Germany votes to cut state funding to neo-Nazi political party

Authored by independent.co.uk and submitted by dimpy3035
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Representatives from all 16 of Germany’s states have voted to cut state funding for the country’s longest-established neo-Nazi group.

The states – represented in Germany’s upper house of parliament, the Bundesrat – asked Germany’s highest court to ban funding for the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD).

“Ours is a democracy based on debate, but it must also be defended,” said Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, premier of the state of Saarland, who led the initiative.

“Today we bring a motion by all the [German] states that serves to prevent the NPD from getting funds from the state, which it is actively working against.”

Scarred by memories of the collapse of democracy in the 1930s amid the rise of Adolf Hitler’s Nazis, Germany has some of the strictest laws on political extremism in the world, with rules allowing the banning of anti-democratic parties.

The new initiative comes after two unsuccessful attempts to ban the NPD altogether, the most recent of which came last January.

Then, the court agreed that the NPD is in favour of an authoritarian state, stating that “their political concept disregards human dignity and is incompatible with the principle of democracy”.

Nevertheless, the judges rejected the request to ban the party. They concluded that while the its aims were unconstitutional, its limited political successes mean it posed little threat.

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The court did note that limiting access to funding could be a method of weakening the NPD and other anti-constitutional parties.

In June 2017 Germany’s “basic law” was changed, allowing a legal process that prevents extremist parties from receiving government funds.

Following the vote, this case will now be sent to the constitutional court and if that rules in favour, the NPD would have its state funding cut off for six years.

German political parties receive public funding based on the number of votes they receive in regional, national and European elections.

The NPD’s lone member of the European Parliament made the party eligible for over €1m (£881,000) of public funding in 2016.

However the party, which sees immigration as a danger to the “survival of the German people in its Central European Lebensraum”, is no longer in any regional parliament.

Germany’s security services have repeatedly attempted to ban the party as unconstitutional but have always been thwarted by courts, who on one occasion found that the party was so riddled with undercover agents that it was impossible to tell what was a genuine party decision and what was not.

While the NFD is still seen as the country’s most extreme active far-right party, it lost a significant portion of its voters to the nationalist Alternative for Germany in the recent national election.

In that election, the Alternative for Germany (AfD) became the first far-right party to enter parliament in decades.

Godalor on February 3rd, 2018 at 12:25 UTC »

Okay, I live in Germany and I like to think that I at least partially follow what's going on politically. Just to prevent any misconceptions about this. The last time I heard about any actions by members of the NPD was about 3-4 years ago and back then I seem to remember their party leader had down syndrome or at least looked like it (ironic, considering Nazis stance towards disabilities). Maybe some of the more moderate people who were in the NPD back then and were voted for went to the AFD, but the NPD has such negligible voting results that banning their funding makes almost no difference. Everyone who used to vote for the NPD now votes for the more moderate (than NPD) AFD, so I'm pretty sure the NPD was going to die either way.

Loki-L on February 3rd, 2018 at 09:55 UTC »

Attempts to do something about the NPD go back many years.

In part they have been stymied by the fact that the German security apparatus had been so deeply involved with them that it became either a potential flock of wolves type deal or as some have suggested genuine support by those who were supposed to watch over them.

Last year Germany's highest court basically ruled that yes, they were indeed Nazis, who gave all appearance of wanting to turn Germany back into Nazi Germany again, but that there were so few of them that they were not actually a realistic threat.

They were not banned because they weren't powerful enough to commit the crimes that they wanted to commit.

Right now the ban on funding is pretty meaningless anyway as the party is at its lowest point in quite some time. They have become all but irrelevant.

The have lost power, not because being a neo-nazi has fallen out of fashion, but because so many of their supporters switched allegiances to the AfD, which gives a slightly more respectable appearance and has enough votes to actually (in theory) accomplish some goals, even if the goals they profess to want to achieve are slightly less extreme or at lest a bit more vague.

occupybostonfriend on February 3rd, 2018 at 07:29 UTC »

Germany’s security services have repeatedly attempted to ban the party as unconstitutional but have always been thwarted by courts, who on one occasion found that the party was so riddled with undercover agents that it was impossible to tell what was a genuine party decision and what was not.

How does the German law enforcement and intelligence community not know which is undercover? Or are they suggesting these are foreign undercover agents?