About 150,000 people took to the streets of Berlin on Saturday as nationwide protests against the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) entered their fourth week.
Protests were also taking place in cities such as Dresden and Hanover, in a sign of growing alarm at strong public support for the AfD.
People flocked to the Reichstag parliament building in Berlin, where protesters gathered under the slogan “We are the Firewall,” to protest against right-wing extremism and to show support for democracy.
Photo: Reuters
“Whether in Eisenach, Homburg or Berlin: in small and large cities across the country, many citizens are coming together to demonstrate against forgetting, against hatred and hate speech,” German Chancellor Olaf Scholz wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.
He said the protests were “a strong sign in favor of democracy and our constitution.”
The AfD’s success has stoked concern among Germany’s mainstream parties, who fear it could sweep three state elections in eastern Germany in September, even though recent polls have shown a slight decline in AfD support.
Jakob Springfeld of non-governmental organization Solidarity Network Saxony said he was shocked that it had taken such a long time for mass demonstrations against the far-right, given the AfD has been successful in many smaller communities already.
“But there’s a jolt now. And the fact that the jolt is coming provides hope I believe,” he said.
Earlier this week, a Forsa poll showed that backing for the AfD dropped below 20 percent for the first time since July last year, with voters citing nationwide demonstrations against the far-right as the most important issue.
The AfD remains in second place behind the main opposition conservatives on 32 percent, while Scholz’s center-left Social Democrats polled third at 15 percent, the poll showed.
The protests followed a report last month that two senior AfD members had attended a meeting to discuss plans for the mass deportation of citizens of foreign origin. The AfD has denied that the proposal represented party policy.
AfD cochairman Tino Chrupalla told broadcaster Deutschlanfunk that while it was “legitimate to take to the streets with the government,” protesters should not allow themselves to be used to distract parties from the country’s actual problems.
Chrupalla said Germany includes Germans with a migrant background and that his party was not planning to expel them.
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