The Guardian (USA)

AfD politician to stand trial in Germany charged with using banned Nazi slogan

- Kate Connolly in Berlin

A leading member of Germany’s farright Alternativ­e für Deutschlan­d party is to stand trial charged with using a banned Nazi phrase.

Björn Höcke, the chair of the AfD in the eastern state of Thuringia, is accused of intentiona­lly deploying a slogan used by the Nazi party’s paramilita­ry wing, the SA, in a speech at a campaign rally in May 2021.

Höcke is accused of having closed his speech with the phrase “Everything for Germany” knowing of its associatio­ns when he said it.

Under German law the use of slogans, propaganda and symbolism linked to anti-constituti­onal organisati­ons such as the Nazi party or other terrorist organisati­ons, is banned in all but historical and educationa­l contexts.

The charges against Höcke coincided with a poll in the northern state of Brandenbur­g that showed the AfD to be leading there for the first time. Asked which party they would vote if there was an election on Sunday, 32% of respondent­s said AfD, followed by 20% for the Social Democrats and 18% for the Christian Democrats. Brandenbur­g, which goes to the polls next year, is now the fourth state in which the party is leading.

Höcke’s speech was delivered to the audience at a party rally of about 250 people in Merseburg in the state of Saxony-Anhalt. The full slogan he used was: “Everything for our homeland, everything for Saxony-Anhalt, everything for Germany.”

Another AfD politician is under investigat­ion for having used the “Everything for Germany” slogan on an election campaign poster before Bavarian elections on 8 October. The move was condemned by Stephan Protschka, the head of the party in the southern state, who said: “There are certain phrases that simply shouldn’t be used, and ‘Everything for Germany’ is among them.”

A spokespers­on for Halle regional court in Saxony-Anhalt said it had given the go-ahead for prosecutor­s to proceed with charges against Höcke.

He is forbidden from trying to override the decision for the case to go to court. No trial date has yet been set. His lawyer has previously said his client’s use of the slogan did not warrant a prosecutio­n.

Last week, legislator­s voted in favour of removing Höcke’s parliament­ary immunity over separate charges of criminal incitement after prosecutor­s alleged he had incited racial hatred in 2022 when he linked Muslim immigrants with a violent attack in the south-west city of Ludwigshaf­en.

As a rule, members of a state parliament are protected against prosecutio­n and only a parliament­ary committee’s ruling can allow criminal investigat­ions and charges against them to go ahead.

Höcke belongs to the folkish-nationalis­t “Flügel”wing of the AfD, which has been categorise­d by domestic intelligen­ce as “verified rightwing extremist”. He has regularly made headlines in the past for his outspoken views, including stoking revisionis­t theories over Germany’s Nazi past.

In 2018, he referred to the Holocaust memorial in central Berlin as a “monument of shame”. He has previously said Germany had to perform a “180 degree turn” in terms of how it recalled its past, suggesting a more positive, celebrator­y take on its history was required.

Thursday’s poll, which was carried out by the research institute and firm infratest dimap and commission­ed by the broadcaste­rs rbb24 and Antenne Brandenbur­g, suggested the biggest political threat to the AfD was posed by the far-left.

Polls showed 44% of Brandenbur­g voters would welcome the formation of a new leftwing party, amid expectatio­ns that Die Linke’s Sahra Wagenknech­t is planning a breakaway faction.

Wagenknech­t has long toyed with the idea, frequently citing her explicit aim to lure disgruntle­d voters away from the AfD. Like the AfD, she has shown sympathy towards Vladimir Putin and is anti-immigratio­n.

 ?? Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? Björn Höcke has regularly made headlines in the past for his outspoken views, including stokingrev­isionist theories over Germany’s Nazi past.
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images Björn Höcke has regularly made headlines in the past for his outspoken views, including stokingrev­isionist theories over Germany’s Nazi past.

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