The Guardian (USA)

AfD party votes to campaign for German exit from EU

- Agence France-Presse

The German far-right party Alternativ­e für Deutschlan­d (AfD) has voted to campaign for the country’s exit from the European Union if its demand for reforms within the bloc are not met.

The decision on Sunday marks the first time any party has called for “Dexit” – a German departure from the EU in the mould of Brexit.

If the EU is not reshaped in line with the party’s ideas “in an appropriat­e timeframe”, Germany must leave the bloc, according to the draft manifesto for the forthcomin­g European parliament elections agreed by delegates at a party congress in the eastern state of Saxony.

Congress attendees also voted through a call to abolish the European parliament – the very body that AfD candidates will be campaignin­g to join this spring.

“We see nation states as having the exclusive competence to make laws,” the text said, attacking the “751 privileged members” of the present European house.

While both demands are now in the draft manifesto, a final vote later on Sunday will adopt or reject the entire campaign package. Elections for the European parliament will take place in May.

AfD was originally founded as a Euroscepti­c party, but rose to its current strength and representa­tion in Germany’s national parliament after rightwinge­rs took over and switched its focus to opposing Islam and immigratio­n.

Like other nationalis­t movements around Europe, its leaders argue that too much power has been transferre­d to Brussels, saying the EU has far outgrown its origins in economic cooperatio­n.

“We don’t need to abolish the EU, but bring it back to its sensible core,” the AfD co-leader Alexander Gauland told delegates Saturday ahead of the vote, saying the party “has partners that would walk the path with us” such as Austria’s Freedom party and Italy’s League.

Concerned about scaring off potential voters in majority pro-EU Germany, party chiefs warned the congress against even harder proposals that would have called for an exit if AfD’s demands for change were not met by 2024.

 ??  ?? Alexander Gauland, co-leader of Alternativ­e für Deutschlan­d. Photograph: Filip Singer/EPA
Alexander Gauland, co-leader of Alternativ­e für Deutschlan­d. Photograph: Filip Singer/EPA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States