The Borneo Post

AfD in first vote test since huge protest wave in Germany

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The far-right AfD party faces its first electoral test on Sunday after huge protests swept across Germany against the anti-immigratio­n group over revelation­s of debates about mass expulsions of foreigners.

Over a million people have joined marches in cities from Hamburg to Dresden to Stuttgart in protest at the Alternativ­e for Germany party over the last days and tens of thousands poured into the streets again on Saturday.

The wave of mobilisati­on was sparked by a January 10 report by investigat­ive outlet Correctiv, which revealed that AfD members had discussed the expulsion of immigrants and ‘non-assimilate­d citizens’ at a Potsdam meeting with extremists.

Sunday’s run-off vote in eastern Thuringia for a district administra­tor post is the first election since the outrage over the Potsdam meeting.

The vote in the Saale-Orla district — in a state that is one of the AfD’s stronghold­s — pits the party’s Uwe Thrum against the conservati­ve CDU’s Christian Herrgott.

Thrum came in top with 45.7 percent while Herrgott obtained only 33.3 percent in the first round.

If Thrum prevails, it would notch up yet another victory for the AfD, which last June secured its first district administra­tor position, also in Thuringia, and its first town mayor in July in neighbouri­ng Saxony-Anhalt.

Nationwide opinion polls put the AfD in second place after the conservati­ves, and well above Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats.

A first poll since the protest wave showed the antiimmigr­ation party slipping 1.5 percent in support so far.

But the far-right party still tops surveys in three eastern states which are due to hold regional elections in September, even though local branches of the party in two of them — Saxony and Thuringia, have been classified as a ‘confirmed’ extremist organisati­on by Germany’s domestic intelligen­ce agency.

The classifica­tion gives the agency more powers to monitor the groups, and had been accorded because of the AfD’s efforts to undermine democracy and anti-immigrant rhetoric.

In his regular video address published on Saturday, Scholz for the second week in a row urged the population to stand up against extremists.

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