The Daily Telegraph

Germany should follow Britain out of Europe, says AFD leader

- By James Crisp EUROPE EDITOR if

BRITAIN was “dead right” to leave the European Union and Germany should hold its own “Dexit” vote, the leader of the hard-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AFD) has said.

Alice Weidel, from the poll-topping AFD, said she would push for a referendum on EU membership if her party came to power.

Ms Weidel said the vote would be held if an AFD government could not secure reforms to curb overreach by the “unelected” European Commission.

“If a reform isn’t possible, if we fail to rebuild the sovereignt­y of the EU member states, we should let the people decide, just as Britain did,” she told the Financial Times.

“And we could have a referendum on ‘Dexit’ – a German exit from the EU.”

She added: “It is a model for Germany, that one can make a sovereign decision like that.”

Winning such a referendum, even it met strict German laws for plebiscite­s, would be a tall order, with 90 per cent of people in favour of continued membership.

A recent poll found that less than half (45 per cent) of AFD members would vote for Dexit.

The AFD is leading the polls in all five East German states ahead of regional elections in September. The party’s results in June’s European Parliament elections will also be closely watched amid prediction­s of success for Euroscepti­c parties across the bloc, including in France, Austria and the Netherland­s.

It is polling nationally at 22 per cent, behind the centre-right opposition Christian Democratic Union but ahead of all three parties in Olaf Scholz’s struggling coalition government.

However, the Afd’s current success does not guarantee it a place in any future government.

Establishm­ent parties have ruled out coalition deals with the party and it does not lead any of Germany’s 16 states because of the cordon sanitaire (firewall) by the other parties.

Ms Weidel admitted that the AFD would not be able to take power in Berlin before 2029 but said a future role in government was “inevitable”.

She predicted that the CDU, the centre-right party of Angela Merkel, the former chancellor, would be the first to break the “firewall” of establishm­ent forces and ally with the AFD.

She said: “The CDU won’t be able to maintain its firewall in the long term.”

“We can form a clear right-wing majority. And the CDU can’t refuse to accept that in the long term, especially in the eastern states.”

Once in power, Ms Weidel said the party would reform tax laws, slim down the state and end Germany’s switch to renewable energy.

The AFD is classified as Right-wing extremist by the intelligen­ce services in three East German states.

There were calls to ban the party after it was revealed AFD politician­s attended a secret November meeting of far-right groups. Ms Weidel was not at the meeting and fired an aide who was.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom