Martin Vincentz narrowly re-elected as AfD leader in NRW

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 AfD party congress in North Rhine-Westphalia took place on Saturday in Marl, where around 500 delegates voted. Martin Vincentz, a 39-year-old general practitioner from Krefeld, was re-elected with 54.77 percent of the votes (270 out of 495). His opponent Fabian Jacobi received 43.4 percent. Originally, a dual leadership of Jacobi and Christian Zaum, supported by the radical Matthias Helferich, planned to challenge Vincentz, but the motion was rejected.

The conflict revolves around the party's direction: Vincentz is considered moderate and seeks electability, while Helferich and his supporters are close to the völkisch wing. Helferich, who was expelled from the party last year and currently has no membership rights, was not present as entry was denied to him. The youth organization 'Generation Deutschland' was classified as a right-wing extremist suspected case by the Verfassungsschutz shortly before the congress; party leader Alice Weidel called this an 'order'.

A heated debate preceded the vote, particularly over allegations against Vincentz ally Klaus Esser, who allegedly submitted fake qualifications in his application. Esser denies this; a party expulsion procedure is ongoing against him. Vincentz said: 'We don't want crazy people from the right.' Weidel sharply criticized the state executive and demanded unity.

After a break, the factions agreed on a deal: Vincentz's camp gets seven executive positions, Helferich's side five. Christian Zaum became first deputy, Tim Csehan, Helferich's office manager, a deputy member. Vincentz has led the association since 2022 and is aiming for the 2027 state election, where the AfD is currently polling at 15 percent. The election bolsters Vincentz's support for federal leader Tino Chrupalla.

مقالات ذات صلة

CDU leader Gordon Schnieder celebrates victory in Rhineland-Palatinate election with supporters and results display showing CDU at 31%.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

CDU wins Rhineland-Palatinate state election ahead of SPD

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

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.

Following nepotism allegations in Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia (see prior coverage), the AfD scandal escalates in North Rhine-Westphalia and Baden-Württemberg, pitting party factions against each other and pressuring federal leaders Tino Chrupalla and Alice Weidel. NRW faces a leadership showdown at its Marl congress, while top Baden-Württemberg candidate Markus Frohnmaier grapples with family hiring claims.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The AfD faction in the Rhineland-Palatinate state parliament has voted out its leader Jan Bollinger shortly after a strong election result. Michael Büge takes over as new faction head. Bollinger remains in the faction and calls for loyalty to the party.

In Hessian local elections on March 15, the CDU emerged strongest statewide with 29.8 percent. The SPD dropped to 20.8 percent, while the AfD gained to 14.8 percent. Turnout rose to 54.3 percent.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

In the Bundestag's economic committee, AfD candidate Malte Kaufmann received 16 votes in the election for vice-chair, even though the party holds only ten seats.

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