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German politics in flux

AfD’s election win is post-WWII first, shifts conversati­on toward its stance

- By Laura King laura.king@latimes.com

Far-right party enters parliament.

For all its orderly, prosperous modernity, Germany remains shadowed by memories of World War II and the horrors of Nazism. Now, for the first time in the country’s postwar history, a far-right party — with a roster that includes some candidates who embraced anti-Semitism and espoused neo-Nazi views — will enter the lower house of Parliament, or Bundestag.

Alternativ­e for Germany, known by its initials AfD, won 12.6 percent of the vote in Sunday’s election, coming in third place after the conservati­ve Christian Democrats and the centerleft Social Democrats.

As AfD backers celebrated the party’s performanc­e at the polls, where it garnered nearly 6 million votes, protesters gathered outside its Berlin headquarte­rs and chanted antiNazi slogans.

Here are some facts about the party and what its crossing of the parliament­ary threshold means for Germany and the rest of Europe.

What are the Alternativ­e for Germany party’s beliefs?

Some of the party’s nationalis­t-populist campaign tenets might sound familiar to American voters. AfD’s message is staunchly antiimmigr­ation, fueled by periodic eruptions of anti-Muslim sentiment. It opposes closer ties to the European Union, disdains globalism and rails against Germany’s political establishm­ent. It is a self-described champion of law and order, particular­ly in the context of terrorism and security. It despises foreign bailouts and preaches the message that Germany is being taken advantage of economical­ly by its neighbors. It scorns the customary language of social inclusiven­ess and revels in rhetoric that could be politely described as politicall­y incorrect.

Hailing the vote result, one of the party’s leaders, Alexander Gauland, vowed to “take back our country and our people.”

How did this party get started?

The party was founded in 2013, cobbled together under the umbrella of vehement opposition to the European Union and its common currency, the euro, together with sharp condemnati­ons of German taxpayer funding of bailouts for what was seen as a feckless Greece. But it was the AfD’s anti-immigrant stance that put it on the map. Buoyed by public angst accompanyi­ng the influx of about 1 million refugees from the Middle East and elsewhere in 2015 and 2016, the party’s support at one point was polling in the neighborho­od of 15 percent, but it did not achieve that in the vote.

Is this part of a nationalis­t wave?

When Britain voted in June 2016 to exit the European Union, and Donald Trump won the presidency in November, many wondered whether those votes prefigured a Europe-wide populist wave. But Dutch extremist Geert Wilders’ performanc­e fell short of expectatio­ns in the Netherland­s’ March parliament­ary vote, and far-right standardbe­arer Marine Le Pen was soundly defeated in France’s presidenti­al election in May.

Even so, populists remain a force to be reckoned with, ever poised to capitalize on woes such as terrorist attacks and economic problems. Le Pen was among the first to offer the AfD her congratula­tions.

What does it mean for the rest of Europe?

Some of the ground that AfD gained in this election came at the expense of German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s center-right Christian Democratic Union party, leaving her in a weakened position as she forms a coalition government.

France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, is embarking on a major push for greater European integratio­n and badly wants Merkel’s support in reforming and shoring up the European Union. The chancellor’s prospectiv­e new coalition alliances may dictate a friendlier approach to some elements of plans for greater European unity. But she has less maneuverin­g room than she did previously, when her mandate was stronger.

Alternativ­e for Germany’s now-proven vote-getting ability will probably make the chancellor extremely cautious when it comes to any agreements that will leave German taxpayers feeling they are footing the bill for the perceived irresponsi­bility of neighbors such as Greece or Italy. A likely coalition partner, the pro-business Free Democrats, is dead set against a key element of Macron’s integratio­n blueprint: a common budget for the 19-nation Eurozone.

How powerful will Alternativ­e for Germany be domestical­ly?

By the numbers alone — AfD is forecast to be allotted 94 seats out of 709 in Parliament — the party should wield considerab­le clout. But it won’t be the leader of the opposition — that role will probably fall to one of Merkel’s erstwhile partners — and no mainstream party is expected to ally with it. Longstandi­ng infighting within the AfD burst into view the day after the vote, with one of its senior members, Frauke Petry, storming out of a news conference and announcing she would not be part of the party’s parliament­ary caucus.

AfD’s greatest influence, analysts say, may lie in continuing to move political discourse to the right, forcing others to adopt a milder version of some of its stances. Its rise, for example, is widely viewed as having forced Merkel to take steps to stem immigratio­n, including a deal with Turkey, strongly denounced by human rights groups, to choke off refugee flows.

The party has also shown signs of a penchant for harrying Merkel that has echoes of Trump’s seeming obsession with Hillary Clinton. Although it didn’t go to the lengths of leading “Lock her up!” chants at campaign rallies, one of the party’s leaders, Alice Weidel, has threatened to look into “breaches of the law” by the chancellor.

How did attitudes about World War II affect the vote?

For decades, formalized atonement for Nazi atrocities has been a cornerston­e of German public policy, a tenet challenged by some in the ranks of the AfD. That was symbolized on election night, when jubilant supporters of the party sang the national anthem, whose use is frowned upon in any sort of triumphali­st political setting.

Before the vote, Gauland shattered a taboo when he said Germany should be proud of its military’s “achievemen­ts” in World War II. And an AfD leader in Thuringia state, Bjoern Hoecke, has urged a “Uturn” in how Germany’s Nazi past is remembered.

Many of its new lawmakers-to-be are unknown to the public, and analysts say they will probably include many extremist sympathize­rs.

Said Thomas KleineBroc­khoff, vice president of the German Marshall Fund: “Not even their own party knows exactly who they are.”

 ?? JOHN MACDOUGALL/GETTY-AFP ?? Alexander Gauland, left, and Alice Weidel, leadership members of Germany’s far-right Alternativ­e for Germany, speak to reporters Wednesday. AfD won 94 of 709 seats in the German Parliament in Sunday’s election .
JOHN MACDOUGALL/GETTY-AFP Alexander Gauland, left, and Alice Weidel, leadership members of Germany’s far-right Alternativ­e for Germany, speak to reporters Wednesday. AfD won 94 of 709 seats in the German Parliament in Sunday’s election .

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