The Daily Telegraph

Polling slump as court rules against AFD over expulsion

- By Jorg Luyken in Berlin

THE crisis inside Germany’s AFD party is deepening after a Berlin court rejected the party leadership’s attempt to eject a far-right figurehead, while new polling confirmed their slumping popularity among voters.

The extremist wing of Germany’s far-right opposition party were able to hail a success on Friday when a Berlin court rejected a decision by the party’s central committee made in May to annul the membership of Andreas Kalbitz, who was until then party leader in Brandenbur­g. The court said that the decision on Mr Kalbitz’s membership could only be made by the Afd’s internal arbitratio­n committee.

A moderate faction under party leader Jörg Meuthen claim Mr Kalbitz was once a member of the Heimattreu­e Deutsche Jugend (Patriotic German Youth), a neo-nazi organisati­on on the party’s “no go” list. Mr Kalbitz disputes having been a member of the group.

Mr Meuthen and deputy leader Beatrix von Storch moved against him in an attempt to rescue the party’s claim to be a conservati­ve alternativ­e to Angela Merkel’s CDU. That claim was seriously damaged in March when Germany’s domestic spy agency described Mr Kalbitz as an “enemy of democracy” and declared they would put him and ally Björn Höcke under surveillan­ce.

The Berlin district court’s decision is a significan­t setback to Mr Meuthen, who had insisted in May that there was nothing improper about the central committee’s vote to eject Mr Kalbitz.

In the wake of the ruling, the extremist wing renewed its attacks on Mr Meuthen, whom Mr Höcke has previously described as a “traitor”.

The removal of Mr Kalbitz also failed to allay concerns in the intelligen­ce services about extremism in its ranks. Last week, the domestic spy agency put the entire Brandenbur­g section of the party under observatio­n over its “ethnocentr­ic worldview”.

The party, which stormed into the Bundestag in 2017 ahead of the Greens and two other minor parties on the back of widespread discontent over Ms Merkel’s immigratio­n policies has seen its popularity tank since early March.

While polling at the beginning of spring put them level with the Social Democrats on 15 per cent, a poll released on Saturday showed them on only nine per cent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom