Germany Wrestles With AfD ‘Extremist’ Label Battle: What to Know

The designation allows the nation’s intelligence service to employ its highest tier of domestic intelligence monitoring.
Germany Wrestles With AfD ‘Extremist’ Label Battle: What to Know
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is congratulated by CDU MP Hendrik Wust under the eyes of the co-leaders of the AfD party Tino Chrupalla (back L) and Alice Weidel (C) and honorary AfD chairman Alexander Gauland (R), in Berlin, dated May 6, 2025. Odd Andersen/AFP via Getty Images
Owen Evans
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The right-wing populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party—which came a close second in recent federal elections—is now locked in a legal battle with the state to avoid being branded an “extremist” right-wing movement.

The controversial label was imposed by Germany’s domestic intelligence agency on May 2, only to then be put on pause amid the transition to a new power-sharing government following a legal challenge.

Here is what we know about this particular aspect of German law—forged post-war to protect against a return to fascism—and the implications for society and politics.

What Is the Legal Battle?

In post-World War II Germany, the 1949 Basic Law was adopted to prevent any return of National Socialism, and the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) was established to safeguard the country’s democratic order from internal threats.
After classifying the AfD as a suspected extremist movement in 2021, BfV formally announced AfD’s designation on May 2.

The BfV argues that the party poses a threat to the country’s democratic order and accuses the AfD of “disregarding human dignity” through “ongoing agitation” against illegal immigrants, which threatens German social peace, national identity, and security.

The government agency compiled a 1,100-page report on the subject that remains undisclosed to the public.

The BfV stated that the AfD’s approach to ethnicity is “not compatible with the free democratic basic order,” noting that the party does not consider German nationals with an immigration background from predominantly Muslim countries to be equal members of the German people.

After six days under the extremist label, the AfD won a reprieve on May 8 when a court granted its motion for an injunction and forced BfV to temporarily suspend use of the designation while its lawsuit challenging BfV’s action proceeds.
If the AfD loses its lawsuit, the label could be reimposed.

What Does the ‘Extremist’ Label Mean?

The label means that the AfD became subject to the BfV’s highest tier of domestic intelligence monitoring.

“They can be surveyed all across Germany; the entire organization. This is the sharpest sword that this domestic intelligence service has against the AfD,” Richard Schenk, a political analyst at the conservative think tank MCC Brussels, told The Epoch Times.

However, surveillance does not automatically trigger criminal charges, as that remains the purview of the police and prosecutors, nor does it imply harassment, he said.

But it does carry consequences. Many banks are “really skeptical of organizations that are under surveillance,” he said, and venues or employers may shy away.

There are also career risks as civil-service applicants, teachers, police, and soldiers must disclose AfD ties.

“You are in fear of losing your job or not getting the job that you want because you are a member of the AfD. So it is putting a lot of pressure on them. It already has consequences,” Schenk said.

How Does the Surveillance Work?

The BfV handles various threats such as counterintelligence, extremism, Islamism, and left-wing and right-wing radicalism.
Legally, once the BfV flags a group, there are three stages: preliminary monitoring, heightened observation, and then full surveillance, which is the stage of monitoring that the AfD is facing.
“Whenever they identify a political group that might be a threat, they are legally obligated to disclose to a certain degree ... that they have placed this organization or individual person under surveillance,” Schenk said.

How Is this Connected to the New Government? 

Since February, the AfD has been shut out of power by a “cordon sanitaire,” a cross-party pact between the ruling center-right Christian Democrats and their coalition partners in the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD).

On May 6, Friedrich Merz of the Christian Democrats became chancellor, and the party’s Alexander Dobrindt took over as interior minister, overseeing the BfV.

Dobrindt told reporters on May 4: “I’m skeptical, because the aggressive, combative nature of the party against our democracy must be a defining characteristic. The Constitutional Court was right to set high hurdles for banning a party. [I am] convinced that the AfD does not need to be banned; it needs to be governed away, and we need to talk about the issues that have made the AfD so big.”
However, the Social Democratic Party has called for a complete AfD ban.

Schenk said while the Christian Democrats party takes a more pragmatic view in the hope of bringing AfD votes back into their fold, Germany’s mainstream political left, along with the Social Democrats, see any kind of compromise on policies with the AfD and their voters as a kind of “heresy.”

Merz’s thin coalition is fragile and Schenk said a nuclear option could be used to bypass the chancellor and implement an AfD ban.

“So they could go through the state governments, which have the votes in the upper house, and use those votes to initiate a party ban this way, to circumvent the responsibility of the federal government through this,” he said.

What Is the AfD?

Originally a protest movement, the AfD surged to dominance in September 2024 in Thuringia and Saxony, winning one-third of the vote in both states and emerging as the dominant political force in eastern Germany, which was behind the Soviet Iron Curtain until 1989.
It also came second in the national elections in February on staunch conservative positions, which were endorsed by social media platform X owner and former Democrat Elon Musk.

Its policies include strong support for traditional marriage between a man and woman and the nuclear family, the preservation of national independence in the face of the European Union’s increasing power, the preservation of German culture in the face of “European integration” and Islamization, and border security, including the expulsion of illegal immigrants.

Its Young Alternative youth wing in Thuringia was also classified as “right-wing extremist” in March 2024. A German court ruled in January 2025 that AfD Saxony can also be designated as a right extremist group by authorities.
AfD joint leaders Tino Chrupalla and Alice Weidel have repeatedly denied that the party is extremist.

Could AfD be Banned?

Under Article 21(2) of the Basic Law, the Federal Constitutional Court has, to date, outlawed only two parties: the Sozialistische Reichspartei (Socialist Reich Party, SRP), a neo-Nazi-style party banned in 1952; and the Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands (Communist Party of Germany, KPD), banned in 1956.

In the noughts, there were two major attempts to outlaw the extreme-right, ultranationalist party the National Democratic Party (NDP) of Germany. However, those efforts were shot down by the Constitutional Court in 2017.

“The NPD pursues anti-constitutional goals but at the moment, there is an insufficient weight of evidence to make it appear possible that their behavior will result in success,” the court’s top judge declared at the time.

Political scientist Werner J. Patzelt, visiting professor of research at MCC Brussels, told The Epoch Times the bar for banning a party is high.

He said that even those who argue against certain constitutional principles, such as calling for a monarchy, do not qualify as extremist parties.

And if a party is simply “too insignificant to present a concrete danger for the existence of the liberal order of the state itself,” then proportionality principles prevent a ban.

When a ban does occur, such parties are forbidden and dissolved, with their property expropriated.

“It is unlawful to entertain a follow-up organization to such a political party,” Patzelt said.

He warned that banning the AfD would not erase their underlying grievances, often tied to, but not cemented to, working-class voters.

“Even if banning the AfD would be successful, [neither] the problems, nor mindsets, nor the convictions, nor the emotions of those Germans would disappear,” Patzelt said.

James Baresel and Guy Birchall contributed to this report.
Owen Evans
Owen Evans
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Owen Evans is a UK-based journalist covering a wide range of national stories, with a particular interest in civil liberties and free speech.