Article 6QE7Z Tuesday briefing: Why the far right’s success in German state elections can’t be written off as a local phenomenon any more

Tuesday briefing: Why the far right’s success in German state elections can’t be written off as a local phenomenon any more

by
Archie Bland
from World news | The Guardian on (#6QE7Z)

In today's newsletter: Alternative fur Deutschland have deployed Nazi rhetoric throughout their rise - and they are pulling the mainstream further to the right

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Good morning. For the first time since the second world war, a far-right party has won a regional election in Germany. As well as finishing first in Thuringia, where it won nearly 33% of the vote, Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) finished second in Saxony, with 31% - and it did so with none of the normalisation strategy that similar parties have deployed in France or Italy. Instead, the AfD uses Nazi slogans and calls the Berlin Holocaust memorial a monument of shame".

While the AfD demanded to be included in coalition negotiations in both states yesterday, a firewall" designed to keep the party out of government is likely to hold for the foreseeable future. Even so, its success is undoubtedly a seismic moment in German politics. For today's newsletter, I spoke to the Guardian's Berlin correspondent Deborah Cole about how the AFD did it, and whether this is a regional phenomenon or a signpost to something larger. Here are the headlines.

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