Ares Land wrote: ↑Tue Sep 03, 2024 5:00 am
Oh, speaking of Germany -- and looking at the AFD recent electoral success in Thuringia; my understanding is that there are provisions in the German constitution aiming at preventing the far right from taking power. Can anything be conceivably done against the AFD?
It is difficult. The constitution allows to ban parties that aim at overthrowing democracy, but the hurdles are very high - it has been tried four times, and succeeded only twice (the two successful bans were both in the 1950s: against the neo-Nazi
Sozialistische Reichspartei in 1952 and against the Communist Party in 1956; the two failed attempts were in 2001 and 2013, both against the same party, the neo-Nazi
Nationaldemokratische Partei Deutschlands, with the second attempt basically failing due to "insignificance" - the party was essentially bankrupt). Also, banning a party of course doesn't mean that the threat goes away: nobody can stop the extremists from founding
yet another party, and there are already several minor far-right parties that would gladly take over the AfD electorate in case the AfD was banned. But as a last-ditch defense, article 20.4 provides the
right to resistance if other measures fail.
Thus, the discussion among the democratic parties is not as much about how to ban the AfD but how to
win back their voters (which is indeed the better strategy, I think). I think there are several factors in play here. One is frustration about the ruling coalition, which indeed performs badly, but that alone wouldn't explain it, as there is a viable democratic alternative, namely the center-right CDU/CSU. Many people apparently yearn back to a past when things weren't so complicated, when there were no gay marriages, no gender ambiguities, no mosques in German towns and nobody talked about such things as climate change (the AfD denies the existence of the climate crisis). And many feel that
democracy was complicated: you have to worry about which party to vote, a concern that an authoritarian government would take from the people.
Fortunately, no democratic party has the slightest inclination to form a coalition with the AfD. Not even that cranky left-populist new formation BSW (a breakaway from The Left). But with the AfD so strong, building viable coalition governments will be difficult.