Leaders of the anti-euro AfD
bristle if they are described as Eurosceptic
To others, Alternative fuer Deutschland (AfD) -
or Alternative for Germany - is a dangerous populist force, whipping up
anti-foreigner feeling, and giving right-wing extremist ideology a respectable
face.
Either way, few are indifferent to Germany's new
anti-euro party.
It was founded last year as a protest against
German-backed EU bailouts for poorer Southern Europe. The AfD originally
catered to some German taxpayers fed up with paying for what they saw as the
irresponsible behaviour of southern Europeans living beyond their means.
But it has now become the first anti-euro party
to win seats in a German regional parliament, receiving almost 10% of the vote
in the eastern German state of Saxony, taking even the party's bosses by
surprise.
"Astonishing results," Frauke Petry,
one of the party's leaders, told journalists in Berlin on Monday.
The 39-year-old mother-of-four is a former
chemist.
As the face of the party, she is meant to shake
off its grumpy-old-man image, campaigning heavily on education and family
issues. That agenda counters allegations that the AfD is simply a more
respectable, lighter version of the far-right NPD, which is no longer
represented in Saxony's parliament.
But Ms Petry has big ambitions, giving a clear
warning to Chancellor Angela Merkel's governing Christian Democrats (CDU), who
have ruled out entering into government with the AfD - both in Saxony now, and
nationally in the future.
"The CDU will lose out if they refuse to
talk to us," she said.
The danger for Angela Merkel is not that the AfD
poses a threat as a rival for national or even regional government.
Rather it is that Germany's right will be
splintered - much as, over the past decade, the far-left Linke party has
chipped away at support for the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD).
By focusing on traditional conservative ideas,
such as law and order, tougher border controls, and the importance of the
traditional family model, the AfD is managing now to attract voters who feel
that Mrs Merkel's government is betraying those values.
Mrs Merkel's pragmatic approach, to appeal to as
many voters as possible, has pulled her CDU party closer to the centre. And
governing with the SPD means compromise.
So the
AfD aims to scoop up voters who want a tougher approach to the EU and
immigration - much as the Eurosceptic party UKIP does in Britain.
But there
the similarity ends.
In
Britain, UKIP can make statements about Europe which in pro-EU Germany would
lead to pariah status.
However,
in Germany, comments by some AfD candidates on abortion or homosexuality would
be deemed unacceptable in mainstream British society.
And AfD
leaders bristle if they are described as Eurosceptic, keen to underline they
are anti-euro, not anti-EU.
So, in
the European Parliament, the AfD is actually in the same grouping as the UK
Conservatives, not with UKIP.
Commentators
often see more parallels between the AfD and the socially conservative American
Tea Party, than with UKIP.
"We
have arrived on the political scene," announced AfD leader and co-founder
Bernd Lucke, an economist who has taken time off from his career as university
professor to campaign for Germany to leave the euro.
The party
narrowly missed getting into the national parliament last September, but did
get into the European Parliament in May.
So the
result in Saxony is being seen as proof that the AfD can play a role in German
domestic politics, and not just campaign on EU issues.
But there
may be a limit to how far the AfD can go. Smaller parties in Germany, such as
the Pirate Party and the free-market FDP, can rapidly become irrelevant.
So Mr Lucke's
confidence may be premature.
This
remains a small party well to the right of Germany's political mainstream.
And the
anti-euro message is controversial in Germany, traditionally a pro-European
country.
In
addition, the AfD's more populist rhetoric is potentially toxic for mainstream
parties, making future governing coalitions with the AfD unlikely.
And other
parties are aware that some former supporters of the far-right NPD in Saxony
appear to have defected to the AfD.
On 14
September the AfD will face its next test, in regional elections in the eastern
German states of Brandenburg and Thuringia. Across eastern Germany as a whole,
support for the AfD is running at about 8%.
The
results of these state elections will indicate if the AfD really is on the march.
2 September 2014
From the section Europe
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου