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The far-right Alternative for Germany’s ruling party has called for mass immigration as it launches its program for next month’s national election.
Alice Weidel, in a fiery speech to supporters in the small town of Resa in eastern Germany’s Saxony, said that under the AfD – second in the polls at around 20 percent – Germany would “look at the time they go home”. large size”
Weidel, the AfD candidate for chancellor in the election, used the controversial term “immigration” to describe his policy.
The term was coined by the right-wing Austrian ideologue Martin Sellner, who called “immigration” the forced removal of migrants who broke the law or “refused to integrate”, regardless of their citizenship status – which critics say is tantamount to ethnic cleansing.
“I have to tell you the truth,” Weidel said on Saturday.
Her performance of “Alles für Deutschland” — a play on the banned Nazi-era slogan “Alles für Deutschland” — earned loud applause from party representatives who repeatedly chanted “All for Germany.”
Weidel, a former Goldman Sachs analyst, has placed herself at the forefront of a party made up of extremists classified as far-right by Germany’s domestic intelligence agency.
In a joint appearance on X with Elon Musk earlier this week, Widdle used an unprecedented public platform to assert that the AfD – in addition to normalizing ties with Moscow and dismantling wind turbines – has become a major political force.
However, her chances of coming to power in the upcoming elections are slim, as all major German parties have broken up against her.
Weidel’s embrace of exile was seen by some in the party as a nod to Bjorn Hocke, the far-right flag-bearer who led the AfD to a historic first-place finish in the eastern German state of Thuringia in September.
“It’s a concession to Bjorn Hocke,” said Kay Gottschalk, a member of the German Bundestag from the more moderate side of the party. “Of course it’s a word. I’ll put it another way – I sent it back to them – but that’s what the delegates want.”
Weidel used her speech to reiterate her calls to restart the Nord Stream gas pipeline from Russia to Germany, bring back nuclear power and oppose nuclear research programs.
The party meeting was met with strong opposition. About 10,000 anti-AfD protesters turned up and police arrested Risa, a town of 30,000 people, delaying the start of the conference by two hours.