ISENBURG, Germany (Reuters) - "Alice fuer Deutschland" (Alice for Germany) chanted supporters as far-right leader Alice Weidel addressed an election rally outside Germany's financial centre Frankfurt,
Alice Weidel, centre left, co-leader of the Alternative for Germany Party (AfD), is surrounded by journalists after a press conference in Berlin, Germany, Monday, Feb. 24, 2025, the day after
An election poster showing AfD top candidate for chancellor Alice Weidel is fixed on a lamp pole in Frankfurt, Germany, Thursday, Feb. 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Michael Probst)
- Leader of the far-right Afd, Alice Weidel, speaks during general debate of the German parliament Bundestag in Berlin, Germany, Sept.11, 2024. (AP Photo/, File)
From left, activists wearing masks of German far-right chancellor candidate Alice Weidel, Elon Musk, President Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Vice President JD Vance protest the U.S. and Russia’s support for the German far-right AfD party at Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.
One in five voters in the German election favored the far right. The AfD leader’s dramatic rise terrifies many of the others.
The half-naked protester was filmed defacing remnants of the Berlin Wall kept outside the German embassy in Ukraine capital Kyiv on Sunday with a Hitler mustache and swept-over cropped dark hair
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Hosted on MSNWho is Alice Weidel? All the facts about Germany’s far-right AfD leader and her girlfriendGermany’s federal elections took place this weekend, with the conservative Christian Democrats (CDU) and their Bavarian sister party the Christian Social Union (CSU) winning overall and set to form a coalition government.
Germany’s political system is set up to exclude extremists. Yet the country is waking up to a new political reality that has lurched to the right with the once outcast Alternative for Germany (AfD) party now firmly established in German politics.
Germany’s right-wing populist Alternative für Deutschland party, or AfD, is on course for a stunning result in Sunday’s German election, with reports indicating one-in-five voters
The Christian Democrats won with 28.6% of the vote while the far-right Alternative for Germany came second with 20.8%.
As Germany heads to the polls, a look at the politician cultivating the anti-immigrant party’s ‘image of competence’.
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