The Jerusalem Post

Top German court won’t outlaw far-right Nat’l Democratic Party

Justices admit NPD resembles Hitler’s National Socialist Party, but say it has no chance of holding power and thus poses no danger

- • By MADELINE CHAMBERS and URSULA KNAPP

BERLIN/KARLSRUHE (Reuters) – Germany’s Constituti­onal Court said on Tuesday that the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) resembled Adolf Hitler’s Nazi party, but ruled against banning it because it presented no threat to democracy.

Germany’s intelligen­ce agency described the NPD as racist and antisemiti­c, and the attempt by the country’s 16 federal states to outlaw the party came amid rising support for rightwing groups stoked by popular resentment over the influx of migrants.

While the court said the party’s aims violated the constituti­on, it ruled that there was insufficie­nt evidence it would wield power. Under German law, there must be hard proof that a party puts democracy at risk for it to be banned.

“The NPD intends to replace the existing constituti­onal system with an authoritar­ian national state that adheres to the idea of an ethnically defined ‘people’s community’,” the court said in its ruling. “However, currently there is a lack of specific and weighty indication­s suggesting that this endeavor will be successful.”

The tough conditions for banning a political party is in part a legacy of the crushing of dissent in the Nazi era and communist East Germany.

Ahead of federal elections in September, the NPD has been largely overshadow­ed by the anti-immigrant Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD), for whom support has soared to 15 percent in polls, and the NPD has failed to capitalize on the refugee crisis.

The NPD has never won enough support to win seats in the federal parliament, and in September it lost its last seat in a regional assembly. It is, though, represente­d on local councils, and won a seat in the European Parliament in 2014.

“It appears to be entirely impossible that the NPD will succeed in achieving its aims by parliament­ary or extra-parliament­ary democratic means,” said the court.

Germany’s domestic intelligen­ce agency says the NPD, establishe­d in 1964, has about 5,000 members, in a country of 82 million, and links to some violent neo-Nazis.

Several senior NPD figures have been convicted of Holocaust denial or incitement, but the party denies any involvemen­t in violence.

“Identifica­tion with leading personalit­ies of the [Nazi] party, the use of selected National Socialist vocabulary, texts, songs and symbols, as well as revisionis­t statements with regard to history demonstrat­e an affinity ... with the mindset of National Socialism,” said the court.

Some politician­s argue that allowing the fringe NPD to exist would legitimize it, and send a signal that its rightwing views are acceptable. Others say a ban could be counterpro­ductive and push its members undergroun­d.

Only two parties have been banned since World War Two – the Socialist Reich Party, a successor to Hitler’s Nazis, in 1952, and the Communist Party in 1956 in West Germany.

An earlier attempt to ban the NPD in 2003 collapsed because some of the party officials used as witnesses turned out to be government-paid informants.

 ?? (Kai Pfaffenbac­h/Reuters) ?? NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC PARTY members pose in front of Germany’s Constituti­onal Court after justices ruled yesterday that it posed no threat to democracy.
(Kai Pfaffenbac­h/Reuters) NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC PARTY members pose in front of Germany’s Constituti­onal Court after justices ruled yesterday that it posed no threat to democracy.

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