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Germany's chancellor rejects calls to relax 'firewall' to work with German far-right AfD party

A man stands in front of the logo at the AfD party headquarters in Berlin, 23 February, 2025
A man stands in front of the logo at the AfD party headquarters in Berlin, 23 February, 2025 Copyright  AP Photo
Copyright AP Photo
By Laura Fleischmann & Gavin Blackburn
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The far-right AfD party finished second in Germany's snap national election in February and polls since then have shown its support base continues to grow.

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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz rejected calls from some in his party to relax its refusal to deal with the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) on Monday, declaring that the still-growing party has nothing in common with his conservatives.

The anti-migration AfD finished second in Germany's snap national election in February and polls since then have shown its support base continues to grow, with some putting it level with or even ahead of Merz's Union bloc.

Merz's nearly six-month-old governing coalition with the centre-left Social Democrats has annoyed many voters with public disagreements on a number of issues.

Five of Germany's 16 states hold regional elections next year, including two in the formerly communist east, where AfD is particularly strong and has a good chance of finishing first.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz speaks at the congress of the German Mining, Chemical and Energy Industrial Union in Hanover, 20 October, 2025
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz speaks at the congress of the German Mining, Chemical and Energy Industrial Union in Hanover, 20 October, 2025 AP Photo

A convention of Merz's Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in 2018 rejected any "coalitions and similar forms of cooperation" with AfD, as well as with The Left party at the other end of the political spectrum.

That limits its room for manoeuvre in a changing political landscape in which majorities for coalitions of like-minded parties are increasingly rare.

Last week, several conservatives — including Peter Tauber, a former CDU general secretary, and former Defence Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg — argued for a more relaxed approach to the AfD.

Tauber suggested a "new policy of red lines" that clearly allows the CDU to make decisions that gain the far-right party's support.

Merz said Monday that no one in the party leadership questions the 2018 decision and "we won't change anything," regardless of calls from what he called "a few marginal figures."

"There is no common ground between this party and us," Merz told reporters after a meeting of the CDU's leadership.

He rejected suggestions that the CDU could push through its priorities with AfD, declaring that the far-right party opposes not only the policies of the last 10 years, but decades of decisions that made modern Germany successful.

AfD has called repeatedly for the CDU to dismantle what is widely known as the firewall against working with the far right.

An election poster of the far-right anti-immigrant party Alternative For Germany party in Magdeburg, 7 February, 2025
An election poster of the far-right anti-immigrant party Alternative For Germany party in Magdeburg, 7 February, 2025 AP Photo

But its "outstretched hand is, in reality, a hand that wants to destroy us," Merz said.

The chancellor acknowledged that his coalition has engaged in "too many public discussions" since it took office in May, with priorities that included revitalising Germany's stagnant economy and reducing irregular migration.

"These arguments hide what the government has rightly put on track in recent months," he added.

The AfD's support has remained high despite Germany's domestic intelligence agency classifying it as a right-wing extremist organisation, a designation that it suspended after the AfD launched a legal challenge.

Additional sources • AP

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