German far-right party calls EU a “failed project”

German far-right party calls EU a “failed project” | INFBusiness.com

The German far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) has called the EU a “failed project” and called for it to be re-established as a ‘Confederation of European Nations’, the party said in its EU election programme that was adopted on Sunday (6 August).

“We think the EU cannot be reformed and see it as a failed project,” the party programme reads.

“Therefore, we are striving for a ‘federation of European nations’, a European economic community and community of interests yet to be founded, in which the sovereignty of the member states is preserved,” it continues.

The new party programme has, however, been somewhat toned down from AfD’s previous positions. A draft proposal of the election programme in June called for its outright dissolution. During the German general elections in 2021, the party also advocated for Germany to leave the bloc. 

However, in order to appeal to a broader voter base, the AfD party heads Tino Chrupalla and Alice Weidel pushed for a softer approach towards the EU. The final version is therefore a compromise with the more radical wing of the AfD that is still pushing for Germany to leave the bloc immediately. 

German far-right party calls EU a “failed project” | INFBusiness.com

German far-right led into European elections by anti-EU hardliner

German far-right party AfD has decided on a hardliner advocating for a “Europe of nation states” as their lead candidate for the upcoming EU elections. Meanwhile, it remains unclear whether the party will push for Germany to exit the EU.

The AfD has recently also strengthened its collaboration with other far-right parties by formally joining the Identity and Democracy Party (ID). Currently, the party’s MEPs are members of ID’s parliamentary group, but the AfD as a whole is not part of the party family.

The far-right AfD is consistently polling at second place with over 20% in recent months – outperforming even the SPD of Chancellor Olaf Scholz and coming dangerously close to the leading conservative CDU/CSU.

The election programme of the AfD was met with fierce reactions, with Manfred Weber, who helms the European People’s Party (EPP), calling it a “declaration of war against the [European] Union”.

“It stands against all that previous generations have fought for,” Weber told German broadcaster ZDF. 

While Weber emphasised that he would exclude any collaboration with the AfD on the European level, he also defended his rapprochement with the far-right party Brothers of Italy of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. Unlike the AfD, Meloni’s party is not part of the ID group but belongs to the European Conservatives and Reformers (ECR).

Weber emphasised that Meloni cannot be compared with the AfD and that the “firewall” against the far-right “must be clearly defined”.

Meanwhile, Vice-President of the European Parliament and former German justice minister Katarina Barley criticised Weber for not distancing himself enough from the far-right parties, especially Meloni. 

“The firewall of the conservatives against the right-wing populists and the fascists no longer exists,” she told the newspaper Augsburger Allgemeine Zeitung. 

“Especially in Germany, we are experiencing a tight right-wing course in the CDU and CSU.” Weber has “deliberately opened the flank to the right and makes no secret of it,” she added. 

German far-right party calls EU a “failed project” | INFBusiness.com

German far-right works for EU’s ‘controlled dissolution’

The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) is set to make the controlled dissolution of the EU one of its key targets for the upcoming European elections, with its leader Tino Chrupalla calling Hungary’s Prime Minister  Viktor Orbán one of his …

[Edited by Nathalie Weatherald]

Read more with EURACTIV

German far-right party calls EU a “failed project” | INFBusiness.com

Austrian leader backs far-right idea of enshrining cash in constitutionAustria’s conservative Chancellor Karl Nehammer wants the right to use cash enshrined in the constitution, he told Austrian media in remarks published on Friday (4 August), an idea the far-right Freedom Party has been pushing for years.

Source: euractiv.com

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