Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Far-right German party dallies with ‘Dexit’ from EU

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GERMANY’S far right voted yesterday to break a national taboo by campaignin­g to quit the European Union if its demand for reforms within the bloc are not met. A party congress gathered in Riesa in Saxony state, the Alternativ­e for Germany’s (AfD) biggest stronghold, voted for the demand to be included in its manifesto for European Parliament elections in May.

Aware that a vast majority of Germans remain in favor of their country’s EU membership, delegates advanced cautiously. They called for a so-called “Dexit” only “as a last resort” if fundamenta­l reforms do not reshape the EU “in an appropriat­e time frame.” But the decision marks the first time in Germany’s post-war history that a political party has dared suggest blowing up the nation’s EU membership. Alongside the transatlan­tic alliance with the United States, membership in the EU project has long been a key element of German national identity, and one way the country has sought to move on from the Nazi past while defending its interests.

Party co-chair Alexander Gauland had earlier warned his party against demanding a concrete time frame for Germany to leave the European Union. “I think it is not wise to go into elections with a maximum demand,” he told delegates in the eastern city of Riesa at an AfD party conference. Should Britain’s exit from the bloc lead to short-term turbulence and economic problems, that could have a negative impact on German voters in upcoming elections, he said.

More generally, with a massive proEU majority in Germany, AfD bosses know they could deter swathes of potential voters by talking too loudly about quitting.

A European Parliament survey in November found 82 percent of Germans would vote to remain in the EU if the country held a UK-style referendum, while 75 percent saw Brexit as either “probably” or “definitely” the wrong decision.

The move opens up a new front for the AfD alongside opposition to Islam and immigratio­n, the foundation of the party’s electoral successes since 2015 and the arrival of more than one million asylum seekers. Far-right leaders need fresh issues to whip up sentiment, after their favorite punching-bag, Chancellor Angela Merkel, announced her retirement for 2021 at the latest.

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