Leaders | AfDer Thuringia

How to deal with the hard-right threat in Germany

As extremists win more votes across Europe, forming moderate and effective governments is getting harder

Björn Höcke, AfD lead candidate in Thuringia, can be seen behind flags.
Photograph: dpa

IT WOULD BE comforting to play down the significance of the votes in two German states on September 1st, when the hard-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party lost in Saxony by a whisker and scored a nine-point lead over its nearest rival in Thuringia. Yes, this victory is the first the hard right has won in a state election in Germany since the second world war. And yes, its leader in Thuringia is a nasty piece of work with two criminal convictions for using a slogan popularised by the Nazi brownshirts and banned under German law. But Thuringia is home to less than 3% of Germans. It is about as representative as Wyoming in America, where Donald Trump took 68% of the votes in 2016, or Clacton in Britain, which elected Reform UK’s leader, Nigel Farage, in July.

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This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “AfDer Thuringia”

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