German lawyers: Ban on far-right AfD 'likely successful' (www.dw.com)
from inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world to world@lemmy.world on 26 Jun 21:04
https://lemmy.world/post/48687298

#world

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comrade_twisty@feddit.org on 26 Jun 21:25 next collapse

Unfortunately, they will be in power and meddle with the courts before anything can happen.

mycodesucks@lemmy.world on 26 Jun 21:41 next collapse

Good call about not banning it because it’s too popular. Just ignore it and wait for people to come to their senses on logic.

It worked to stop Trump in the US.

/s

nao@sh.itjust.works on 26 Jun 21:57 next collapse

Last time the reason was they are too small to ban. Now they are too large?

rwrwefwef@sh.itjust.works on 26 Jun 22:51 collapse

Banning a small party would be politically damaging, banning a big party would be institutionally damaging.

mycodesucks@lemmy.world on 26 Jun 22:54 collapse

You know what else is institutionally damaging?

Right-wing populist rule.

anomnom@sh.itjust.works on 27 Jun 17:23 collapse

I guess the Nazis have arrived to downvote this fact.

A_norny_mousse@piefed.zip on 27 Jun 05:31 collapse

This has been Germany’s strategy wrt far-right populism for decades.

It worked really well to stop them.

/s

rwrwefwef@sh.itjust.works on 26 Jun 22:54 next collapse

Germany has so much red tape in its constitution due to fascism that it pretty much always has an excuse to ban whatever it wants, from the far right to Palestine protests. Question is, do they have the will to do it?

avidamoeba@lemmy.ca on 26 Jun 22:55 next collapse

I wonder what people think voters whose grievances are represented by the AfD would do when the party is banned. Probably they’d have their minds changed and quietly vote status quo.

/s

MadameBisaster@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 27 Jun 05:05 next collapse

They would need a new party that needs to be created and need to get popular. And the new one would hopefully learn to not break the constitution.

Are you argumenting that partys are above laws and constitution?

avidamoeba@lemmy.ca on 27 Jun 05:31 collapse

Are you argumenting that partys are above laws and constitution?

It depends on how popular it is. If it’s 5% of the pop- def not. If it’s 30%, probably not. If it’s 60% then the laws and constitution might need amendment.

But that’s besides my point. If you rely on forcing a third of Germany to make another party to represent it, you might not like what the new party’s popularity would be.

MadameBisaster@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 27 Jun 05:50 collapse

Ok, now I am confused. You are saying that they, as a party with around 30% popularity, shouldnt be above the law but the law shouldnt be enforced because it may make them more popular?

avidamoeba@lemmy.ca on 27 Jun 13:54 collapse

I’m suggesting that just enforcing the law without providing an aternative (for AfD), at this point in time, is likely to make them (the figures that formed the AfD) more popular, along with their new party they’ll inevitably form. I doubt Germany would round all of them up and throw them in jail. I think the time to ban the AfD was when there were significantly fewer people on their bandwagon. The other comment under mine says AfD voters aren’t too fervent supporters, so perhaps it won’t go the way I think it would. But that’s not my bet. (What I think would happen isn’t what I hope btw.)

When I say alternative I don’t mean another deporters party but with nicer messaging. That clearly doesn’t work. I mean an alternative that gives people real improvements by counteracting the austerity policies of the past for example.

MadameBisaster@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 27 Jun 14:03 next collapse

SPD and C*U are already doing a lot of anti immigration stuff. Immigration is sinking for years now and more and more get exported. What is actually missing for them being an alternative for AfD followers?

Also hopefully the new party they form would learn to not break laws anymore.

avidamoeba@lemmy.ca on 27 Jun 14:11 collapse

Sorry I added an edit abt what I meant by alternative before I saw your reply.

MadameBisaster@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 27 Jun 15:31 collapse

Ah read the update. Not sure what you mean with austerity policies? Also partys with real improvements like the leftist parties?

BlindPenguin@lemmy.world on 27 Jun 18:22 collapse

is likely to make them (the figures that formed the AfD) more popular, along with their new party they’ll inevitably form.

Any follow-up party is automatically banned too. That’s how this law works.

A_norny_mousse@piefed.zip on 27 Jun 05:35 next collapse

Most of these voters are not extremist. They just go for the Platzhirsch (top dog) of what sounds good to them. Not many will protest when they get banned, and will accept that AfD “went a bit too far” or whatever euphemism they choose.

avidamoeba@lemmy.ca on 27 Jun 13:56 collapse

Perhaps. Only one way to find out 🔨

x00z@lemmy.world on 27 Jun 14:13 collapse

They have no grievances. They believe they have grievances because they have been manipulated by the AfD to need an enemy which the AfD presents them on a platter. It’s literally the only thing far right politics boils down to so the people give them power which they can use to steal money.

rimu@piefed.social on 27 Jun 01:19 next collapse

‘Successful’ in the very narrow sense that it would be legal to do so. But not successful in actually changing anyone’s politics or the material conditions that give rise to the AfD.

Nomad@infosec.pub on 27 Jun 05:09 next collapse

Well, it would probably splinter them into a few new parties as their extreme wing would need to be split off to avoid the same thing repeating with the next party.

This milder form would still be popular and the backlash could catapult them to power. But they might be in power soon anyways.

Best case they will get temporarily weakened and the Germans have time to learn from the American deserter and maybe the rise of the far right won’t be en vougue that much.

birne@feddit.org on 27 Jun 06:47 collapse

They couldn’t splinter into new parties. Successor parties would be banned as well by this decision.

Nomad@infosec.pub on 27 Jun 13:48 collapse

I guess you would be able to ban some central people from holding political office for a few years. But to can’t can every member from politics forever.

BlindPenguin@lemmy.world on 27 Jun 18:18 collapse

The AfD is pretty much the glue that is currently holding all the opposing far-right factions together. The moment they’re gone, there will be a lot of infighting.

A_norny_mousse@piefed.zip on 27 Jun 05:34 next collapse

the material conditions that give rise to the AfD

This here. Thatcherism, Schröderism, Reaganism - libertarianism, austerity narratives & politics, “lobbyism” aka pro-billionaire politics aka taking legal bribes - they all helped advance far-right populism to the mainstream.

Plus most other (not even necessarily right-wing) parties helping them along by pointing the finger in the wrong direction: immigrants.

avidamoeba@lemmy.ca on 27 Jun 13:59 next collapse

This is what I was getting at in my comment. There’s got to be an alternative that addresses those material conditions to durably prevent a right resurgence.

AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world on 27 Jun 14:54 collapse

What did the piano playing kid from Charlie Brown/ Peanuts do?

homoludens@feddit.org on 27 Jun 06:52 next collapse

No one thinks it will suddenly change the poltical views of all their voters. The AfD will no longer sit in every TV show spouting their bullshit. They will not get millions and millions of public money. And they will not become our government. That’s not a narrow success - that would be huge.

chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world on 27 Jun 15:40 next collapse

Exactly. Since when has the mainstream ever succeeded in de-radicalizing a group of political outsiders?

nightlily@leminal.space on 27 Jun 16:50 collapse

Fascists are not permitted a place in democracy as they are anti-democratic. It’s a simple principle that is part of what the German constitution is founded on. Letting them continue while the complex topics they propose simplistic fascist solutions for are addressed, is not an option.

panthera_@lemmy.today on 27 Jun 03:33 next collapse

The way to undermine the AfD’s popularity is to adopt their popular views but in a milder form.

MadameBisaster@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 27 Jun 04:59 next collapse

So what the C*U is doing? Doesnt really look that effective ^^

panthera_@lemmy.today on 27 Jun 14:31 collapse

From visaverge.com/…/friedrich-merz-leads-conservative…

Chancellor Friedrich Merz has implemented sharply more restrictive migration policies while prioritizing pathways for specialized labor.

Permanent border controls and technology-driven surveillance led to a 42% drop in irregular crossings during 2025.

The Skilled Immigration Act was updated to fast-track visas for nurses and engineers to address labor shortages.

nightlily@leminal.space on 27 Jun 17:12 collapse

As a skilled immigrant to Germany, Merz didn’t do shit except further restrict pathways we had towards citizenship. The immigration offices remain underfunded and overworked to the extent that many skilled immigrants would rather leave Germany (or indeed are forced out due to missed deadlines from immigration processing) than continue to deal with them.

njm1314@lemmy.world on 27 Jun 05:04 next collapse

A milder form of racism and hatred? Isn’t that just normal conservativism?

panthera_@lemmy.today on 27 Jun 14:26 collapse

The AfD could be motivated by racism and hatred. The centrist motivation would be to preserve a country’s cultural identity. This could be achieved by only permitting migrants with talent or needed skills.

njm1314@lemmy.world on 27 Jun 16:20 next collapse

Could be motivated by racism and hatred? You doubt that for some reason?

foreverknew@lemmy.zip on 27 Jun 16:38 next collapse

Could you elaborate on what constitutes the German cultural identity you mentioned?

nightlily@leminal.space on 27 Jun 17:30 collapse

There’s already an Einbürgerungstest as part of permanent residency and citizenship. Many native born Germans couldn’t pass it.

BlindPenguin@lemmy.world on 27 Jun 05:34 next collapse

That is quite literally the opposite of what every reputable political scientist is saying…

Also, what the fuck is the “milder form” of deporting German citizens?

panthera_@lemmy.today on 27 Jun 14:23 collapse

The centrist view on immigration would only permit migrants who have talent or needed skills.

BlindPenguin@lemmy.world on 27 Jun 14:51 collapse

Besides the fact that we already had skilled-worker immigration programs for decades, you didn’t answer my question. You want the other parties to adopt AfD views “in a milder form”. Which views are those gonna be? Asylum? Immigration? Because the AfD is conflating those. And judging from their little meeting in 2024, their politicians made it clear that they also planning to deport German citizens that don’t fit their racist ideas.

EDIT: Oh, and before i forget. There are other topics the AfD is going against “the mainstream”. I wonder what the “milder form” is there. The topics among others:

  • Climate change denial
  • LGBT+ rights denial
  • Withdrawal from Nato
  • Stripping citizenships
  • Weaken or leave the EU
  • Reverse gay marriage
  • Ending military support to Ukraine
homoludens@feddit.org on 27 Jun 06:54 next collapse

Did you forget an /s?

A_norny_mousse@piefed.zip on 27 Jun 11:22 collapse

Because that has worked so well in the past 20 years.

A_norny_mousse@piefed.zip on 27 Jun 05:29 next collapse

Let’s be clear: could be successful.

This means that it would have to be brought to the constitutional court first. I’m not saying this isn’t likely to happen, but I don’t know how likely. Just my obligatory clickbait headline correction.

DanceMomsSavedMe@lemmy.zip on 27 Jun 15:04 collapse

Yeah let’s let Germany figure it out internally through diplomatic channels.

Its historically worked out very well!

Twice

daychilde@lemmy.world on 27 Jun 17:08 next collapse

You’re complaining that they’re trying to basically ban nazis?

Thalion@lemmy.ca on 27 Jun 17:21 collapse

I don’t think it’s very relevant to WW1/The German Empire