In today's time, the increasing challenges in the field of politics are becoming extremely difficult for politicians. Germany's most successful postwar far-flung party is free - divided on its coronavirus strategy and prone to civil war - but that does not mean that it is dead. The Alternative of Leaders for Germany (AfD) dropped a metaphorical hand grenade into the party last week, ousting the fanatical faction of Brandenburg party leader Andreas Kalabitz and a key member of Der Flügel, (The Wing). The party representing between 20% and 40% of the members.
According to reports, the Brandenburg Party, meanwhile, has remained loyal to Kalabitz, voting on Monday to put it in the AfD parliamentary group. At the meeting where it was decided to expel him last week, with the vote against Tang, he must have been fractal. Even the party's highest-ranking figures were divided: Co-leader Alice Weald and parliamentary leader Alexander Gauland both voted to keep Kalabitz on board, which meant that the other co-leader, Jörg Methane, only had his speed. Managed to force through.
Lockdown protest: This is not a good time for the internal rank AFD who are struggling to establish a position on the coronavirus epidemic. In recent weeks, it has fallen by 10% in some national elections. In early March, AFD demanded that the government close Germany's national borders, with some politicians sometimes trying to blame the virus outbreak on migrants.
Now the party has come to the level of anti-lockdown protests. AFD supporters have made a notable presence at such events, and in a Facebook post published on Saturday, Mathune condemned those who criticized the lockdown measures, calling them "Corona-deniers". German political scientist and far-right populist expert Florian Hartleb said the party "did not really know what to do with the coronavirus."
According to information received, "He supported Angela Merkel's course in Parliament, now he is basically starting to protest," he told DW. But AfD spokesman Ronald Glaeser in Berlin insisted that the party for Germany had been "something like an avant-garde". At the end of February, in early March, we called for a border closure, saying that masks needed to be provided, and the government was saying, 'Oh, we don't need those people, they don't help anyway' ", Told DW. Glaser said, "Now, of course, we are the worst about it, and that's why the party has been moved to take measures to relax." "We particularly supported the right to political demonstrations. We have not called on people to protest in the sense that we agree hundred percent with all demands, but many of the protesters' concerns are justified."
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