• About Us
  • Who Are We
  • Work With Us
Monday, June 23, 2025
No Result
View All Result
The Globe Post
39 °f
New York
44 ° Fri
46 ° Sat
40 ° Sun
41 ° Mon
No Result
View All Result
The Globe Post
No Result
View All Result
Home Democracy at Risk

Germany’s Far-Right AfD Basks in Spotlight of Musk Support

Staff Writer with AFP by Staff Writer with AFP
02/17/25
in Democracy at Risk, Featured, World
Thousands of counter-protesters are seen at the AFD election rally in Schadow Square, Duesseldorf, Germany, on February 15, 2025.

Thousands of counter-protesters are seen at the AFD election rally in Schadow Square, Duesseldorf, Germany, on February 15, 2025. Photo:Ying Tang/NurPhoto via AFP

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

All other German parties see the far-right AfD as a threat to democracy, but the anti-immigration party has a powerful friend abroad: Elon Musk, the loudhailer voice of Team Trump.

“Let’s go, guys, let’s go – fight for a great future for Germany!” the tech billionaire shouted via video link at a recent campaign rally of the Alternative for Germany (AfD).

“It’s good to be proud of German culture, German values, and not to lose that in some sort of multiculturalism that dilutes everything,” he told the jubilant crowd in Halle in the party’s ex-communist eastern heartland.

While mainstream Berlin has reacted with a shudder to the new leadership in Washington, the AfD has cheered its ideological allies in the fight against migrants, wind farms, gender politics and all things “woke.”

As Europe’s top economy careens towards February 23 polls, Musk has weighed in on the campaign with volleys of online crossfire.

As well as backing the AfD, the man behind SpaceX, Tesla and X has also trolled centre-left Chancellor Olaf Scholz with insults such as “fool” and “Oaf Schitz”.

“You must vote for change,” Musk told Germans in a streamed conversation with the party’s top election candidate Alice Weidel. “And that is why I’m really strongly recommending that people vote for AfD.”

On Friday, US Vice President JD Vance backed that stance in a speech to a security meeting in Munich where he berated EU leaders for ignoring the wishes of voters worried about immigration in a broadside later hailed by US President Donald Trump.

Long shunned as outsiders in Germany, the subject of mass protests and security services surveillance, the AfD has gloated about the attention lavished on it from across the Atlantic as it polls at a record 20 percent.

“It’s a good time for the AfD because we are getting a lot of support from the Trump administration,” said the party’s Berlin boss, architect Kristin Brinker.

“If the richest man in the world and people from Trump’s circle say that the AfD is okay, you can work with them, then that’s the best thing that could have happened – and I think it will open even more doors for us.”

Right-Arm Salute

The AfD was invited to Trump’s inauguration, a day on which a jubilant Musk gave a right-arm salute many interpreted as the Nazi greeting outlawed in post-war Germany.

Musk has denied any such meaning, but many of his critics were not convinced – including political activists who beamed the image and the word “Heil” onto the Tesla electric-car plant outside Berlin.

When Musk addressed the AfD campaign rally, he told the crowd via video link to be proud of their “millennia-old” culture and worry less about their historical guilt.

It played well with the party, whose senior figures have called for an end to Germany’s post-World War II culture of repentance and dubbed Berlin’s Holocaust remembrance site a “memorial of shame.”

Musk has delighted in deriding Germany’s centrist politicians, who have been stunned by the new hostility from the US, long their most important ally.

Scholz has tried to push back, including on Trump’s stated designs on Greenland, seeking to signal a quietly resolute stance while avoiding further stirring up a hornets’ nest.

Trump – who often rails against Germany over insufficient NATO spending and its huge trade surplus – has also issued threats, such as tariffs that would hammer Germany’s already ailing economy.

Conservative election frontrunner Friedrich Merz, who boasts a business world background, has vowed to speak to Trump, whom he has characterized as “predictably unpredictable.”

‘Insane, Woke, Leftist’

While Berlin’s political establishment is in a flap over Trump 2.0, the AfD cannot believe its luck.

In her streamed X chat with Musk, Weidel claimed the AfD had been “negatively framed” as an extremist group. She insisted it was really a “conservative libertarian” party.

Like Musk, she spoke admiringly of Trump and said it had caused her “physical pain to see how he has been disparaged” in Germany.

Both voiced their shared disdain for German bureaucracy and online “censorship” and agreed heartily when Weidel slammed Germany’s “insane, woke, leftist, socialist” education system.

When the conversation turned to Germany’s Nazi history, Weidel insisted Hitler was a “communist.” They also discussed the Middle East and religion, before their exchanges took an interstellar turn.

Weidel asked Musk about his plans to settle Mars, leading the Space X chief to expound at length on his vision for humans to become “a multi-planet species.”

While their chat was widely ridiculed in German media, political scientist Wolfgang Schroeder of Kassel University predicted Musk’s praise for the AfD would have “a mobilizing effect” and presented “a kind of ennoblement.”

ShareTweet
Staff Writer with AFP

Staff Writer with AFP

Related Posts

An Iranian protester
Featured

Iran’s Nuclear Program: From Its Origins to Today’s Dispute

by Staff Writer with AFP
June 23, 2025
Protesters and police clash during the “No Kings” protest in Los Angeles, California on June 14, 2025.
Democracy at Risk

US Appeals Court Allows Trump Control of National Guard in LA

by Staff Writer with AFP
June 20, 2025
Donald Trump
Opinion

Fact vs. Fiction: The Trump Administration’s Dubious War on Reverse Discrimination

by Kevin Cokley
June 18, 2025
Iranian missiles and Israeli interceptors light up the sky over Beirut, Lebanon, on June 14, 2025. Iran launched multiple missiles toward Israeli targets, triggering interception attempts above several regional capitals, including Beirut.
Featured

Israel-Iran Conflict: Latest Developments

by Staff Writer with AFP
June 18, 2025
Tens of thousands of protestors shut down Fifth Avenue in Manhattan on Saturday, April 5, 2025, protesting the Trump administration's abuse of the separation of federal powers as well as the deep cuts to governmental services overseen by presidential advisor Elon Musk.
Opinion

Civil Society Is Holding the Line. Will Washington Notice?

by Mandeep S. Tiwana
June 17, 2025
An Iranian walking in front of a wall painting of the Iranian flag in Tehran
Featured

How Much Damage Has Israel Inflicted on Iran’s Nuclear Program?

by Staff Writer with AFP
June 16, 2025
Next Post
Rescuers sift through the rubble at the scene of an Israeli strike that targets Beirut's southern suburbs

Lebanon Presses for Full Israeli Withdrawal as Troops Remain in 5 Places

An elderly woman pulls a trolley bag past a destroyed building in Bakhmut in Ukraine's Donetsk

Three Years After Russia Invasion, UN Faces Difficult Votes on Ukraine

Please login to join discussion

Recommended

An Iranian protester

Iran’s Nuclear Program: From Its Origins to Today’s Dispute

June 23, 2025
Protesters and police clash during the “No Kings” protest in Los Angeles, California on June 14, 2025.

US Appeals Court Allows Trump Control of National Guard in LA

June 20, 2025
Donald Trump

Fact vs. Fiction: The Trump Administration’s Dubious War on Reverse Discrimination

June 18, 2025
Iranian missiles and Israeli interceptors light up the sky over Beirut, Lebanon, on June 14, 2025. Iran launched multiple missiles toward Israeli targets, triggering interception attempts above several regional capitals, including Beirut.

Israel-Iran Conflict: Latest Developments

June 18, 2025
Tens of thousands of protestors shut down Fifth Avenue in Manhattan on Saturday, April 5, 2025, protesting the Trump administration's abuse of the separation of federal powers as well as the deep cuts to governmental services overseen by presidential advisor Elon Musk.

Civil Society Is Holding the Line. Will Washington Notice?

June 17, 2025
An Iranian walking in front of a wall painting of the Iranian flag in Tehran

How Much Damage Has Israel Inflicted on Iran’s Nuclear Program?

June 16, 2025

Opinion

Donald Trump

Fact vs. Fiction: The Trump Administration’s Dubious War on Reverse Discrimination

June 18, 2025
Tens of thousands of protestors shut down Fifth Avenue in Manhattan on Saturday, April 5, 2025, protesting the Trump administration's abuse of the separation of federal powers as well as the deep cuts to governmental services overseen by presidential advisor Elon Musk.

Civil Society Is Holding the Line. Will Washington Notice?

June 17, 2025
A Black Lives Matter mural in New York City.

Fuhgeddaboudit! America’s Erasure of History

April 2, 2025
Bust of Deputy Rubens Paiva in the Chamber of Deputies

Democratic Brazilians Are Still Here

March 18, 2025
A woman from Guatemala

Dispatch From Central America

January 28, 2025
US President Donald Trump

Dear Trump Supporters: Is This the America You Wanted?

January 28, 2025
Facebook Twitter

Newsletter

Do you like our reporting?
SUBSCRIBE

About Us

The Globe Post

The Globe Post is part of Globe Post Media, a U.S. digital news organization that is publishing the world's best targeted news sites.

submit oped

© 2018 The Globe Post

No Result
View All Result
  • National
  • World
  • Business
  • Interviews
  • Lifestyle
  • Democracy at Risk
    • Media Freedom
  • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Book Reviews
    • Stage
  • Submit Op-ed

© 2018 The Globe Post