Thursday, September 19, 2024

Tuesday briefing: Why the far right’s success in German state elections can’t be written off as a local phenomenon any more

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Good morning. For the first time since the second world war, a far-right party has won a regional election in Germany. As well as finishing first in Thuringia, where it won nearly 33% of the vote, Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) finished second in Saxony, with 31% – and it did so with none of the normalisation strategy that similar parties have deployed in France or Italy. Instead, the AfD uses Nazi slogans and calls the Berlin Holocaust memorial a “monument of shame”.

While the AfD demanded to be included in coalition negotiations in both states yesterday, a “firewall” designed to keep the party out of government is likely to hold for the foreseeable future. Even so, its success is undoubtedly a seismic moment in German politics. For today’s newsletter, I spoke to the Guardian’s Berlin correspondent Deborah Cole about how the AFD did it, and whether this is a regional phenomenon or a signpost to something larger. Here are the headlines.

Five big stories

  1. Israel-Gaza war | The UK has broken with the Biden administration by announcing it is suspending some arms export licences to Israel because of a “clear risk” the materiel may be used in violation of international humanitarian law. It came as Benjamin Netanyahu defied protests at home and criticism from Biden by vowing that Israel would not relinquish control over the strategic Philadelphi corridor along the Gaza-Egyptian border.

  2. Grenfell inquiry | Companies found at fault over the Grenfell tower fire are facing calls to be banned from public contracts. Ahead of the final public inquiry report’s publication tomorrow, it emerged that about £250m in deals have been made in the past five years with firms involved in the high-rise’s refurbishment.

  3. Politics | Jeremy Corbyn is to form an official parliamentary alliance with four independent MPs who were elected on pro-Gaza platforms, and has issued a call for more MPs to join. The group will have the same number of MPs as Reform UK and the Democratic Unionist party, who each have five MPs, and more than the Green party and Plaid Cymru, who each have four.

  4. France | A husband who allegedly drugged his wife and invited more than 80 strangers to rape her at their home for almost a decade will go on trial on Monday in a case that has shocked France. Fifty men accused of taking part in the abuse of the woman are also on trial at the court in Avignon.

  5. Society | Pride in Britain’s history has fallen sharply over the past decade as the country has become more reflective about its place in the modern world, according to a leading barometer of the British public mood. The proportion of people saying they were proud of Britain’s history fell from 86% to 64%.

In depth: ‘It has sent aftershocks through the country – everyone is grappling with the consequences’

Leftwing groups protest in Hamburg after the victory of Alternative for Germany (AfD) in the state elections in Saxony and Thuringia. Photograph: snapshot/Future Image/C Tamcke/REX/Shutterstock

News of the AfD’s success was “all-consuming” in Germany on Monday, Deborah Cole said – with the subplot of success for an upstart populist party on the left, the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW), providing little consolation for the mainstream parties.

The three parties in chancellor Olaf Scholz’s unpopular government, including his own centre-left Social Democrats, each received less than 10% of the vote. “Despite the fact that we’ve known all year that this election would probably look exactly like this, there is a feeling of a political earthquake,” Deborah said. “It has sent aftershocks through the country, and everyone is grappling with the consequences.”

The state elections in which the AfD has enjoyed such success confer considerable power on the victors. “The postwar constitution designed things to avoid too much power being concentrated in Berlin,” Deborah said. The states have power over areas ranging from education to policing and health care – but the regional elections are also a barometer of the wider political mood.

“In the past, there have often been attempts to dismiss strong performances at the state level as protest votes or being based on hyper-regional issues,” Deborah said. “But these two elections represent about 10% of the German population. We are out of the territory of dismissing this as a protest. For many voters now, the AfD really is their party. They have pledged their allegiance.”


How strong are the AfD?

While many parties on the far right begin on the fringes and then seek to make themselves more acceptable to the mainstream, the story of the AfD’s rise follows a very different path.

“People like Marine Le Pen [in France] and Giorgia Meloni [in Italy] have tried to put a bourgeois face on their politics,” Deborah said. “The AfD has dispensed with that. They started out as a little grouping of Eurosceptic economics professors, critical of European bailouts and feeling that Germany shouldn’t have to pay the bill for what they saw as profligate southern European countries. It was more about the euro than migration.”

But in the 11 years since its founding in 2013, the party has only become more radical with each change in leadership, with anxieties over Angela Merkel’s commitment to help refugees arriving from Syria in 2015 just one rung on the ladder. Deborah points to Björn Höcke (main picture), its leader in Thuringia, whom she recently heard speak in the state capital of Erfurt, and who is central to its radical anti-migrant, anti-Islam message.

“He has directly targeted Germany’s culture of remembrance and atonement for the Holocaust,” she said. “It’s hard to overstate how shocking that is to many Germans.” Another former AfD leader has previously dismissed the Third Reich as “no more than a speck of bird shit in over 1,000 years of successful history”.

“The scary thing is that the most successful chapters of the party are also the ones that are under observation from the German constitutional authorities and designated as rightwing extremists,” Deborah said. “Their hostility to the mainstream makes them quite thrilling to some voters, particularly in the east. So there is no obvious incentive for them to tack towards the centre.”


Who are the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance?

Sahra Wagenknecht speaks in Berlin after the AfD’s victory. Photograph: Clemens Bilan/EPA

The other big winner on Sunday night was the BSW, which was founded only last year when Wagenknecht (above), a charismatic firebrand in hard-left politics since the 1990s, broke away from the existing Die Linke party. Her eponymous party finished third in both Thuringia and Saxony, and is now likely to form a part of any coalition government.

“The party’s name underlines how much this is a one-woman show, and she has scrambled the landscape,” Deborah said. “You can’t make light of what her party is calling for. On the one hand, it is left wing on economics, calling for higher taxes on the wealthy, for example. But Wagenknecht has also really struck a chord with views that many see as being pro-Russian, or even pro-Putin: she is strongly critical of military aid to Ukraine, and she wants immediate peace talks – which would cement Russia’s existing gains.”

Foreign affairs are not part of regional coalition negotiations, of course. “But it’s only a year until the general election,” Deborah noted. “The smart money is on the BSW at least being able to capture the five per cent of the national vote which is the hurdle to representation in parliament. So that means she could be a player in national coalition talks.”


Is this just a regional phenomenon?

Ever since the fall of the Berlin Wall and German reunification, the east of the country has held a distinct political identity of its own. In this excellent analysis, Philip Oltermann writes: “For years, the assumption in Germany has been that once the eastern states had ‘caught up’ with the rest of the country economically, their political outlook would align.”

Today, though, the AfD is succeeding even as more people migrate from west to east than are going the other way, with eastern states’ economies growing rapidly. “You don’t see the kind of disparity you used to,” Deborah said. “But the impact of the past is still felt. There are still big demographic differences: for example, a lot more women have left than men.”

As early as 2007, Spiegel reported that two thirds of those who had left since 1991 were women, and that the young men who stayed were prime targets for neo-Nazi groups. “A lot of the people with better education and better prospects left too. The AfD have been very good at tapping into a sense of alienation.”

Nonetheless, any attempt to dismiss these elections as a local problem should be treated with caution. “In two weeks’ time, we’ll have elections in Brandenburg [the state surrounding Berlin], and while the Social Democrats will do a bit better, we’re probably going to see similar results. This is not just a phenomenon of the east any more.”


Will the firewall hold?

The mainstream parties have said that they will maintain a brandmauer, or firewall, against the AfD, and refuse to cooperate with them on legislation or include them in coalitions. While the CDU did work with the AfD in Thuringia in 2023 to pass a property tax cut and defeat the minority government, there is little expectation of that norm collapsing now.

“You can more or less guarantee that that will be maintained in the foreseeable future,” Deborah said. “They are too far outside the mainstream. They will not enter any central government coalition.”

But there are ways that policy can work to the benefit of a party that presents itself as an anti-establishment voice. Meanwhile, even if it won’t work with the AfD, the CDU has been shifting rightwards since Angela Merkel’s retirement, in part because of the threat the AfD poses to its vote share.

After a mass stabbing allegedly carried out by a Syrian asylum seeker in the western city of Solingen in August, for example, the CDU demanded that all Afghan and Syrian refugees be stopped at the border before making an asylum claim – in defiance of the German constitution. “Yes, the AfD is going to continue to be excluded from government,” Deborah said. “But there is a strong argument that they are exercising a lot of influence already.”

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What else we’ve been reading

Adele: leaving behind a diva void? Photograph: Matt Crossick/Alamy
  • Is the diva dead? As Adele (above) embarks on her long hiatus, Jeffrey Ingold takes a look at why there isn’t an heir apparent to take up the mantle. Nimo

  • From turning off your notifications to sorting laundry as you go and “stacking” habits, Emma Bedington has 100 tiny tips to set you up for a productive back-to-school season, whatever your age. Hannah J Davies, deputy editor, newsletters

  • For this week’s edition of The big idea, Jonathan Portes explains why the framing of the immigration debate in the UK is all wrong. Nimo

  • Tray bien: Ellie Violet Bramley has written about why the new airport power move is snapping your artfully composed items as they glide along in those grubby security bins. Gross – but oh-so-chic. Hannah

  • A group of Republican politicians and top aides who worked under Donald Trump when he was president have publicly opposed him in a bid to prevent him from returning to the White House. It’s a humiliating blow for the former president, but Chris McGreal examines whether it will make a real difference. Nimo

Sport

Great Britain’s Ellie Challis celebrates winning gold in the women’s S3 50m backstroke in Paris. Photograph: Zac Goodwin/PA

Paralympics | Ellie Challis and Louise Fiddes won golds within minutes of each other at La Défense Arena as ParalympicsGB’s fine Games in the pool continued – Challis (above) in the women’s S3 50m backstroke, Fiddes in the SB14 100m breaststroke. The pregnant Para-archer Jodie Grinham and Nathan Macqueen sealed GB gold by beating Iran 155-151 in the mixed-team compound final.

Tennis | British No 1 Jack Draper overwhelmed Tomas Machac 6-3, 6-1, 6-2 to reach his first grand slam quarter-final. Menawhile, Alex de Minaur put friendship to the side to end compatriot Jordan Thompson’s spirited campaign with a 6-0, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5 victory.

Football | Erik ten Hag received public ­backing from the two most senior Manchester United executives hired by Ineos this summer after his side took just three points from their first three games. Omar ­Berrada and Dan ­Ashworth said they were “fully backing” ten Hag after a search for a possible successor over the summer.

The front pages

The Guardian splashes on “UK breaks with US to suspend 30 arms export licences to Israel”, while the Times says “Labour puts limits on arms deals with Israel”. The i has “UK restricts sale of weapons to Israel due to ‘clear risk’ of breaking international law” while the Financial Times’ headline also covers the story: “UK cites possible law breaches in halting some arms exports to Israel”.

“Petrol cars rationed to meet eco targets” – that’s the Telegraph, while the dynamic ticket pricing row leads the Mirror: “Keir vs Oasis”. “Brutally honest! ‘Tories need to stop acting like Labour’” – the Conservative leadership contest is on the front page of the Express. “Now Labour are ‘running scared’ over winter fuel backlash” – that’s according to the Tories, reports the Daily Mail. “Missing Jack’s parents’ ransom hoax ordeal” – an awful case on the front of the Metro.

Today in Focus

A woman looking at advertisements in an estate agent’s window. Photograph: Yui Mok/PA

The millennials living with their parents

Elle Hunt reports on the millennials living with their parents, and explains why such living arrangements are on the rise. A family in London describes what it’s like to live together again

Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings

Illustration: Ben Jennings/The Guardian

The Upside

A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad

Nigerian architect Mariam Issoufou. Photograph: Courtesy of Mariam Issoufou

Mariam Issoufou never dreamed of becoming an architect. “I didn’t know of any architects in Niger, let alone any women in the field,” she says, in an interview with the Guardian’s Oliver Wainwright. However, little over a decade since leaving a career as a software engineer, Issoufou has established herself as one of Africa’s most sought-after designers.

Issoufou’s prize-winning work is defined less by a particular style and instead by a desire to utilise the best of local materials and skills, and aren’t centred in western ideas or standards. “That’s the only image of progress that we have, and unless you’re able to achieve that, you’re somehow lacking. I found that incredibly insulting,” she says. Instead, she seeks to innovate in ways tailored to the places she works in. Built with unfired earth bricks and designed around passive ventilation principles, buildings in the housing complex she designed in Niger’s capital, Niamey, are 10 degrees cooler indoors than out, while an equivalent concrete building would require air conditioning to be habitable.

Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday

Bored at work?

And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow.

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