Germany’s domestic intelligence agency has officially classified the right-wing party Alternative for Germany (AfD) as extremist.
This means that intelligence services now have the right to keep it under surveillance.
BfV said in a statement that AfD’s approach to ethnicity is “not compatible with the free democratic basic order.”
According to BfV’s statement, AfD does not consider German nationals with a migration background from Muslim-origin countries as equal members of the German people.
BfV Vice President Sinan Selen and Vice President Dr. Silke Willems in a joint statement said: “We have come to the conviction that the Alternative for Germany is a definitively right-wing extremist movement.”
In the party’s first response to the report, the leader of a regional parliamentary group, Anton Baron, said: “It is sad to see the state of democracy in our country when the established parties now resort to the most politically questionable means to act against the strongest opposition party.”
Brandner said that this has “nothing to do with law and order, and is a purely political in the fight of the cartel parties against the AfD.”
The other parties have failed across the board in recent years and driven Germany into the abyss, Brandner said.
“The people know this and therefore vote for us,” he said
“In current polls, the AfD is the strongest party,” they said, adding that the “opposition party is now being publicly discredited and criminalized shortly before the change of government.”
“The associated, targeted interference in the democratic decision-making process is therefore clearly politically motivated.”
The Epoch Times has contacted AfD for comment.
The decision comes shortly before conservative leader Friedrich Merz is due to be elected as Germany’s new chancellor.
Merz’s center-right CDU emerged as the winner of the February elections and is now in a coalition with the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), which is calling for a party ban.
“The whole thing must now continue in the necessary care, resilient and continuous without errors. It is clear to me that the ban must come,” she added.
Outgoing Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Friday that proceedings to ban the party must not be rushed.
“I am against a quick shot, we have to evaluate the classification carefully,” he said at a church convention in the northern city of Hanover.