Germany’s right-wing populist Alternative für Deutschland party, or AfD, is on course for a stunning result in Sunday’s ...
The influence of the far-right AfD party has grown in Germany following the elections. Constitutional law experts warn of attacks on democracy.
Alternative for Germany (AfD) came in second with 20% of the vote, its best election results since its founding just over a decade ago. While AfD didn't take home a majority, it squeezed votes ...
Economically troubled Germany just held elections and will soon have a new government. The conservative Christian Democratic ...
The far-right Alternative for Germany wants to have a bigger say in foreign policy. It is relying on its contacts within the ...
Supported by The Alternative for Germany party, or AfD, with its anti-immigrant and nationalist platform, has long been the pariah of German politics. Its members have been fined for Nazi slogans ...
Exit polls show Alternative for Germany on course for strongest far-right showing in a national election since WWII.
The Alternative for Germany party, which achieved the best result in its history in the elections (20.8%), could have taken ...
The Alternative for Germany still has pariah status among other major political parties in a country where far-right politics ...
When German voters go to the polls Sunday, the country’s moribund economy — and promises to fix it — will be front of mind.
“That feeds into this whole far-right populist narrative that the mainstream parties are abandoning those areas,” Lueders ...