德国:禁止 AfD 的行动可能会在新选举之前进行 Germany: Move To Ban AfD May Come Before New Elections

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/germany-move-ban-afd-may-come-new-elections

在德国政治动荡之际,基民盟的马可·万德维茨主张尽快禁止选择党,声称它对民主构成威胁。 尽管一项动议需要 37 名议员投票,万德维茨仍试图利用逮捕与选择党有联系的个人的机会。 尽管德国选择党否认与所涉及的极端主义组织有任何联系,但万德维茨认为这是取缔该党的一个机会,该党在民意调查中排名第二。 潜在的禁令面临很高的举证责任,需要联邦宪法法院的批准。 几个政党对此事有不同的看法,基民盟和自民党倾向于禁令,而绿党则倾向于渐进式的做法。 由于万德维茨计划很快退出政坛,拟议禁令的时机至关重要。 任何最终禁令都可能需要数年时间才能实施,并可能加剧与美国的紧张关系,特别是如果埃隆·马斯克或前总统特朗普表示支持选择党的话。 潜在的危机凸显了德国民主面临的挑战以及外部影响对其内部事务的影响。

Amidst Germany's political turmoil, CDU's Marco Wanderwitz advocates for an expedited ban on the AfD, claiming it poses a threat to democracy. Despite a motion requiring 37 MP votes, Wanderwitz seeks to capitalize on the arrest of individuals with AfD ties. Although the AfD denies any connection to the extremist group involved, Wanderwitz sees this as an opportunity to ban the party, which polls as the second most popular in the nation. The potential ban faces a high burden of proof and would require approval by the Federal Constitutional Court. Several parties have differing views on the matter, with the CDU and FDP leaning towards a ban, while the Greens favor a gradual approach. The timing of the proposed ban is crucial as Wanderwitz plans to retire from politics soon. Any final ban would likely take years to implement and could escalate tensions with the United States, particularly if Elon Musk or former President Trump voice support for the AfD. The potential crisis underscores the challenges facing German democracy and the impact of external influences on its internal affairs.


Germany: Move To Ban AfD May Come Before New Elections

Via Remix News,

With the German government collapsing, one of the main proponents of an Alternative for Germany (AfD) ban, CDU politician Marco Wanderwitz, is pushing for a speedy procedure right before new elections.

“Our aim is still to submit the motion and vote on it in this legislative period and thus get the proceedings at the Federal Constitutional Court underway,” he told Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland.

He said that things now have to “move quickly.”

CDU MP Marco Wanderwitz says the AfD, the second most popular party in the country, must be banned to save democracy. (Source: Wanderwitz.de)

As Remix News has long reported, MP Wanderwitz, who was defeated by an AfD politician in local elections but gained re-entry into the Bundestag due to being on the CDU party list, has been pushing for a ban for a year. In order to submit a motion to ban the AfD, he needs 37 fellow MPs, or 5 percent of the Bundestag MPs, to vote with him.

Wanderwitz is attempting to capitalize on the arrest of three individuals from the Saxon Separatists group who had links to the AfD, with Wanderwitz claiming that the group has connections to right-wing terrorism. The AfD has indicated that it has no ties to the Saxon Separatists and disavows the group.

Notably, many on the left have open connections to left-wing extremist groups, and even the country’s current interior minister, Nancy Faeser, wrote for Antifa Magazine shortly before she won her position, a group known to be funded by a government-designated left-wing extremist group.

Politicians in Germany have been split on the issue. CDU leader Friedrich Merz is allegedly no longer fundamentally opposed to a ban, but claims he wants to observe new developments. The FDP, which was once against the move, is now moving closer to a ban. Notably, both parties stand to gain voters from the rival AfD should a ban move forward.

The Greens, meanwhile, want a gradual process towards a ban, including consulting with legal experts.

Wanderwitz himself sees a short window for a ban to come about, at least while he is leading the charge. He is set to retire from politics, which means by the time the next government is voted in, he will no longer be a part of it.

No matter what happens, a ban on the AfD could take years. Any final ban would have to be approved by the Federal Constitutional Court, and the burden for such a ban is supposed to be very high. Notably, the AfD party routinely polls between 16 and 20 percent of the national vote, and is the second most popular party in the nation. The courts have never banned such a popular party, setting the stage for a potential national crisis should the motion go through.

Another wild card in a potential AfD ban is Donald Trump and Elon Musk. Musk has come out as a quasi-supporter of the party on his X platform. Any move on democratic backsliding in Germany, including a ban on a major opposition party, could result in U.S. sanctions and increased tensions with a Trump-led United States.

Just last week, Musk called Chancellor Olaf Scholz a “fool,” in the latest sign that tensions are heating up between the new American power bloc and the left-liberal EU elite.

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Tyler Durden Mon, 11/11/2024 - 10:30
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