from prosecution.
After former President Donald J. Trump suggested Antifa be labeled a terrorist group for their politically violent tactics, establishment figures in Europe expressed their support for the terror group, with some waving an Antifa flag in the European Parliament.
Members of the left-extremist Antifa organization in Germany have called on supporters to carry out violent acts against properties associated with the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party and its supporters. The X (formerly Twitter) account Rote Flora, named for a well-known Antifa squat in Hamburg, posted a picture of a new billboard, which lists "13 things you can do against the AfD," including attacking AfD members and links to a website suggesting additional violent actions.
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Police in the German city of Bremen state that unknown suspects set fire to a vehicle owned by a former populist lawmaker who was almost murdered in 2019. In the early morning of Thursday, August 8, a Volkswagen was set on fire in a public parking lot in the city. Firefighters were able to contain the blaze before it could set fire to a nearby apartment building.
The vehicle is said to belong to Frank Magnitz, a former member of the German parliament for the anti-mass migration Alternative for Germany (AfD) party. Police say they are investigating a possible political motive for the attack.
In 2019, Magnitz was savagely beaten, nearly to death, while walking down a street in Bremen after leaving a local theatre. Antifa militants took credit for the attack on a platform associated with far-left extremism. However, no arrests were ever made, nor were any suspects named in the case.
The attack matches similar assaults carried out by the notorious Antifa-aligned Hammerbande (Hammer Gang) group. The Hammer Gang terrorizes political opponents by beating them bloody with claw hammers.
Members of the Hammerbande traveled to Budapest, Hungary, last year, where they attacked both populists and random bystanders in a rampage across the city.
An Italian national connected to the gang was arrested by Hungarian police but was later elected as a Member of the European Parliament (MEP), giving her immunity from prosecution.
Police in the German city of Bremen state that unknown suspects set fire to a vehicle owned by a former populist lawmaker who was almost murdered in 2019. In the early morning of Thursday, August 8, a Volkswagen was set on fire in a public parking lot in the city. Firefighters were able to contain the blaze before it could set fire to a nearby apartment building.
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A journalistic watchdog has published a scathing review of a prior report from a George Soros-funded group, which alleged members of the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party were holding a secret conference to discuss deporting all people with a migration background from Germany, even if they are citizens.
The Übermedien expert group slammed the leftist activist group Correctiv for its misrepresentation of the facts. The watchdog also blasted the German mainstream media for being entirely uncritical of the claims made by Correctiv about a conference in Potsdam earlier this year that was attended by members of the AfD and Austrian anti-mass migration activist Martin Sellner.
The Correctiv report, which won awards in German media and sparked left-wing protests involving hundreds of thousands of people, is deeply flawed, according to the watchdog, noting a recent court case in which Correctiv outright admitted there was no formal talk of plans for the mass expulsions of migrants by the AfD.
“It has long been obvious how problematic Correctiv reporting and its reception are. And at the same time, how much a critical examination of it is lacking in large parts of the serious press,” the watchdog said.
FAKE REPORTS PROMPTED BANS FROM GERMANY.
Martin Sellner spoke at the Potsdam conference about the “remigration” of illegals and those who refuse to integrate into German society to their homelands, but Correctiv was accused by Übermedien of taking a few fragments of sentences he said, twisting them, and comparing his ideas to Naziethnic cleansing.
The watchdog was especially disturbed by the comparison to the Wannsee conference made by Correctiv in its reporting. The Wannsee conference was the first major meeting to decide on the implementation of what would become the Holocaust.
As a result of the misleading report, Martin Sellner was banned from entering Germany, despite the internal open borders of the European Union (EU) and the close links between Germany and Austria.
SOROS GROUP INVENTED ‘DEPORTATION OF MILLIONS’ PLAN.
Übermedien also notes that only two people in the conference spoke about remigration, but Correctiv implied that the entire conference was actively planning to deport millions of people from Germany.
The Correctiv report even opened by saying, “High-ranking AfD politicians, neo-Nazis and financially strong entrepreneurs came together in November in a hotel near Potsdam. They planned nothing less than the expulsion of millions of people from Germany.”
Correctiv had to note that Sellner had not said that he wanted to use unlawful means to deport anyone, and that others had even said deporting those with German passports was impossible.
REPORT DIVIDED THE POPULIST RIGHT.
The Correctiv report also had some repercussions on the AfD’s relations with other European populist parties. French National Rally (RN) leader Marine Le Pen said she was reconsidering her party’s then-alliance with the AfD because of the report.
Following the European Parliament elections, the AfD had to go its own way and split from other leading populist parties, forming the Europe of Sovereign Nations (ESN) group along with other smaller parties from across Europe.
Le Pen and others joined with Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban to form the Patriots for Europe group, whhile Italy’s Giorgia Meloni remains in the more establishment-friendly European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR), effectively splitting the populist right.
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A journalistic watchdog has published a scathing review of a prior report from a George Soros-funded group, which alleged members of the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party were holding a secret conference to discuss deporting all people with a migration background from Germany, even if they are citizens.
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