By Michelle Martin
COLOGNE,
Germany (Reuters) - The co-leader of the anti-immigrant Alternative for
Germany (AfD) suffered an embarrassing defeat on Saturday when
delegates refused to discuss her motion to shift the party into the
"mainstream", putting it on course to turn further right.
The
party, a pariah in German politics, has seen its support drop in recent
months, and thousands turned up to protest the congress and the party's
anti-immigrant stance.
Frauke
Petry, the AfD's public face, shocked supporters on Wednesday by
announcing that she would not lead the AfD's campaign for a Sept. 24
federal election.
She
had ruffled feathers by proposing to rebrand the AfD as a party that
would seek to join coalitions from 2021 elections rather than becoming a
"fundamental" opposition party. All established parties refuse to work
with the AfD.
Petry
said she was prepared to edit the text with her arch-rival Alexander
Gauland, whom she upset by naming as the key proponent of the
"fundamental" opposition camp. Her foes within the party say the
division laid out in her motion is artificial.
But
delegates stressed the need to use the congress in Cologne to signal
the AfD was united ahead of the elections after months of bitter
infighting that have helped drag down its poll ratings by about
one-third to 8-10 percent.
They
voted against discussing Petry's motion or another proposal in which
she and others said the AfD should reject "racist, anti-Semitic ... and
nationalist ideologies".
Speaking
after the vote, Petry said the AfD had made a "mistake" and added that
those acquainted with the party since it was founded in 2013 knew that
it was "exactly this lack of strategy" that was behind much of its
internal strife.
"As
long as the party does not indicate which direction it actually wants
to go in, protagonists who can live with this non-decision a lot better
than I can have to lead this election campaign," Petry said, adding that
she would however do her bit to make the AfD successful.
Co-leader
Joerg Meuthen gained wild applause - and a standing ovation from some -
for saying the AfD would never form an alliance with the likes of
Chancellor Angela Merkel, Social Democrat leader Martin Schulz or the
Greens, who he said were wrecking Germany with their pro-migrant
stances.
Around
10-15,000 protesters demonstrated against the AfD's meeting in Cologne,
a police spokesman told broadcaster n-tv - well below initial
expectations that 50,000 could turn up. Two police officers were injured
and a police car was set ablaze.
Delegates
also voted on Saturday in favor of having a team of national candidates
for the election campaign despite Petry warning against such a
strategy. The line-up is due to be decided on during the congress.
In
a firebrand speech, economics professor Meuthen said Germans were
increasingly "few and far between" and that without action now, "the
irrevocable change of our homeland into a Muslim-dominated country is a
mathematical certainty".
Many of the more than one million migrants who have arrived in Germany in the last two years are Muslims.
Meuthen
said he was not xenophobic but was concerned about the extent to which
migrants were changing Germany and that Germans did not want to become a
minority in their own country.
He likened the country to the Titanic.
"Everybody
is still in good spirits and there's a relaxed party mood above and
below deck but it's almost impossible for the huge ship to make the
necessary change in direction anymore," Meuthen said. "People can't or
don't want to imagine a collision with an iceberg but it's already
unavoidable."
1 comment:
NOT SO GENERAL KNOWLEDGE!!
Paul Michel Gabriel Lévy (27 November 1910 – 16 August 2002) was a Belgian journalist and professor. He was born in Brussels and was a Holocaust survivor. He worked for many years as Director of Information at the Council of Europe, helping to create the Flag of Europe in the 1950s in collaboration with Arsène Heitz.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_M._G._L%C3%A9vy
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