Another Day, Another AfD Ban | Today on EuroCon
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Driving the day...
Another day, another threat to ban the Alternative for Germany (AfD).
Last weekend, German federal president Frank-Walter Steinmeier gave a speech
that indirectly accused the AfD—the second-largest party in the Budestag—of
extremism, antisemitism, and threatening the democratic order. Such parties,
Steinmeier argued, must be banned.
This is the argument that has regularly been made by the German political
establishment—that the state should outlaw the right-wing party in order to
‘save’ democracy. Thankfully, this time, politicians outside the AfD are
speaking out against this authoritarian move. The Free Democrats’ Wolfgang
Kubicki told the media that Steinmeier’s suggestion that the AfD was at all
similar to the Nazis was "inappropriate," “ahistorical,” and an
“outrage.” Sahra Wagenknecht of the left-populist BSW similarly accused the
president of “political stupidity.”
It’s positive that more mainstream political figures are recognising the idiocy
of banning the AfD. This is a party that performed astonishingly well in the
last elections and continues to dominate the polls. As much as Germany’s
managerial state would like it to be the case, you cannot simply outlaw a party
because you disagree with its beliefs. And, ironically, threatening to do so is
only likely to bolster the AfD’s popularity. Criminalising your opponent does
not mean you win the argument.
By Lauren Smith

