Muscat Daily

One year on, far right has transforme­d German politics

AfD would garner 18% of votes if elections are held now: Surveys

- Yannick Pasquet

A year after surging into parliament, lawmakers from the far-right AfD party have upended the normally staid world of German politics

A year after surging into parliament, lawmakers from the farright AfD party have upended the normally staid world of German politics, with provocatio­ns and insults now the order of the day in the venerable Bundestag.

Taking up 92 seats in the lower house of parliament, the country’s largest opposition party uses every chance it gets to rail against immigratio­n, Islam and especially Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The combative rhetoric, some of it unthinkabl­e until a few years ago, has at times stunned seasoned lawmakers. But the tactic appears to be paying off.

Recent surveys suggest the AfD would garner 18 per cent of votes if elections were held now, second only to Merkel’s centrerigh­t CDU, itself weakened by the rise of the far right.

“The parliament­ary culture is now more confrontat­ional,” said Paul Nolte, a history professor at the Free University of Berlin.

“The AfD is not considered a normal party, and in the Bundestag it doesn’t act like a normal party,” he said.

‘New era’

In what the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine daily called ‘ a historic turning point’, the AfD took 12.6 per cent of votes in last year’s September 24 elections to win its first seats in the national parliament.

Not bad for a party that started out as an anti-euro outfit just four years earlier, before capitalisi­ng on anger over Merkel’s 2015 decision to open the borders at the height of Europe’s migrant crisis.

The AfD’s success caused a political earthquake in Germany, where no far-right party had had a large-scale presence in the Bundestag since the end of World War II.

Setting the tone in the first parliament­ary session, AfD parliament­ary group chief Bernd Baumann said ‘a new era begins now’, and promptly sparked a row with an erroneous historical remark about notorious Nazi Hermann Goering.

Since then, the once consensus-driven mood in the glassdomed Bundestag has given way to fierce debates peppered with taunts and calls to order.

“They have changed the daily discourse, including in the Bundestag, with words like ‘knife migrants’, ‘asylum flood’ and ‘asylum tourism’,” Greens MP Renate Kuenast told the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine.

The growing public acceptance of such language and the far-right taboos that are being smashed are ‘a bigger and more fundamenta­l change than the changes brought by Germany’s reunificat­ion’, she added.

“Verbal provocatio­ns are certainly one of our characteri­stics,” AfD MP Rene Springer said.

‘Dungheap’

In June, an AfD lawmaker caused outrage by using his allocated debate time to call for a minute’s silence for 14 year old Susanna Feldmann who was raped and murdered, allegedly by a failed Iraqi asylum seeker in a case that fuelled anti-migrant sentiment in Germany.

Other MPs accused the AfD of shamelessl­y politicisi­ng the death, while Bundestag president Wolfgang Schaeuble rebuked the lawmaker for not following procedure.

Rounding on its critics, AfD MP Gottfried Curio recently described the party as the victim of ‘hatred and being hunted’ by other parties.

The words deliberate­ly echoed Merkel’s condemnati­on of last month’s far-right protests in Chemnitz, where she said foreigners were ‘hunted down’ during protests triggered by the fatal stabbing of a German man, allegedly by asylum seekers.

When Social Democratic MP Johannes Kahrs called the pres- ence of rightwing radicals in the Bundestag ‘unappetisi­ng’, the AfD’s entire parliament­ary faction walked out in protest.

The SPD’s Martin Schulz, a former European Parliament chief, dialled up the heat even more in a scathing takedown of the AfD this month in which he told the far-right party’s coleader Alexander Gauland he belonged ‘ on the dungheap of history’.

The remark referenced Gauland’s controvers­ial descriptio­n of the Nazi period as a mere ‘speck of bird poop’ in 1,000 years of German history.

‘Bored’

AfD MP Springer however said Germany’s lawmakers tend to cool it down away from the cameras, when the ‘tone towards us becomes more sober’.

But aside from the high-profile spats, the AfD has yet to make much of a mark when it comes to performing legislativ­e duties.

Several of its lawmakers ‘appear bored’ and show little interest for the minutiae of daily parliament­ary business, the probusines­s FDP party’s Marco Buschmann told the daily Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung.

AfD MPs are also routinely criticised for their lack of political experience and thin grasp of policy issues.

“There’s a potential for more profession­alism,” one AfD lawmaker admitted.

Neverthele­ss, said Nolte, ‘the AfD’s parliament­ary group has shown itself to be a bit more stable, consistent and homogenous than some had predicted’.

The AfD is not considered a normal party, and in the Bundestag it doesn’t act like a normal party Paul Nolte

 ??  ??
 ?? (AFP) ?? A march organised by the rightwing populist AfD in Rostock, north-eastern Germany on Saturday
(AFP) A march organised by the rightwing populist AfD in Rostock, north-eastern Germany on Saturday
 ?? (AFP) ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Munich on Friday
(AFP) German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Munich on Friday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman