Weidel warns: government wants to represent AfD as unconstitutional!
Weidel warns: government wants to represent AfD as unconstitutional!
At the CPAC conference in Budapest, which began on Thursday, Alice Weidel, the co-chair of the AfD and the strongest opposition party in Germany, came to the center of attention. In her speech, she pointed out that influential politicians are trying to break the AfD and asked the audience to work for the values of freedom of expression and the security of future generations. In particular, she emphasized the challenges with which Germany is confronted, including increasing crime, high living costs and the consequences of mass immigration. Weidel criticized the current government for not stopping illegal migration and spending tax money on Ukraine. In addition, she accused the old Green government of being voted out, but continuing the same catastrophic policies.
In her speech, Weidel Viktor Orbán, the Hungarian Prime Minister, described as a "beacon of freedom" and praised his government since 2010. Orbán is considered a pioneer for a future for free and patriotic citizens. According to Berliner Zeitung was talking about Weidel in English, and their statements were applied under the participants, for which Herbert Kickl from the FPÖ and Robert Fico, the Slovak Prime Minister, belonged.political challenges and attacks on the AfD
Weidel said that the AfD was to be seen as the second strongest political force in Germany and was soon ready to rule. In particular, she criticized the CDU Federal Chancellor Friedrich Merz because he had previously taken on AfD solutions, but had changed his position after expressing his ambitions to the Chancellery. The co-chair also appealed to the AfD classification by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, which the party classifies as "secured right-wing extremist". Weidel complained that the authority tries to criminalize the AfD and present it as an enemy of the constitution.
During the Conference, the role of German Constitutional Protection in the current political landscape is critically questioned. Weidel claimed that the constitution was manipulated in Germany to suppress the parliamentary opposition. In addition, she warned that the protection of the constitution now serves more to keep the government in office than to actually prevent terrorist attacks.
The context of populism in Europe
The current political developments are part of a larger trend in Europe, which is examined by cordis . Populistic parties gain influence in many countries, including Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, France, Spain and the United Kingdom. As Jan Kubik, the main researcher at Rutgers University, warns, the rise of populism leads to the hollowing out of the rule of law and persecution of minorities.
In Hungary, a “neofeudal system” is described under Orbán that contradicts the democratic principles of the EU. Populist politicians often represent minorities as the “enemies of the people”, which leads to further social division. These developments throw a light on the dangers and challenges with which democracies are faced in Europe.
The CPAC conference in Budapest, a branch of the right-wing conservative American event, illustrates the international networking of populist actors. US President Donald Trump sent a greeting, while former and current political personalities from different European countries were present to support Weidel's concerns. This underlines the influence and ambitions of populist movements across national borders.
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