AfD youth leader Hohm seeks federal board seat

Jean-Pascal Hohm, head of the AfD youth group Generation Deutschland, has confirmed his candidacy for the party's federal board.

The 29-year-old Brandenburg state parliament member from Cottbus aims to join the AfD leadership at the party congress in Erfurt in early July. He told the German Press Agency that the young generation brings essential perspectives to address Germany's challenges. Hohm has led Generation Deutschland since its founding in November 2025. The group was created after the AfD parted ways with its previous youth wing, the Junge Alternative. Party leaders see strong prospects for his bid. Daniel Tapp, spokesperson for AfD co-leader Alice Weidel, said youth representation on the federal board is needed to keep the organization closely tied to the party. Sections of the Thuringia AfD have also backed the candidacy.

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News illustration of FDP leadership race: Kubicki shakes hands with supportive Dürr at congress podium, Höne observing in background.
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FDP leadership race: Kubicki candidacy gains momentum as Dürr withdraws support

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FDP vice-chairman Wolfgang Kubicki has launched his bid for party leadership, with incumbent chairman Christian Dürr withdrawing his own candidacy to back Kubicki and maintain unity. NRW leader Henning Höne remains a challenger ahead of the late-May congress.

Four months before the state election in Saxony-Anhalt, the AfD is preparing a comprehensive personnel overhaul in ministries and authorities. Top candidate Ulrich Siegmund considers 150 to 200 positions realistic. The party fears resistance from the existing administrative apparatus.

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Reiner Haseloff, former Minister President of Saxony-Anhalt, attributed the AfD's strength to distrust in established parties in an interview with Süddeutsche Zeitung. He warned of the consequences of a potential AfD government after the state election on September 6. A coalition with the AfD is out of the question for the CDU, as it aims to destroy the party.

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.

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CDU candidate Marcus Hoffmann has won the runoff election for mayor of Aue-Bad Schlema against the candidate of the „Freie Sachsen“.

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