Germany’s increasingly unpopular and politically irrelevant Green party—which, according to the latest polls, commands just 12% of the national vote— is advocating for a ban on Alternative for Germany (AfD), the nation’s second most popular party. Reports suggest they are also pressuring other globalist parties to support this effort.
The Green Party’s push to ban the AfD—widely seen as an anti-democratic, globalist-driven move—follows a failed attempt by Christian Democratic Union (CDU) MP Marco Wanderwitz. This CDU politician, defeated by an AfD candidate in a 2021 local election, introduced a motion to ban the party in October 2023. However, the support for the effort fizzled out.
Now, as the AfD nears record-high levels of public support, authoritarian globalists—lacking a compelling message of their own capable of resonating with the large sections of the German electorate—are once again attempting to suppress their opposition.
Germany, Forsa poll:
CDU/CSU-EPP: 27% (-1)
AfD-ESN: 23% (+1)
SPD-S&D: 14% (-1)
GRÜNE-G/EFA: 12% (+1)
LINKE-LEFT: 11%
FDP-RE: 4%
BSW-NI: 3%+/- vs. 04-10 March 2025
Fieldwork: 11-17 March 2025
Sample size: 2,501➤ https://t.co/obOCVirbpF pic.twitter.com/Y3SRgan68q
— Europe Elects (@EuropeElects) March 18, 2025
The Managing Director of the Greens parliamentary group Till Steffen stated days ago that a cross-party ban application “should be submitted as soon as possible,” according to the Frankfurter Rundschau.
According to the newspaper, sources within the CDU/CSU—Germany’s nominally “conservative” party—indicate that the Union may back a ban on the AfD if the party is officially designated a “confirmed right-wing extremist” by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), the country’s highly politicized domestic intelligence agency.
To illustrate the agency’s overt politicization, in June 2023, the head of the State Office for the Protection of the Constitution (LfV) in Thuringia—responsible for the state’s internal security—used dehumanizing rhetoric to describe AfD voters, effectively branding all 16 million of them as “fascist scum.”
Thuringia’s state intelligence chief, Stephan Kramer, made remarks strikingly similar to Hillary Clinton’s infamous 2016 “deplorables” comment, where she referred to half of Americans as “deplorables.” Kramer characterized AfD supporters, now constituting well over one-fifth of Germany’s population, as the “brown dregs.”
Originally scheduled for release in 2024, the agency’s report on the AfD has been delayed following the departure of its chief, Thomas Haldenwang. Nancy Faeser, Germany’s globalist extremist activist interior minister, has yet to appoint a successor.
Interior Minister Faeser previously wrote for an Antifa publication, the press organ of the Bund der Antifaschistinnen und Antifaschisten (VVN-BdA), an organization classified as left-wing extremist by the Bavarian state intelligence agency.
Media reports suggest the appointment will occur only after the new Chancellor is sworn in. As a result, a decision from the BfV is now not expected until May 2025 at the earliest.
Earlier, CDU leader Friedrich Merz, who is poised to become the new Chancellor, cautioned against pursuing a ban procedure in early 2024. However, at a parliamentary group meeting in early 2025, he reportedly indicated that the CDU/CSU could only support such an application after the 2025 federal election.
The Social Democratic Party of Germany’s parliamentary group is also awaiting the final opinion from the Office for the Protection of the Constitution.
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