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POLITICS

Far-right AfD second strongest force in Brandenburg and Saxony

Germany's far-right AfD party surged to new strengths in elections for two eastern states on Sunday, exit polls said, reflecting anger over Chancellor Angela Merkel's migrant policy and a wealth gap 30 years after the Berlin Wall fell.

Far-right AfD second strongest force in Brandenburg and Saxony
Björn Höcke, chairman of the AfD in Thuringia, celebrating the result in Werder, Brandenburg. Photo: DPA

The Alternative for Germany became the second-strongest party in regional parliaments in both Saxony and Brandenburg, the state which surrounds the capital Berlin, according to final results..

In Saxony, where the radical anti-Islam Pegida street movement was born, the AfD scored 27.5 percent, up sharply from 9.7 percent five years ago, broadcasters ARD and ZDF forecast.

And it won between 23.5 percent in Brandenburg state, compared to 12.2 percent in 2014, said the initial projections.

The outright winners in Saxony were Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU), who scored 32 to 33 percent. In 2014 the party won about 40 percent of the vote.

READ ALSO: Far-right AfD surge expected in east Germany state elections

Michael Kretschmer, state premier of Saxony, and his partner Annett Hofmann at the CDU election party in Dresden. Photo: DPA

18-Uhr-Prognose zur #Sachsenwahl und #Brandenburgwahl pic.twitter.com/slqcbK8J5E

Brandenburg was held by the Social Democrats (SPD), who came first with just over 27 percent, down from 31.9 percent in the previous election in 2014.

AfD co-leader Alexander Gauland said “we are satisfied in Brandenburg as well as in Saxony” where his party had “punished” Merkel's conservatives.

He conceded that “yes, we are not yet the strongest force… We are working on it.”

Though broadly anticipated in pre-election surveys, the outcome delivered another slap to the fragile coalition government of Merkel's CDU and their junior partners the SPD.

READ ALSO: 'We are heading up': Why the Green party is gaining support in eastern Germany

'We are the people'

Aside from railing against asylum-seekers and Islam, the AfD has protested against plans to shutter coal mines to protect the climate and capitalized on resentment about perceived injustices since the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall.

“Let's complete the change”, it had vowed in the campaign, referring to the peaceful revolution that ended the one-party state and in 1990 brought national reunification.

Voter turnout was high as the tense political atmosphere mobilised both AfD supporters and their opponents.

All other parties had declared before the vote that they would not cooperate with the AfD, forcing the mainstream groups into new coalitions to achieve governing majorities.

The SPD celebrates in Potsdam, Brandenburg. Photo: DPA

The AfD has long co-opted the former pro-democracy chant “We are the people” and turned it against what it labels the “Merkel regime”.

Eastern Germany is home to several of the AfD's most extremist leaders, among them Björn Höcke, who has labelled Berlin's Holocaust memorial a “monument of shame”.

His close ally, former paratrooper Andreas Kalbitz, 46, who has had deep ties to right-wing extremist groups, was the top candidate in Brandenburg.

Der Spiegel weekly has reported that in 2007 Kalbitz joined known German neo-Nazis on a visit to Athens that came to police attention when a swastika flag was flown from a hotel balcony.

Kalbitz confirmed to the magazine that he joined the trip but insisted that the event “was not conducive to arousing my further interest or approval”.

Fragile coalition

The AfD, formed initially as a eurosceptic group, now focuses mainly on fear and anger over Germany's mass migrant influx since 2015.

READ ALSO: Could the far-right AfD really win in upcoming German state elections?

Merkel, who also grew up in the east, had avoided campaigning on the ground ahead of Sunday's polls in the region, where she has in the past faced harsh abuse.

The veteran leader has already pledged to step down when her current term ends in 2021, but regional election upsets could speed up her government's demise.

A third election will be held on October 27 in the eastern state of Thuringia.

Poor results for the SPD, already demoralized by a string of election defeats, were expected to again boost internal critics who want the party to leave Merkel's government quickly.

Meanwhile, the Green party, which has never been strong in the east of Germany, made gains, reaching about 9 percent in Saxony – plus 3.3 points – and  around 10 percent in Brandenburg (a gain of 3.8 points).

All parties have ruled out forming a coalition with the AfD.

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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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