Germany: AfD co-chair Jörg Meuthen quits party, says it′s lurched too far right | News | TheTeCHyWorLD

The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party’s co-chair and spokesman Jörg Meuthen is leaving the party altogether, he confirmed to German public broadcasters on Friday. The 60-year-old said that he was dissatisfied with the right flank of the party and felt that the AfD’s “democratic foundations” were not solid.  “The party’s heart is beating very far to the right today, and permanently at an elevated rate,” Meuthen said. “I do see quite clear totalitarian echoes there.” The economist, who is considered a comparative moderate in the party’s ranks, had already announced plans to step down from the party leadership last year. However, a party summit in December to elect a successor was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Aims to stay on as MEP

Meuthen, who was elected co-leader of the party in 2015, said he wants to keep his job in the European Parliament. He said he is already in talks with other parties, but would not confirm which ones. Meuthen has long been at odds with much of the rest of the AfD and had, over the past two years, repeatedly argued for his party to take a more moderate course. In doing so, he made enemies, especially in the far-right movement around the central state of Thuringia’s leader Björn Höcke. Meuthen’s relationship with the party’s recently elected parliamentary leaders, Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla — who also shares the party chair position with Meuthen — has also been tense. Both Weidel and Chrupalla have continued to support the hardliners within the party.

Meuthen decries AfD’s ‘cult-like’ COVID stance

In his interview with public broadcaster ARD, Meuthen also complained that the AfD had become something of a cult in its politics around the COVID-19 pandemic. Germany has seen widespread protests in opposition to the government handling of the health emergency over the past 18 months, which intelligence agencies have said were driven by the far-right. At best, Meuthen said he can only see a future for the AfD as a regional party for eastern Germany. The AfD’s federal executive board issued a muted response to the resignation. A party statement said it had “noted” the decision and thanked Meuthen for “the further development of the AfD as the only opposition party in Germany.”

  • Germany: AfD party leaders — lurching further to the far-right

    Bernd Lucke (2013 – 2015)

    In 2013 the economist co-founded the Alternative for Germany (AfD) as a euroskeptic party that he went on to represent in the European Parliament in 2014. He left the AfD in 2015 after losing a power struggle against its more xenophobic wing.

  • Germany: AfD party leaders — lurching further to the far-right

    Konrad Adam (2013-2015)

    Konrad Adam, born 1942 in the western city of Wuppertal, is a German journalist and publicist. He was a member of the conservative CDU before becoming a founding member of the AfD. He left the party in 2021, blaming his longtime colleague Alexander Gauland for what he called the AfD’s “tragic” development into a far-right party.

  • Germany: AfD party leaders — lurching further to the far-right

    Frauke Petry (2013 – 2017)

    A chemist by training, Frauke Petry (*1975) began her career as a businesswoman before overcoming Bernd Lucke in an internal power struggle in 2015. But she left the party after another leadership battle in 2017. Petry is known for her anti-Islam views and made headlines in 2016 for saying that German police should “use firearms if necessary” to prevent illegal border crossings.

  • Germany: AfD party leaders — lurching further to the far-right

    Jörg Meuthen (2015 – 2022)

    The economics professor, born in 1961, joined the AfD because of its euroskeptic positions. A nationalist conservative at heart, his rhetoric has been marked by xenophobia against migrants and Muslims. But he tried for years to push back against far-right extremists in the AfD — a struggle he lost. He resigned and left the party in January 2022, dogged by a donations scandal.

  • Germany: AfD party leaders — lurching further to the far-right

    Alexander Gauland (2017-2019)

    The former CDU member, born in 1941, is most notorious for a speech he made to the AfD’s youth wing in June 2018: Acknowledging Germany’s responsibility for the crimes of the Nazi era, he went on to say Germany had a “glorious history and one that lasted a lot longer than those damned 12 years. Hitler and the Nazis are just a speck of bird shit in over 1,000 years of successful German history.”

  • Germany: AfD party leaders — lurching further to the far-right

    Tino Chrupalla (2019 – present)

    Tino Chrupalla, born in 1975 in eastern Germany, joined the AfD in 2015, attracted to its anti-immigration platform. The trained painter and decorator from Saxony has been an MP since 2017 and backs the far-right wing of the party, though he urges more moderate language. Author: Rina Goldenberg


AfD co-leader hits out at Meuthen

However, party co-leader Weidel was sharply critical of the decision. In an interview with the Stuttgarter Nachrichten and Stuttgarter Zeitung newspapers, she accused Meuthen of “throwing mud at the party he has long presided over,” which she said “does not speak to the quality of his character.” Weidel said Meuthen’s resignation may have been linked to plans to lift his immunity as an MEP over a scandal involving illegal party donations. On Thursday, the EU Parliament’s Legal Affairs Committee had voted to strip Meuthen of his immunity, which bolsters the chances that Berlin’s public prosecutor’s office will open an investigation against him over the affair. Last year, the AfD was ordered to pay €500,000 ($558,000) in fines after being found to have accepted donations from a German-Swiss property billionaire three years earlier. Meuthen said his decision to leave was not related to the lifting of immunity. He had earlier said a potential probe would be a chance to clear his name. mm/msh (AFP, dpa, Reuters)

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