AfD youth establishes state association in Thuringia

The AfD youth organization 'Generation Deutschland' established its state association in Thuringia on Saturday. State leader Björn Höcke vows the newcomers to the political fight and emphasizes Thuringia's leading role in the party. The founding took place amid controversial speeches with xenophobic tones.

In Ilmenau, the founding of the Thuringian state association of the AfD youth 'Generation Deutschland' (GD) took place on Saturday. The event was pathetically compared to the Hall of Mirrors in Versailles and the 1871 founding of the Reich. The federal association was established in November in Gießen, and now the states are following. The Thuringian AfD is classified as right-extremist by the constitutional protection agency.

State leader Björn Höcke emphasized the leadership claim in his speech: 'We are the most important state association of the AfD in Germany.' He addressed the youth: 'You are part of a performance community that continually perfects itself.' Höcke demanded turning the country 'from head to feet' and creating 'a new life for Germany' instead of being bystanders. He recalled his time in the Young Union and cited Helmut Kohl's plans from the 1980s to send Turkish citizens back: 'In that sense, the CDU invented remigration, not the AfD.'

The 23-year-old Carolin Lichtenheld was elected state chairwoman. In her speech, she recounted an incident at age 14 on a bus where an 'Arab-looking man' touched her. She called for a 'Fortress Europe' and echoed AfD narratives on assaults by foreigners. Vice Eric Engelhardt spoke of 'Ali and Mohamed' spreading 'fear and terror on schoolyards' and positioned remigration as a guiding principle.

Höcke told the RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland (RND) that integrating the youth into the party protects against ban proceedings. The same weekend, associations were founded in North Rhine-Westphalia, Schleswig-Holstein, and Saxony-Anhalt, where right-wing candidates prevailed. In NRW, Luca Hofrath won (165:88 votes); in SH, Jasper Griebel (with a right-extremist past); in Saxony-Anhalt, Florian Ruß (formerly Identitarian Movement, remigration demands). Lichtenheld stressed: There should be 'no distancing from the patriotic forefield'.

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CDU leader Gordon Schnieder celebrates victory in Rhineland-Palatinate election with supporters and results display showing CDU at 31%.
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CDU wins Rhineland-Palatinate state election ahead of SPD

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In Rhineland-Palatinate's state election, the CDU won with 31 percent ahead of the SPD's 25.9 percent, ending 35 years of opposition. The AfD achieved its best result in a western German state at 19.5 percent, becoming the third strongest force. A grand coalition under CDU leader Gordon Schnieder is likely.

Lower Saxony's constitutional protection agency has classified the AfD state branch as confirmed right-wing extremist, the first such case in western Germany. Interior Minister Daniela Behrens justified this by citing the threat of right-wing extremism to society. The party has announced it will challenge the decision in court.

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At the AfD party congress in Marl, Martin Vincentz defended his position as NRW state chairman with 54.7 percent of the votes. The moderate politician prevailed in a bitter internal power struggle against candidates from the radical wing. The narrow election has implications for the state executive board and the federal party.

The CDU showed great unity at its 38th federal party congress in Stuttgart, confirming Chancellor and party leader Friedrich Merz with 91.2 percent. Despite government challenges, the party avoided confrontations with coalition partner SPD. General Secretary Carsten Linnemann also received a strong result with 90.5 percent.

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The latest RTL/ntv Trendbarometer by Forsa shows the AfD at 27 percent, five points ahead of the Union at 22 percent. The Union records its worst result since December 2021. Approval for Chancellor Friedrich Merz has fallen to a low of 15 percent.

CDU General Secretary Carsten Linnemann has assured Friedrich Merz of support ahead of the party congress in Stuttgart. Despite poor poll numbers and discontent within the party, delegates expect a strong re-election of the chancellor as party leader. The congress will also address controversial issues like a social media ban.

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