The Alternative for Germany (AfD), a far-right party recently declared extremist by Germany's domestic intelligence service, is gaining traction in Western Germany. This is a significant shift from its initial stronghold in the former East Germany.
In February's federal elections, several neighborhoods in Duisburg, Western Germany, saw the AfD receive nearly 40% of the vote.
The AfD, initially formed around euro skepticism, has evolved into a party characterized by its denigration of immigrants and refugees, a key factor in its extremist designation.
A confidential intelligence report details an entrenched xenophobic mindset within the party's leadership, citing instances of Nazi-era slogan repetition and calls for mass deportations with cruelty, particularly from figures like Bjorn Höcke.
The article highlights a noticeable change in public perception of the AfD in Western Germany. Local AfD members, once met with hostility, are now experiencing increased acceptance in certain areas.
It was a warm spring day in Duisburg, a rusty industrial hub in Western Germany, and Alan Imamura, a member of the City Council, was chatting with constituents in a shop-lined pedestrian mall on the city’s impoverished north side.
Until recently, Mr. Imamura said, he was not welcome in places like this. That is because he is a leading local figure in the Alternative for Germany, known as the AfD, a far-right party whose national organization was recently declared an extremist group by the country’s domestic intelligence service.
Much of the AfD’s support comes from the former East Germany. But in recent years, it has developed a beachhead in parts of Western Germany. During February’s federal elections, several neighborhoods in Mr. Imamura’s district gave the AfD some of its best results in the country, coming close to 40 percent of the vote.
“It’s so different,” he said. “You would not imagine, five years ago — when I put up some posters, people spat on me. And today the people, they say, ‘Finally.’”
The AfD emerged over a decade ago around skepticism against the euro, but it soon morphed into a party built on the denigration of immigrants and refugees, one of the reasons it was designated as extremist.
A confidential, 1,018-page report by the domestic intelligence service, which was not released but was reviewed by Der Spiegel magazine, documents what it called “an entrenched xenophobic mind-set” within the “top leadership structures of the AfD.” For example, Bjorn Höcke, who leads the AfD in the Eastern state of Thuringia, has repeated Nazi-era slogans and called for “large-scale” deportations with “well-tempered cruelties.”
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