Europe | Rightwards and upwards

How the AfD got its swagger back

Germany’s hard-right party is gaining support even as it radicalises

Alice Weidel, AfD national chairwoman, waits in front of a spotlight for a TV interview
Photograph: dpa
|BAUTZEN AND WEISSWASSER

IT IS A bitingly cold evening in Bautzen, a handsome town nestled in the hills of the Oberlausitz, deep in the east German state of Saxony. But spirits are high at the election stand of the hard-right Alternative for Germany (afd). “Our land first, because we love Germany!” proclaim banners in the party’s trademark bright blue. “The mood inside the party is really good,” beams Frank Peschel, who sits in Saxony’s parliament. The afd took 39% of the vote here at last year’s European election, and your correspondent struggles to find any local not planning to vote for it at the national election on February 23rd. “The left calls us Nazis, but we just want a normal life,” says Simon, a 20-year-old. He will deliver his first vote to the party next month.

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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Rightwards and upwards”

From the January 18th 2025 edition

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