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POLITICS

Far-left political force tells Germany it is here to stay

The rising power in the German political scene, the far-left Die Linke, had a simple message at its party conference this weekend: we cannot be ignored, reports AFP’s Audrey Kauffmann.

Far-left political force tells Germany it is here to stay
Left party chiefs Lafontaine (l) and Bisky. Photo: DPA

Just 11 months after the creation by neo-communists and defectors from the centre-left Social Democrats, Die Linke, or The Left, is now Germany’s third largest political force.

With increasing discontentment in Europe’s biggest economy over rising prices and the growing gap between the rich and poor, support for the party and its populist agenda has rocketed.

It now holds seats in 10 of Germany’s 16 states, not only in the deprived, formerly communist East Germany but also in four states in the wealthier former West.

Fiercely pacifist, the party wants Germany to withdraw its 3,200 troops from Afghanistan and to take Germany out of the NATO military alliance. It also has strong misgivings about the European Union.

This surge of support has made it more popular with voters than the traditional kingmakers in Germany’s previously cozy political scene, the Greens and the liberal Free Democrats (FDP).

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrats (CDU) have been in an uneasy governing coalition with the SPD since 2005, and all the parties are now looking ahead to the next elections in September 2009.

Die Linke, having shaken up the political scene, could make things interesting. Opinion polls suggest it could win 14 percent of the vote.

Both the SPD and the CDU want to win enough votes to ditch the other in order not to have to endure another four years of their grand coalition.

But they are unlikely to win enough votes to govern alone, so both are starting to look around for possible partners.

The combinations are not obvious. The CDU’s traditional allies are the FDP, but it is uncertain they will garner enough seats between then, a situation shared by the SPD and their partners between 1998 and 2005, the Greens.

The SPD’s only choice may be to work with Die Linke, but the reaction to talks about such a tie-up at regional level showed SPD members were fiercely opposed.

Oskar Lafontaine, the charismatic former chairman of the SPD and now one of the heads of the Die Linke, feels he has the other parties on the run.

“The wind of history is blowing in our sails,” Lafontaine told the 562 party faithful who made the journey to Cottbus near Berlin, promising on Sunday to “change politics.”

“Other parties are adopting our positions … Let us be a party that dares to go against the spirit of the times,” Lafontaine told the crowd from an all-red podium in a speech citing Marx, Engels and even Mikhail Gorbachev.

The party members adopted a motion that would see an increase of €50 billion ($78 billion) in annual spending on health care, education, the environment and public services.

POLITICS

German politicians flock to TikTok after far-right success on the platform

Spooked by the far right's success in reaching youth voters via TikTok, Germany's political heavyweights are trying to muscle their way onto the social media platform ahead of June's European elections.

German politicians flock to TikTok after far-right success on the platform

Chancellor Olaf Scholz, hardly famous for his sparky social media presence, made his unexpected debut on the platform in April, promising he won’t be caught dancing.

And vice-chancellor Robert Habeck followed soon afterwards, despite having previously quit Twitter and Facebook after his comments online sparked social media storms.

The timing of the German leaders’ moves to join TikTok appeared to fly in the face of growing concerns in the West over the video-sharing network.

Launched in 2016 by Chinese company ByteDance, TikTok has been threatened with a ban in the United States over concerns about espionage, while the EU is investigating whether its spinoff Lite app poses a risk to young users’ mental health.

But the network’s reach among young people has even led US President Joe Biden to tap it for his election campaign.

In Germany, the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) has been by far the most successful political party on TikTok, originally known for its dance videos and challenges.

Ulrich Siegmund, a member of parliament for the AfD in Germany’s Saxony-Anhalt state, said his party’s engagement on the network has helped “many, many people to open their eyes”.

READ ALSO: A fight for the youth vote: Are German politicians social media savvy enough?

‘We get influenced’

“TikTok gives me the chance to freely communicate our ideas… but also proven facts, and get them into the homes of our country,” Siegmund, who has been crowned the party’s “poster boy” on TikTok by German media, told AFP.

The 34-year-old has often used TikTok to protest against taxpayers’ money being spent on foreigners, especially Ukrainians.

Maximilian Krah, the German far-right MEP caught up in a recent scandal over his alleged links with China and Russia, is also a prominent figure on the network.

Surveys suggest the party’s TikTok drive has coincided with a boom in its popularity among young people.

According to a major poll published in April, the AfD is now the favourite party among young people aged 14 to 29, with a projected 22 percent of the vote – double its score just a year ago.

Founded in 2013, the AfD was “the first to use the platform systematically and strategically”, said political consultant Johannes Hillje, who has written two books on the party’s communications strategy.

The AfD has succeeded in speaking “directly to young people, in a personal way, with emotional messages”, Hillje told AFP.

A man films with a smartphone in front a placard of German far-right Alternative for Germany AfD party with the lettering 'Freedom Party' during a campaign event for the upcoming European Parliament elections, and ahead of Saxony's municipal and state elections, in Dresden, eastern Germany on May 1, 2024.

A man films with a smartphone in front a placard of German far-right Alternative for Germany AfD party with the lettering ‘Freedom Party’ during a campaign event for the upcoming European Parliament elections in Dresden, eastern Germany on May 1st, 2024. Photo by JENS SCHLUETER / AFP

“They simply know how to polarise,” said Madeleine Groebe, 17, an activist with SOE Gegen Rechts, an association of young people against the far right.

“We spend a lot of time on social networks and we get influenced,” she said.

‘Cringe risk’

Germany has nearly 20 million TikTok users, according to official statistics, with almost 60 percent of internet users aged between 12 and 19 regularly browsing the network.

Many of them will be able to vote in the EU elections in June, as the voting age has been lowered to 16 in Germany.

Habeck said he was joining TikTok because he wanted to meet young people “where they are”.

In France, Jordan Bardella, the 28-year-old leader of the far-right National Rally, is already a star on the network — as is far-right Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni with over a million followers.

Hungary’s far-right leader Viktor Orban, 60, has been on TikTok since July 2023, but has struggled to make an impact.

The challenge for newcomers to TikTok will be to find the right tone, preferably without simply copying the far right or leaving themselves open to ridicule.

“The cringe risk is high,” said Hillje, and Scholz’s first video – in which he pays tribute to his trusty briefcase – is hardly very promising.

German politicians are more used to addressing the over-50s, who make up more than half of the electorate.

But they must come to grips with TikTok, Hillje said – otherwise “the TikTok generation risks becoming the AfD generation”.

By Isabelle LE PAGE

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