Current:Home > InvestA mayoral race in a small city highlights the rise of Germany’s far-right AfD party -Capitatum
A mayoral race in a small city highlights the rise of Germany’s far-right AfD party
TradeEdge View
Date:2025-04-09 10:34:33
BERLIN (AP) — The German city of Nordhausen is best known as the location of the former Nazi concentration camp Mittelbau-Dora.
On Sunday, a mayoral election could again put the focus on the municipality of 42,000 people if a far-right candidate wins the vote.
Joerg Prophet, a candidate from the populist far-right Alternative for Germany party, or AfD, is the frontrunner in Sunday’s mayoral runoff vote. Earlier in September, Prophet won 42.1% of the vote in the first round of the election and now faces off against independent candidate Kai Buchmann.
Sunday’s election underscores recent gains nationally for the AfD and the increasing influence it has on the political discussion in Germany. It also raises concerns about the normalization of far-right rhetoric in places like Nordhausen, drawing criticism from Holocaust survivors and those who work to combat discrimination.
“The significance of the election in Nordhausen extends far beyond (its) borders,” Felix Klein, the German government’s antisemitism commissioner, told the Funke Media Group.
The AfD was founded as a euroskeptic party in 2013 and first entered the German Bundestag in 2017. Polling now puts it in second place nationally with around 21%, far above the 10.3% it won during the last federal election in 2021.
The party has seen its support grow for a number of reasons. Its politicians have seized on frustration with the German government’s climate and energy policies, such as the plan to replace fossil-fuel heating systems with greener alternatives.
What’s more, a spike in the number of asylum-seekers entering Germany in recent months has put political attention back on the topic of migration, which has long been the AfD’s signature issue.
“The AfD mobilizes their support with two fearful narratives related to cultural and economic modernization: Both migration and climate policies are turned into a threat to people’s cultural identity and lifestyle,” said Johannes Hillje, a Berlin-based political consultant who tracks far- and extreme-right rhetoric in Germany.
That strategy has proven successful in recent months. In addition to growing its support nationally, the AfD won its first executive-level positions earlier this summer: An AfD candidate was elected county administrator in the eastern city of Sonneberg in June, and in July, the party won its first mayorship in the town of Raguhn-Jessnitz.
The AfD’s strength, particularly in eastern Germany, has prompted discussions among other parties about whether and how to cooperate with it. Despite a longstanding taboo against collaborating with the far right, the center-right Christian Democrats in Thuringia made headlines when they recently passed new tax legislation with AfD support.
In Thuringia, the state in which Nordhausen is located, the AfD is both especially strong and especially radical. Recent polling puts the party in first place in Thuringia, where most surveys have its support above 30%.
Bjoern Hoecke, the AfD leader in Thuringia, is the symbolic face of the party’s furthest-right faction. Germany’s domestic intelligence agency has placed the AfD’s Thuringia branch under formal observation.
Hoecke has espoused revisionist views of Germany’s Nazi past. In 2018, he referred to the Holocaust memorial in Berlin as a “monument of shame” and called for the country to perform a “180-degree turn” in its memory culture.
As a result, there’s a particular significance to the prospect of an AfD mayor in a city like Nordhausen, given the work that has been done there to preserve the Mittelbau-Dora camp as a site of memory and to rebuild trust among Holocaust survivors.
“It’s inconceivable that the last survivors of the concentration camps and their families (…) could be welcomed in Nordhausen by a mayor from the ranks of a party whose political program consists of calls for xenophobia, racism, antisemitism, antigypsyism, nationalism and revisionism,” an international committee of survivors of Mittelbau-Dora and the nearby Buchenwald concentration camp said in a statement.
With three important state-level elections in Germany’s east on the horizon in 2024, including in Thuringia, there is increasing pressure on Germany’s other political parties to combat its rise.
Winning posts like mayorships and growing its support nationally helps normalize the AfD in the German political landscape, and puts increasing pressure on parties like the CDU to collaborate with it — which experts argue would only strengthen and legitimize the AfD’s far-right positions.
“It‘s a huge strategic mistake to help the AfD to have political impact,” Hillje said. “This will mobilize their supporters even more.”
veryGood! (73182)
Related
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Teen gunman sentenced to life for Oxford High School massacre in Michigan
- Anthony Davis leads Lakers to NBA In-Season Tournament title, 123-109 over Pacers
- A Soviet-era statue of a Red Army commander taken down in Kyiv
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- US and Philippines condemn China coast guard’s dangerous water cannon blasts against Manila’s ships
- US vetoes UN resolution backed by many nations demanding immediate humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza
- Inside Amy Robach and T.J. Holmes' Enduring Romance
- Trump's 'stop
- We Ranked All of Meg Ryan's Rom-Coms and We'll Still Have What She's Having
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Over 300 Rohingya Muslims fleeing Myanmar arrive in Indonesia’s Aceh region after weeks at sea
- College football award winners for 2023 season: Who took home trophies?
- Why Shohei Ohtani will be worth every penny of $700 million contract for Los Angeles Dodgers
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- 4 coffee table art books from 2023 that are a visual feast
- With bison herds and ancestral seeds, Indigenous communities embrace food sovereignty
- What to do if you can't max out your 401(k) contributions in 2023
Recommendation
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
Anthony Davis leads Lakers to NBA In-Season Tournament title, 123-109 over Pacers
Ukraine’s Zelenskyy heads to Argentina in bid to win support from developing nations
UN says the Taliban must embrace and uphold human rights obligations in Afghanistan
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Sri Lanka experiences a temporary power outage after a main transmission line fails
Teen gunman sentenced to life for Oxford High School massacre in Michigan
'Zombie deer' disease has been reported in more than half the US: What to know about CWD