The AfD are circling like vultures. But in Berlin, I found a new, young left rising against them | Owen Jones
On election night, as the far right rose nationwide, Die Linke made crucial gains in the capital. But its supporters see the hard road ahead
Will democracy still prevail in the west in a decade? It was certainly a question weighing on the minds of the hundreds of Die Linke supporters crammed into a former film studio overlooking Berlin's Tempelhof airport last weekend. They were gathered to listen to the results of Germany's election - and their reactions were mixed. The far-right Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) had just doubled its support in federal elections, securing a fifth of the vote, yet Die Linke came top in the capital, albeit with 21% of the vote. They cheered, hugged, kissed and cried.
We were in Neukolln, a diverse neighbourhood of south-eastern Berlin, and the triumphant candidate was Ferat Kocak, a charismatic Kurdish-German leftist. His grassroots campaign knocked on every door in the district - not unusual in the UK and US, but a novelty in Germany. For several years, the left has been in a kind of shocked paralysis about what to do with the rising right," explained 30-year-old activist Isabelle: grassroots campaigning, she believes, brought the left out of its bubble.
Owen Jones is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...