📱

Read on Your E-Reader

Thousands of readers get articles like this delivered straight to their e-reader. Works with Kindle, Boox, and any device that syncs with Google Drive or Dropbox.

Learn More

This is a preview. The full article is published at politico.eu.

Germany’s far right loosens its embrace of Trump

Germany’s far right loosens its embrace of Trump

By By James AngelosPOLITICO

BERLIN — Germany’s far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has long sought close ties to the Trump administration in its quest for powerful international allies and an end to its political isolation at home. But as public sentiment in Germany increasingly turns against U.S. President Donald Trump and his foreign interventionism — in particular his talk of taking control of Greenland and his seizure of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro — AfD leaders are recalibrating, putting distance between their party and a U.S. president they previously embraced. “He has violated a fundamental election promise, namely not to interfere in other countries, and he has to explain that to his own voters,” Alice Weidel, one of the AfD’s national leaders, said earlier this week. Advertisement Standing alongside Weidel, Tino Chrupalla, the AfD’s other national leader, partly defended Trump for pursuing what he perceives to be American interests within the country’s “sphere of influence.” At the same time, he also condemned the approach Trump was taking. “Wild West methods are to be rejected here, and the end does not always justify the means.” By distancing themselves from Trump, the AfD leaders are following the path of Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally in France, whose leaders, due to the American president’s deep unpopularity there, have been far more critical of Trump and view his administration’s overtures to European nationalists as a liability . In response to Trump’s stances on Greenland and Venezuela, for instance, National Rally President Jordan Bardella recently accused the American leader of harboring “imperial ambitions.” The AfD’s criticism this week, by contrast, was tepid; but even mild disapproval has been rare from the party’s leaders. From the moment Trump began his second term, the German far right has seen American ideological backing — including from billionaire tech mogul Elon Musk and U.S. Vice President JD Vance — as key to boosting the party’s domestic legitimacy and breaking the “firewall” that mainstream parties have historically imposed to keep the AfD from power. But the political risks inherent in the AfD’s efforts to ally with Trump are also becoming clearer. Surveys show the vast majority of Germans strongly oppose what Trump has said about Greenland and what he has done in Venezuela. Only 12 percent of Germans view his performance positively, according to Germany’s benchmark ARD-DeutschlandTrend poll released last week, while only 15 percent see the U.S. as a trustworthy partner, a new low. Trump’s unpopularity is forcing AfD leaders to attempt a awkward balancing act: Criticize the president, while not undermining the considerable efforts the party has made to forge links with Trump and his Republican party . Advertisement Tino Chrupalla, the AfD’s other national leader, partly defended Donald Trump for pursuing what he perceives to be American interests within the country’s “sphere of influence.” | Clemens Bilan/EPA AfD leaders have leaned heavily on the Trump administration to help end their political ostracization at home. The strategy appears to have worked: When Germany’s domestic intelligence agency declared the AfD as extremist...

Preview: ~500 words

Continue reading at Politico

Read Full Article

More from POLITICO

Subscribe to get new articles from this feed on your e-reader.

View feed

This preview is provided for discovery purposes. Read the full article at politico.eu. LibSpace is not affiliated with Politico.

Germany’s far right loosens its embrace of Trump | Read on Kindle | LibSpace