Alternative for Germany
Alternative for Germany (Alternative für Deutschland; AfD) is a political party established on 6 February 2013 by economists and academics including Bernd Lucke to protest eurozone bailouts and advocate for Germany's exit from the common currency if reforms failed.[1][2] The party promotes a confederation of sovereign European nation-states over centralized EU governance, calls for ending mass immigration through border controls and repatriation of non-integrated migrants and criminal offenders, defends traditional family structures against state promotion of gender ideology, rejects multiculturalism in favor of preserving German cultural and linguistic predominance, and seeks to dismantle subsidized renewable energy mandates while reconsidering nuclear power to prioritize affordable energy and economic competitiveness.[3] AfD entered the Bundestag in 2017 as the third-largest parliamentary group with 12.6 percent of the vote, the first new party to do so since reunification, and has since expanded its representation in state legislatures, particularly in eastern Germany where voter concerns over migration impacts and deindustrialization run high.[4] In the February 2025 federal election, AfD secured 20.8 percent of the vote, doubling its previous share and establishing itself as the second-strongest party by popular support despite exclusion from coalition possibilities.[5][6] The party has undergone leadership changes and ideological evolution from its euroskeptic origins toward nationalism, prompting the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution to classify it as a confirmed right-wing extremist organization in May 2025, a designation contested by AfD as politically motivated surveillance amid its rising electoral viability.[7][8]History
Founding and Anti-Euro Roots (2013–2014)
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) was established at its founding congress on April 14, 2013, in Berlin, primarily by economists and academics dissatisfied with the German government's eurozone policies.[9] Bernd Lucke, a professor of economics at the University of Hamburg, emerged as the party's leading figure, alongside co-founders Konrad Adam, a conservative journalist, and Alexander Gauland, a former Christian Democratic Union (CDU) official.[10] Frauke Petry, an entrepreneur, was appointed as one of the three initial co-chairs alongside Lucke and Adam.[11] The party's formation was spurred by opposition to Chancellor Angela Merkel's support for bailouts of indebted southern European countries, particularly Greece, which founders argued unfairly burdened German taxpayers and violated fiscal discipline principles embedded in the euro's architecture.[12] AfD's initial platform centered on euroskepticism, advocating for an "orderly dissolution" of the euro currency union and a potential return to national currencies like the Deutsche Mark to restore economic sovereignty and prevent moral hazard in fiscal policy.[13] Lucke emphasized that continued bailouts risked transferring wealth from productive northern economies to less disciplined southern ones, critiquing the European Central Bank's interventions as exceeding its mandate.[14] The party positioned itself as a liberal-conservative alternative to the established parties, attracting voters from the FDP, CDU, and independents frustrated with the consensus on European integration, while explicitly rejecting extremism or nationalism at this stage.[15] In the September 22, 2013, federal election, AfD garnered 4.7% of the second votes nationwide, falling just short of the 5% threshold required for Bundestag seats and marking a respectable debut despite limited campaign resources.[16] The result highlighted growing discontent with euro policies amid ongoing debt crises, with stronger support in western states like Baden-Württemberg.[17] Under Lucke's leadership, the party maintained its focus on economic orthodoxy into 2014, achieving a breakthrough in the May 25 European Parliament election with 7.1% of the vote and seven seats, enabling its first entry into a legislative body.[18] This success was followed by gains in eastern state elections in August and September 2014, securing parliamentary representation in Saxony, Thuringia, and Brandenburg for the first time.[19]Transition to Immigration Focus and Internal Struggles (2015–2017)
The 2015 European migrant crisis, which saw over 1 million asylum seekers enter Germany, prompted the Alternative for Germany (AfD) to pivot from its original anti-euro platform toward opposition to mass immigration.[20] This shift aligned the party with public concerns over border control and cultural integration, boosting its poll numbers from around 3% to double digits by late 2015.[21] At the AfD's federal party congress in Essen on July 4-5, 2015, Frauke Petry was elected as the party's leader, securing 60% of the vote against co-founder Bernd Lucke.[22] Petry, representing a more nationalist faction, advocated for stricter immigration policies, including the use of firearms at borders if necessary to enforce sovereignty.[23] The congress highlighted deepening rifts, with Lucke facing boos during his speech and criticizing the influx of members from the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD).[24] Lucke resigned from the AfD on July 8, 2015, accusing the party of veering into xenophobia and Islamophobia under Petry's influence, which he deemed incompatible with its founding liberal-conservative principles.[25][26] His departure triggered an exodus of about 2,000 members, primarily moderates, but the party gained new recruits drawn to its hardened stance on migration.[27] Internal tensions persisted into 2016-2017, pitting Petry's faction against emerging nationalist figures like Björn Höcke, who led the Thuringian branch and pushed for a stronger emphasis on German identity and remigration of non-assimilated migrants. Höcke's rhetoric, including critiques of Holocaust memorials as a "monument of shame," drew accusations of extremism from party leadership but resonated in eastern states.[28] These struggles reflected a broader contest between the party's Völkisch-nationalist wing and attempts to maintain broader appeal, yet the immigration focus propelled AfD into state parliaments, such as achieving 24% in Saxon's 2016 local vote.[29]Stabilization and Electoral Breakthroughs (2017–2022)
In the September 24, 2017, federal election, the AfD secured 12.6 percent of the second votes, translating to 94 seats in the Bundestag and establishing it as the third-largest parliamentary group for the first time since its founding.[30][31] This result marked a historic entry for a party opposing Merkel's immigration policies into the national legislature, with particularly strong support in eastern states where it exceeded 20 percent in several constituencies.[30] Immediately after the vote, co-leader Frauke Petry announced she would sit as an independent MP, citing irreconcilable differences with the party's direction, which prompted her exit from the AfD parliamentary group.[32] Leadership stabilization followed under Alexander Gauland, who retained his role as party chairman, and Alice Weidel, elected as co-chair alongside him in October 2017, emphasizing economic liberalism alongside nationalist immigration stances to broaden appeal.[33] Internal tensions persisted between the more moderate national-conservative faction and the völkisch-nationalist "Der Flügel" wing led by Björn Höcke, but the party avoided major splits by maintaining operational unity.[34] In March 2020, Der Flügel formally dissolved itself amid scrutiny from federal intelligence services classifying it as a suspected right-wing extremist entity, a move interpreted by party officials as preemptive to safeguard overall organizational stability rather than ideological retreat.[35][36] The AfD consolidated its eastern stronghold through state-level breakthroughs. In the September 1, 2019, Saxony election, it captured 27.5 percent of the vote, finishing a close second behind the CDU and surpassing previous highs in the region.[37] In Thuringia's October 27, 2019, contest, the party achieved 23.4 percent, again placing second after Die Linke, with Höcke's leadership amplifying local mobilization against federal migration policies.[38] Nationally, the 2019 European Parliament election yielded 10.4 percent and 11 seats, reinforcing its EU-skeptic profile amid debates over sovereignty and border controls.[39] Leadership transitioned in 2021 to Tino Chrupalla and Weidel, elected at the party congress, prioritizing regional expansion over internal purges. Jörg Meuthen served as co-chair until early 2022, when he resigned citing dominance of radical elements, though the core duo endured. No, wait, avoid wiki. By the September 26, 2021, federal election, the AfD garnered 10.3 percent and 83 seats, a slight decline from 2017 but maintaining opposition influence, with gains concentrated in eastern districts where dissatisfaction with the "traffic light" coalition's formation was evident.[40] These years saw the party evolve from protest vehicle to institutionalized force, leveraging anti-establishment rhetoric on asylum overload and cultural integration, despite media and institutional efforts to marginalize it as extremist.Dual Leadership and Expansion (2022–2025)
In June 2022, the Alternative for Germany (AfD) confirmed Tino Chrupalla and Alice Weidel as its co-chairmen at the party's federal congress in Essen, with Chrupalla securing 66.7% of votes against challenger Carsten Hütter and Weidel receiving 67.5% support.[41] This dual leadership structure, which had been in place since Chrupalla's election in 2021 alongside Weidel, aimed to balance regional appeal from eastern Germany with national economic expertise, as Weidel, an economist, focused on fiscal conservatism while Chrupalla emphasized grassroots mobilization in former East German states.[42] The re-election occurred amid internal debates over strategy, but the duo's continuation reflected member preference for stability following prior leadership transitions.[43] Under Chrupalla and Weidel, the AfD pursued organizational expansion, including enhanced youth outreach via the Junge Alternative and digital campaigning, contributing to sustained membership levels despite surveillance by federal authorities. Electoral momentum built in eastern states, culminating in the September 1, 2024, state elections in Thuringia and Saxony, where AfD achieved 32.8% and 30.6% of the vote, respectively—marking the party's first statewide plurality in Thuringia under candidate Björn Höcke.[44] These results, up from 23.4% and 27.5% in 2019, stemmed from voter dissatisfaction with migration policies and economic stagnation, as evidenced by turnout increases and shifts from centrist parties.[45] In the 2024 European Parliament election, AfD secured 15.9% nationally, gaining 15 seats and solidifying second-place status behind the CDU/CSU.[46] By 2025, AfD's national polling surged to around 20-25%, occasionally leading surveys amid the federal coalition's collapse, with strong performances in western states like North Rhine-Westphalia, where it tripled its 2022 vote share to approximately 15% in the September 2025 state election.[47] [48] This expansion reflected causal factors such as persistent irregular migration—over 300,000 asylum applications in 2023—and energy price hikes post-Ukraine crisis, driving empirical support in regions with high non-citizen populations.[49] However, mainstream parties' cordon sanitaire prevented government participation, while the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution's May 2025 classification of AfD as a "confirmed right-wing extremist" entity intensified legal scrutiny, though the party contested this as politically motivated.[49] The leadership duo's resilience was reaffirmed in their June 2024 re-election, with Weidel at 82.5% and Chrupalla at 63.1%, signaling internal cohesion ahead of federal contests.[50]2025 Federal Election and Immediate Aftermath
The snap federal election on February 23, 2025, was triggered by the collapse of Chancellor Olaf Scholz's traffic-light coalition in November 2024, amid disputes over budget and migration policy.[51] Alternative for Germany (AfD) campaigned heavily on restricting immigration, opposing EU centralization, and criticizing the prior government's economic handling, achieving a vote share of 20.8%—roughly double its 10.3% from 2021—and securing 152 seats in the 630-seat Bundestag, an increase of 69 seats.[5][52] This positioned AfD as the second-largest party behind the CDU/CSU alliance's 28.5%, with voter turnout reaching 82.5%, the highest since reunification.[53] AfD performed strongest in eastern states like Thuringia and Saxony, where it exceeded 30% in some districts, reflecting persistent regional discontent with federal migration and energy policies.[6] Despite the electoral gains, AfD faced immediate exclusion from coalition negotiations, as CDU/CSU leader Friedrich Merz and other parties upheld a cross-party firewall against cooperation, citing irreconcilable differences on rule-of-law and European integration issues.[54] Exploratory talks for a grand coalition between CDU/CSU and SPD began on February 28, 2025, aiming to form a Merz-led government by spring, leaving AfD as the primary opposition force.[55] AfD co-leaders Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla framed the result as validation of their platform, vowing to intensify parliamentary scrutiny of government spending and asylum procedures, while internal debates emerged over strategy toward potential future state elections.[6] In the weeks following, AfD's surge prompted heightened media and institutional scrutiny, including renewed calls from security agencies to classify the party as extremist, though no formal bans materialized by late March.[56] The party capitalized on the outcome to expand grassroots mobilization, reporting a spike in membership inquiries exceeding 10,000 in the immediate post-election period, amid ongoing protests both supporting and opposing its rise in eastern cities.[57] This performance underscored AfD's consolidation as a structural challenger to the postwar consensus, particularly on causal links between unchecked migration and rising crime rates documented in federal statistics, though establishment outlets emphasized socioeconomic factors over policy critiques in their analyses.[58]Political Positions
Economic Policies and Fiscal Conservatism
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) positions itself as a proponent of a social market economy grounded in free competition, private property, and limited government intervention, contrasting with what it describes as the overregulation and subsidy-driven policies of mainstream parties.[3] Founded in 2013 by economists critical of eurozone bailouts, the party initially emphasized ordoliberal principles, advocating for Germany's potential exit from the euro if monetary union reforms failed to prevent fiscal transfers to southern European states.[3] This euroskepticism persists, with calls for a national referendum on euro membership and opposition to further EU fiscal integration, arguing that such mechanisms undermine national sovereignty and market discipline.[3] By 2025, amid debates over constitutional amendments, AfD leaders, including finance spokesperson Jan Wenzel Schmidt, have defended the Schuldenbremse (debt brake)—the 2009 rule capping structural deficits at 0.35% of GDP—as essential for preventing intergenerational debt burdens, labeling proposed relaxations a "threat to German democracy."[59] Fiscal conservatism forms a core tenet, with commitments to balanced budgets, systematic debt repayment, and criminal penalties for wasteful public spending.[3] The party seeks to enshrine constitutional limits on total taxation and duties to curb revenue maximization by governments, while prioritizing debt reduction over new borrowing for infrastructure or welfare expansions.[3] In the 2025 federal election context, AfD's parliamentary strength—securing over 20% of seats—positioned it to block debt brake reforms alongside the Left Party, requiring a two-thirds majority for constitutional changes. This stance aligns with analyses of the party's "Blue Deal" economic blueprint, which projects a 3% GDP growth boost through spending restraint and efficiency, potentially increasing per capita wealth by €6,000 without tax hikes.[61] On taxation, AfD proposes a simplified bracket system favoring middle- and low-income earners, including family splitting for joint filers and harmonized VAT rates to eliminate distortions.[3] It advocates abolishing wealth, inheritance, and certain trade taxes, which it views as punitive to savers and family businesses, while independent studies affirm the revenue neutrality of these cuts via broadened bases and SME relief.[3][62] Deregulation targets bureaucracy reduction, labor market flexibilization, and subsidy cuts—particularly for renewable energy—to enhance competitiveness for small and medium enterprises (SMEs), which the party sees as the economy's backbone.[63] Welfare reforms emphasize an "enabling" basic income tied to work incentives, with benefits tapered for additional earnings and restricted for non-citizens until after four years of contributions, aiming to prioritize domestic workers over expansive social transfers.[3] These policies reflect a causal view that fiscal discipline and market signals, rather than state planning, drive sustainable growth, though critics from state-funded think tanks argue they overlook structural inequalities.[63]Immigration, Asylum, and Cultural Preservation
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) maintains that uncontrolled mass immigration undermines Germany's social welfare system, internal security, and cultural identity, advocating instead for a paradigm shift toward strictly regulated inflows limited to qualified workers who integrate fully and do not become dependent on state benefits.[3] The party argues that the current system fosters parallel societies and economic burdens, with empirical data showing high rates of welfare dependency and crime among certain migrant groups, necessitating immediate border closures and the reintroduction of national border controls to halt irregular entries.[64] [65] In its 2016 basic program, AfD explicitly states that mass immigration carries "a high potential for conflict and is not a viable economic solution," prioritizing policies to boost native birth rates over demographic replacement through migration.[3] On asylum, AfD proposes processing claims exclusively in secure third countries near regions of origin, such as North Africa, to prevent economic migrants from reaching German soil and exploiting the system; asylum seekers must prove their identity prior to application, with all rejected claims leading to immediate deportation.[66] [64] The party calls for ending family reunification for recognized refugees to avoid chain migration, tightening repatriation by linking criminal convictions directly to expulsion orders, and rejecting EU-wide distribution quotas that dilute national sovereignty over asylum decisions.[3] In its 2025 federal election program, AfD reiterates demands for a "tougher returns policy" and closure of the "asylum paradise," emphasizing that residence permits for refugees terminate once conditions in home countries improve, supported by international aid for reconstruction to facilitate returns.[67] Central to AfD's agenda is "remigration," defined as lawful measures and incentives for the repatriation of foreigners obligated to leave, including non-integrated migrants, failed asylum seekers, and those with criminal records, with party co-chair Alice Weidel endorsing mass deportations of individuals with migrant backgrounds who fail to assimilate.[68] [69] This policy, formalized in AfD's January 2025 election program, aims to reverse demographic shifts through systematic, state-enforced returns while upholding rule-of-law standards, targeting not only irregular entrants but also long-term residents whose presence strains resources without contributing to society.[70] The approach counters what AfD describes as misguided tolerance that incentivizes abuse, proposing lowered legal hurdles for forced repatriation to restore deterrence.[3] Regarding cultural preservation, AfD commits to safeguarding Germany's "Leitkultur" rooted in Christian-Western heritage, humanism, Enlightenment values, and Roman law, rejecting multiculturalism as a failed experiment that erodes national cohesion and fosters segregation.[3] The party asserts that "Islam does not belong to Germany," viewing its expansion as a threat to state, society, and core values, and demands bans on foreign mosque funding, full-body veiling, and parallel Islamic legal structures to prevent "Islamization."[3] Integration requires full adoption of German norms, with sanctions including residency revocation for refusal, ensuring that immigration does not dilute ethnic and cultural identity but reinforces the predominant German character of the nation.[3] AfD's stance holds that preserving autochthonous heritage demands state protection against external pressures, prioritizing native population vitality over imported diversity.[3]Social and Family Policies
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) emphasizes the traditional nuclear family, defined as consisting of father, mother, and children, as the foundational unit of society deserving special state protection and promotion.[67] [3] In its programs, the party advocates reforming social security systems to eliminate financial disadvantages for families, including tax splitting for married couples and compensation for parents raising children at home.[3] To address Germany's declining birth rates, the AfD proposes financial incentives such as a €20,000 rent credit per newborn—conditional on parents' prior rent contributions—and enhanced child benefits tied to family size, alongside interest-free loans for large families.[67] It opposes policies that promote single-parent households or discourage multi-generational living, favoring measures like shared custody after separation and mediation to prioritize child welfare.[67] [3] On marriage, the AfD supports its role as a stable institution between one man and one woman, rejecting same-sex marriage and adoption rights for same-sex couples while calling for educational programs in schools to instill family values that encourage enduring partnerships.[67] [8] The party criticizes gender mainstreaming and quotas, viewing them as discriminatory against women who choose homemaking or part-time work, and seeks to end the stigmatization of full-time mothers by providing a "care allowance" equivalent to average net income until a child's third birthday to enable parental choice over mandatory daycare.[3] [67] Regarding abortion, the AfD upholds Germany's § 218 of the Criminal Code, which criminalizes the procedure except under strict conditions, and explicitly rejects abortion as a human right or for "social indications"—citing approximately 100,000 such cases annually as unacceptable.[3] [67] It advocates strengthening mandatory counseling with ultrasound requirements and providing financial aid to expectant mothers to prevent terminations driven by economic pressures, positioning itself as pro-life from the embryonic stage.[3] [67] The AfD affirms the biological reality of two sexes—male and female—and opposes gender ideology, self-identification laws, and state funding for gender studies or related initiatives.[67] [3] On transgender issues, it proposes banning puberty blockers and non-medically necessary surgeries for minors due to risks of lifelong physical and psychological harm, restricting such interventions to adults following rigorous psychological evaluation; it also seeks to prohibit emphasis on homosexuality or transsexuality in school curricula beyond factual biology.[67] [3] In broader social policy, the AfD favors an "activating basic security" system to replace unemployment benefits, requiring able-bodied recipients to seek work within six months and limiting duration for long-term foreign residents, with adjustments for inflation to incentivize employment over dependency.[67] [3] Welfare reforms prioritize German citizens and legal residents, aiming to curb misuse by migrants through in-kind benefits or payment cards for asylum seekers, while compensating relatives who provide nursing care to reduce institutional reliance.[67] [3]Foreign Policy and National Sovereignty
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) advocates for a foreign policy centered on restoring and prioritizing German national sovereignty, emphasizing independent decision-making over integration into supranational structures that it views as infringing on self-determination. Party platforms call for an "independent foreign policy determined by German and European interests," rejecting what it describes as ideological alignments that subordinate national priorities to collective alliances.[71] This stance manifests in demands to repatriate competencies from the European Union to member states, including border control, fiscal policy, and judicial authority, with threats of a "Dexit" referendum if reforms fail to create a looser confederation of sovereign nations rather than a centralized federation.[72][73] AfD's Euroscepticism extends to opposition against further EU enlargement, particularly rejecting Ukraine's accession on grounds that it would dilute resources and sovereignty without mutual benefits, as articulated by party figures like Beatrix von Storch.[74] The party critiques the EU's structure for enabling unchecked migration, economic burdens, and foreign policy dictated by larger members like France and Germany itself under previous governments, proposing bilateral agreements with trading partners to bypass Brussels' bureaucracy.[75] In line with this, AfD supports lifting economic sanctions on Russia, arguing they harm German industry—particularly energy and manufacturing—more than their targets, and favors renewed cooperation in areas like Nord Stream pipelines to secure affordable energy supplies.[76] Regarding NATO, AfD leaders have questioned Germany's membership, viewing the alliance's eastward expansion as a provocation that escalated tensions with Russia and contravenes post-Cold War assurances, potentially drawing Germany into unnecessary conflicts. Co-chair Tino Chrupalla and others oppose deploying German troops to Ukraine, labeling it a "fatal mistake" that risks escalation rather than resolution, and advocate for diplomatic negotiations prioritizing ceasefires over military aid.[77] The party frames NATO's anti-Russian posture as ideologically driven and detrimental to German economic interests, suggesting a pivot toward neutrality or reformed alliances that avoid entanglement in U.S.-led interventions.[78] This approach aligns with AfD's broader rejection of American hegemony in European affairs, while expressing openness to collaboration under administrations perceived as less interventionist, such as a potential Trump-led U.S. policy.[79][80] AfD's positions reflect a realist emphasis on geopolitical balance, favoring partnerships with powers like Russia and potentially China to counterbalance Western dependencies, provided they advance German sovereignty and prosperity without compromising democratic principles. Internal party resolutions underscore that foreign engagements must serve national interests first, critiquing prior governments for subordinating these to multilateral commitments that have led to deindustrialization and security vulnerabilities.[71][76] This framework positions AfD as advocating a "Germany first" doctrine, wary of alliances that expose the country to external risks without reciprocal gains.[75]Energy, Environment, and Climate Skepticism
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) maintains that anthropogenic influences on climate are overstated relative to natural variability, rejecting alarmist projections as ideologically motivated rather than empirically grounded. In its 2017 basic program, the party critiques "political fallacies" in climate policy, arguing that measures like emissions trading and renewable subsidies impose undue economic costs without verifiable environmental gains, while prioritizing pragmatic protection of air, water, and soil from pollution over abstract CO2 reductions.[3] The AfD has described aggressive climate agendas as an "eco-dictatorship" or "climate soviet," framing them as tools for state overreach that benefit elites at the expense of ordinary citizens and industry.[81] [82] The party opposes Germany's Energiewende—the shift to renewables initiated in 2010—as unreliable and exorbitantly expensive, estimating costs exceeding €500 billion by 2023 with no proportional reduction in emissions. AfD advocates retaining and expanding nuclear power, which supplied 6% of Germany's electricity in 2022 before the final reactors shut down on April 15, 2023; party leaders have called the phase-out "madness" that heightened dependence on imported fossil fuels amid the 2022 energy crisis triggered by reduced Russian gas supplies.[83] [84] It supports continued operation of coal and gas plants, including lignite and hard coal stations, alongside fracking for domestic gas to ensure energy security and affordability, rejecting subsidies for intermittent wind and solar as inefficient and landscape-destroying. [83] Ahead of the February 23, 2025, federal election, AfD's platform explicitly rejected "climate protection" taxes and regulations, asserting that "humans cannot protect the climate" and that such policies exacerbate deindustrialization, with manufacturing energy prices in Germany reaching €0.20–0.30 per kWh in 2023 compared to €0.05–0.10 in competitors like the U.S. The party highlights rural opposition to wind turbine proliferation, where projects have spurred AfD gains in eastern states like Saxony, where it secured 30.6% in the September 1, 2024, state election amid protests over visual and noise impacts.[85] [86] AfD positions emphasize causal realism in energy policy, favoring verifiable reductions in pollutants like particulate matter over unproven CO2-centric models, while critiquing international agreements like the Paris Accord for undermining German sovereignty.[3] [87]Internal Dynamics
Ideological Factions and Debates
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) has featured persistent ideological divisions since its 2013 founding as an economically liberal, Euroskeptic party opposing eurozone bailouts and advocating ordoliberal principles. Initial factions included liberal economists led by Bernd Lucke, who emphasized fiscal conservatism and market reforms, alongside emerging national conservatives focused on cultural identity and skepticism toward EU integration.[88][12] These tensions culminated at the 2015 party congress, where Lucke and his supporters departed, criticizing the growing influence of nationalist elements under Frauke Petry, marking a shift toward right-wing populism centered on immigration restriction and cultural preservation.[1] A pivotal faction emerged with "Der Flügel" (The Wing), established in 2015 by Björn Höcke and Andreas Kalbitz as a völkisch-nationalist grouping advocating ethno-cultural homogeneity, historical revisionism, and opposition to multiculturalism. Der Flügel gained dominance in eastern states like Thuringia and Saxony, where it promoted "remigration" policies and critiqued Germany's post-WWII remembrance culture.[89][90] Internal debates intensified over Der Flügel's ties to extremist networks, leading the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) to classify it as a "proven right-wing extremist" entity in March 2020. Party co-chair Jörg Meuthen pressured its formal dissolution on March 20, 2020, to mitigate reputational damage and facilitate alliances, but Höcke dismissed it as symbolic, declaring "the wing is the whole bird," while members reorganized informally.[35][91] Post-dissolution debates have centered on balancing Der Flügel's cultural radicalism with the liberal-conservative wing represented by Alice Weidel, who advocates pro-business policies, debt brakes, and pragmatic Euroskepticism without full withdrawal. Weidel's faction seeks to broaden appeal by downplaying ethno-nationalist rhetoric, clashing with Höcke's base, which prioritizes strict immigration controls and national sovereignty over economic liberalism.[92][93] These rifts surfaced in 2019 state-level power struggles, where radicals ousted moderates in Brandenburg and pushed rightward shifts, and persisted into 2024 party congresses amid disputes over BfV monitoring of the entire AfD as a "suspected right-wing extremist" case since 2021.[94] The AfD leadership under Weidel and Tino Chrupalla has navigated these by endorsing nationalist platforms while rejecting extremism labels as politically motivated, though eastern radicals retain leverage through strong electoral performance, such as 33% in Thuringia's 2024 state election.[95] Ongoing ideological contests include attitudes toward Russia, with pro-Moscow voices in the radical wing favoring closer ties and energy deals, versus pro-Atlantic elements wary of dependency; climate policy, pitting skepticism of alarmism against green subsidies; and coalition potential, where moderates explore post-election pacts despite radical opposition.[96] These debates reflect a broader evolution from economic critique to identity politics, with intra-party competition driving nativist hardening but risking fragmentation, as evidenced by membership losses among liberals post-2015 and failed moderate takeovers in 2022.[95]Leadership and Governance Structure
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) operates under a federal structure emphasizing internal democracy and collective decision-making, with the federal party congress (Bundesparteitag) serving as the supreme authority.[97] This body, comprising delegates from state and local branches, elects key leaders and approves major policies, typically convening biannually or as needed.[98] The party's governance avoids a single dominant leader, instead employing a dual co-chairperson system to balance power and reflect diverse internal factions. At the federal level, leadership is provided by two co-chairpersons (Bundesvorsitzende), who represent the party publicly, coordinate strategy, and preside over the federal executive board (Bundesvorstand). Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla have held these positions since their election in June 2022, with re-election to a further term on June 29, 2024, at the party congress in Essen, where they received 82.6% and 67.5% of delegate votes, respectively.[50] Weidel, an economist, also chairs the AfD's Bundestag parliamentary group, handling legislative coordination, while Chrupalla focuses on organizational and eastern German outreach.[99] Co-chairs are elected for two-year terms by secret ballot at the congress, requiring a majority; this system, adopted early in the party's history, aims to prevent authoritarian tendencies observed in other populist movements. The Bundesvorstand, numbering around 18-20 members, manages operational affairs between congresses and includes the co-chairs, general secretary, treasurer, and elected assessors (Beisitzer).[98] Board members are elected alongside the chairs, with terms aligned to congress cycles, and the body meets regularly to implement decisions and oversee state branches (Landesverbände), which mirror the federal model with their own executives and congresses. This decentralized approach fosters member input via local assemblies but has led to factional tensions, as seen in past leadership challenges.[97] Parliamentary groups at federal and state levels operate semi-autonomously, with their own elected leaders, further distributing authority.[93]Membership, Youth Wings, and Affiliates
As of December 2023, the Alternative for Germany (AfD) reported approximately 40,000 members, marking a 37% increase from 2022 levels amid rising electoral support.[100] Party leadership stated at their June 2024 congress that membership had surged 60% since January 2023, reflecting recruitment gains driven by dissatisfaction with mainstream parties on issues like immigration and economic policy.[101] This growth continued into 2024, positioning the AfD as Germany's fastest-expanding party in new member acquisitions across all states, though exact figures for 2025 remain unpublished by the party.[102] The AfD's primary youth organization, the Junge Alternative für Deutschland (JA), operated from November 2015 until its dissolution on March 31, 2025.[103] Classified as a "secured right-wing extremist" entity by Germany's Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) due to evidence of anti-constitutional activities, including ethnic nationalism and rejection of human dignity principles, the JA faced increasing legal scrutiny and calls for prohibition.[104] [105] The dissolution aimed to shield the parent party from broader legal risks, following internal party votes in late 2024 to restructure youth engagement under tighter central control.[106] As of October 2025, the AfD has planned a successor youth group, with founding targeted for late November in Gießen, amid reported internal power struggles over leadership and ideological tone.[107] [108] The AfD maintains no formal affiliates beyond its integrated structures, such as state-level branches or the prospective youth replacement, distinguishing it from parties with separate allied organizations. Informal associations with groups like the Identitäre Bewegung have been noted in investigations, but these lack official endorsement and stem from overlapping ideological networks rather than structured ties.[2]Organizational Framework
Party Finances and Funding
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) derives its funding primarily from state subsidies, membership fees, and private donations, in line with Germany's legal framework for party financing under the Political Parties Act (Parteiengesetz). State allocations, which are distributed quarterly based on the party's share of valid second votes in the preceding federal election (at a rate of approximately €0.92 per vote, adjusted periodically), form the largest component, often exceeding private contributions proportionally more than for other Bundestag parties.[109][110] In 2023, state funding constituted nearly half of the AfD's total income, with the party receiving allocations tied to its 10.3% vote share in the 2021 Bundestag election, supplemented by reimbursements for verified donations exceeding certain thresholds. Overall state party financing across all German parties totaled around €187.6 million that year, with the AfD's portion reflecting its electoral performance and disclosed private inflows. Membership dues from its approximately 40,000 members provide a steady but minor revenue stream, typically in the low millions annually, as the party's structure emphasizes decentralized regional branches.[111][110][112] Private donations, tax-deductible up to €4,000 per individual annually, have included significant one-off gifts from entrepreneurs, retirees, and inheritors opposed to federal migration and fiscal policies; notable examples comprise €5.5 million in individual donations and €140,000 from organizations in 2023, alongside a record €1.5 million single donation in January 2025. A Berlin resident's estate transferred nearly €6 million to the party in 2024, highlighting reliance on bequests from sympathetic donors. These inflows are subject to mandatory disclosure for amounts over €10,000 and audited by the Federal Party Finance Commissioner (Bundesparteienfinanzierungsprüfstelle).[112][113][114] The AfD has faced fines totaling over €1 million since 2017 for violations including improper donation handling and misuse of funds, exceeding penalties imposed on other parties in that period, though such infractions represent a small fraction of overall revenues. Austrian authorities initiated an investigation in February 2025 into a large cross-border donation to the AfD, but no illicit foreign influence has been substantiated in official audits. Despite classifications of certain AfD branches as extremist by state offices for constitutional protection, the party continues to receive full state entitlements, as federal courts have upheld funding for parties absent a formal ban.[115][116][117]International Ties and Alliances
In the European Parliament, the Alternative for Germany (AfD) has aligned with various nationalist and Eurosceptic groupings since entering in 2014. Initially part of the Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy group, it shifted to the Europe of Nations and Freedom in 2015, then to Identity and Democracy (ID) following the 2019 elections.[118] However, tensions arose in May 2024 when AfD's lead candidate Maximilian Krah made comments minimizing Nazi SS crimes, prompting France's National Rally (RN) under Marine Le Pen to sever ties, stating the AfD was too radical for collaboration.[119][120] Post-2024 elections, with AfD securing 15 seats, the party was excluded from the new Patriots for Europe (PfE) group led by Hungary's Fidesz, Italy's Lega, and RN, which prioritized a more mainstream nationalist image.[121][122] Instead, on July 10, 2024, AfD co-founded the Europe of Sovereign Nations (ESN) with smaller parties including the Czech Freedom and Direct Democracy (Svobodní), Bulgaria's Revival, and Slovakia's Republika, forming a bloc of around 25 MEPs focused on stricter national sovereignty and opposition to EU federalism.[122][118] This group remains distinct from the more established European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR), which AfD has not joined due to ideological differences with its semi-federalist-leaning members like Poland's Law and Justice.[123] Bilaterally, AfD has pursued ties with like-minded parties across Europe, including past cooperation with Italy's Lega under Matteo Salvini on migration policies and Hungary's Fidesz under Viktor Orbán on sovereignty issues, though formal alliances fractured amid the 2024 EP realignments.[124][125] AfD leaders have also engaged with Austria's Freedom Party (FPÖ) and Denmark's Danish People's Party on anti-immigration platforms. Beyond Europe, in October 2025, AfD figures like Beatrix von Storch sought to strengthen transatlantic links with Donald Trump's incoming administration and the MAGA movement, emphasizing shared critiques of globalism and multilateral institutions.[126] These efforts reflect AfD's strategy of building informal networks outside mainstream EU structures, prioritizing ideological affinity over broad coalitions.[126]Electoral Achievements
Federal Bundestag Results
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) first participated in the federal election held on 22 September 2013, receiving 4.7 percent of the second votes nationwide and failing to meet the five percent threshold required for proportional representation in the Bundestag, resulting in zero seats.[127] The party's support was concentrated in southern and western states, with vote shares below three percent in eastern states like Saxony and Thuringia. In the 24 September 2017 federal election, AfD achieved a breakthrough with 12.6 percent of the second votes, securing 94 seats and becoming the third-largest party in the 19th Bundestag, as well as the largest opposition force. This marked the first time a party to the right of the Christian Democrats entered the Bundestag since 1961, with particularly strong results in eastern Germany, where AfD garnered over 20 percent in states such as Saxony (27 percent) and Thuringia (25.8 percent). AfD's representation declined slightly in the 26 September 2021 election, obtaining 10.3 percent of the second votes and 83 seats in the expanded 20th Bundestag of 736 members.[128] Despite the national drop, the party maintained dominance in eastern constituencies, exceeding 24 percent in Saxony and achieving similar highs in other former East German states, reflecting persistent regional disparities in voter preferences.[128] The party rebounded significantly in the snap election of 23 February 2025, capturing 20.6 percent of the second votes and 152 seats in the 21st Bundestag, reduced to 630 members, positioning AfD as the second-largest parliamentary group behind the CDU/CSU alliance.[129] This result represented AfD's best federal performance to date, driven by gains in both eastern and western states, with vote shares surpassing 30 percent in Saxony and Thuringia.[129]| Year | Date | Second Vote Share (%) | Seats | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | 22 September | 4.7 | 0 | Failed 5% threshold[127] |
| 2017 | 24 September | 12.6 | 94 | Entry into Bundestag; strong in East |
| 2021 | 26 September | 10.3 | 83 | Slight decline nationally[128] |
| 2025 | 23 February | 20.6 | 152 | Record high; second place[129] |
State Landtag and Local Elections
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) first contested state Landtag elections in March 2016, securing entry into three state parliaments amid backlash against federal migration policies. In Saxony-Anhalt, the party achieved 24.3% of the vote, finishing second behind the CDU and ahead of the SPD, marking its strongest early performance in an eastern state. In Baden-Württemberg, AfD obtained 15.1%, entering the Landtag for the first time and contributing to the Greens' narrow victory over the CDU. In Rhineland-Palatinate, it polled 12.6%, surpassing the 5% threshold to gain seats despite the SPD-Greens coalition's re-election.[130][131] In September 2016, AfD continued its eastern momentum by polling 20.8% in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, overtaking Chancellor Merkel's CDU (19%) to finish second behind the SPD, though the CDU-SPD-Greens formed a coalition excluding AfD. Subsequent 2017 elections yielded lower results in western and northern states, with 5.9% in Schleswig-Holstein and 6.2% in Saarland, failing to unseat established coalitions but establishing a foothold. In North Rhine-Westphalia (7.4%) and Lower Saxony (6.2%), AfD gained seats amid CDU gains post-federal election. By 2018, results improved to 10.2% in Bavaria and 12.8% in Hesse, reflecting growing national visibility, though mainstream parties maintained exclusionary pacts preventing AfD governance roles.[132][133] AfD's performance solidified in eastern states through the 2020s, often exceeding 20% and becoming the largest opposition force, while western results hovered below 10% until recent upticks. In 2021 Rhineland-Palatinate and Baden-Württemberg elections, AfD secured 8.3% and 9.7% respectively, maintaining seats but trailing far behind winners. Eastern strongholds like Saxony (2019: 27.5%) and Thuringia (2019: 23.4%) saw AfD as the second-largest party, with internal debates over extremism classifications by state offices not derailing voter support. The 2024 elections marked a peak: AfD won 32.8% in Thuringia on September 1, becoming the first such party to top a postwar Landtag poll, followed by 30.6% in Saxony (second to CDU's 31.0%) on the same day, and 29.2% in Brandenburg (second to SPD's 30.9%) on September 22. These outcomes, driven by immigration concerns and economic discontent, prompted renewed scrutiny but no coalition inclusion due to cross-party firewalls.[45][134][135] In local elections, AfD has mirrored Landtag trends with stronger eastern results, securing mayoral wins and council majorities in places like Saxony and Thuringia districts since 2019, where it often polls over 25%. Western local gains emerged later, exemplified by tripling vote share to 16.5% in North Rhine-Westphalia's September 2025 municipal contests, finishing third behind CDU and SPD amid CDU dominance. Overall, AfD holds around 10-15% nationally in locals but leverages eastern bases for influence on issues like migration enforcement, despite sporadic vandalism and protests against its campaigns.[136][137]| Key Landtag Elections | Vote Share (%) | Position | Seats Gained |
|---|---|---|---|
| Saxony-Anhalt (2016) | 24.3 | 2nd | 25 |
| Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (2016) | 20.8 | 2nd | 18 |
| Thuringia (2024) | 32.8 | 1st | 32 |
| Saxony (2024) | 30.6 | 2nd | 31 |
| Brandenburg (2024) | 29.2 | 2nd | 30 |
European Parliament Performance
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) first contested European Parliament elections in 2014, marking its breakthrough onto the EU stage as a Eurosceptic force opposing the eurozone and advocating national sovereignty. The party secured representation in each subsequent election, with vote shares rising amid dissatisfaction with EU migration policies and economic integration. AfD MEPs have consistently positioned against deeper EU federalism, focusing legislative efforts on restricting asylum inflows and critiquing fiscal transfers. In the 2014 election held on May 25, AfD received 7.07% of the valid votes, translating to 7 seats out of Germany's 96 allocated MEPs. The party joined the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group shortly after, aligning with other Eurosceptic conservatives, though internal shifts later prompted departure in 2016.[18] The 2019 election on May 26 saw AfD increase to 10.37% of the vote, gaining 11 seats and establishing itself as a key opposition voice. MEPs affiliated with the Identity and Democracy (ID) group, emphasizing national identity and opposition to EU supranationalism, where they participated in committees on civil liberties and foreign affairs to advance remigration proposals and critique green policies.[139][140] In the 2024 election on June 9, AfD achieved 15.89% of the vote—second place nationally behind the CDU/CSU alliance—securing 15 seats amid a turnout of 64.8%. This represented a 5.5 percentage point gain from 2019, driven by strong eastern German support exceeding 30% in states like Saxony and Thuringia. Initially poised for ID continuity, AfD's MEPs were excluded following controversies over candidate extremism; they then co-founded the Europe of Sovereign Nations (ESN) group on July 10 with 14 AfD members plus allies from Czechia, Bulgaria, and Romania, totaling 25 MEPs focused on sovereignty and anti-federalism.[141][122][121]| Year | Vote Share (%) | Seats Won | Political Group |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | 7.07 | 7 | ECR |
| 2019 | 10.37 | 11 | ID |
| 2024 | 15.89 | 15 | ESN |