
The AfD are circling like vultures. But in Berlin, I found a new, young left rising against them
Will democracy still prevail in the west in a decade? It was certainly a question weighing on the minds of the hundreds of Die Linke supporters crammed into a former film studio overlooking Berlin's Tempelhof airport last weekend. They were gathered to listen to the results of Germany's election – and their reactions were mixed. The far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) had just doubled its support in federal elections, securing a fifth of the vote, yet Die Linke came top in the capital, albeit with 21% of the vote. They cheered, hugged, kissed and cried.
We were in Neukölln, a diverse neighbourhood of south-eastern Berlin, and the triumphant candidate was Ferat Koçak, a charismatic Kurdish-German leftist. His grassroots campaign knocked on every door in the district – not unusual in the UK and US, but a novelty in Germany. 'For several years, the left has been in a kind of shocked paralysis about what to do with the rising right,' explained 30-year-old activist Isabelle: grassroots campaigning, she believes, brought the left out of its bubble.
A few months ago, Die Linke seemed sunk, its former co-leader Sahra Wagenknecht splitting away to forge a new alliance blending leftwing economics with social conservatism. But the alliance failed to win seats. 'Young people are more attracted to connecting leftwing economics with antiracism and feminism, and not putting them against each other,' said fellow activist Johanna.
Die Linke's support was once concentrated in a generation that grew up in the former East Germany, battered by deindustrialisation and nostalgia – ostalgie – for the security of Stalinism. But as that generation drifted to the far right, the West German youth shifted leftwards. The party also prospered with women, with more than a third voting for them. A quarter of men opted for the far right.
Even though Koçak stormed to victory in Neukölln with 30%, his mood is sombre. 'Dark times are upon us,' he tells me in a cramped room away from the crowd, pointing to how 'everyone was talking about deportation and migration'. When I ask why the AfD has suddenly surged, his answer is clear: 'They're gaining strength in a social environment where people can no longer afford to live.' When he knocked on doors, one woman pointed to her single shopping bag. It cost €50, she said: that would once have filled two bags.
Germany was once Europe's powerhouse, benefiting from a euro that made its exports to eurozone countries much cheaper than the old deutschmark. In the past three years, inflation as a result of the energy shock produced by Russia's invasion of Ukraine has hit people's pockets. More than half of Germans say they worry about increasing prices meaning they can't pay bills, rising to 75% of AfD supporters.
There are long-term issues, too. 'In the last 20 years, neither the state nor private sector did enough investment,' Carolina Ortega Guttack, an economist at the thinktank FiscalFuture, tells me. A 'debt brake' – introduced in 2009 by the then chancellor, Angela Merkel, to commit to limit borrowing – helped deter investment. In real terms, the German economy is smaller than it was five years ago. Germany brims with discontent: 83% of Germans say the economic situation is bad – compared with 39% in 2022 – rising to 96% with AfD voters.
Without migrants filling vacancies left by an ageing population, its economy would probably be worse, but, encouraged by the AfD, politicians of different flavours have willingly made them scapegoats. Under Merkel, the centre-right CDU brought in more than 1 million refugees: but it has since swerved rightwards on migration. A few weeks ago, the CDU – now set to lead the government – passed a parliamentary motion clamping down on asylum seekers with the support of the AfD, violating the 'firewall' against the far right that has persisted since the second world war.
Helena Marschall, a young activist who helped organise protests against the firewall desecration, said all parties played with fire. 'My deportation plans are better than your deportation plans' is how she sums up the mainstream parties' campaigns. Across Europe, these parties attempted to defuse far-right surges by raiding their rhetoric and policies, only succeeding in legitimising them.
Here's the fear. The AfD co-leader Alice Weidel sees Hungary's far-right Viktor Orbán as a 'great role model'. Orbán has gradually dismantled democracy by rigging the game against opponents in politics and media. It is a playbook comparable to Vladimir Putin's strategy in Russia, a repressive autocracy that still allows opposition parties for appearance's sake.
Across the west, economic discontent fused with anti-migrant scapegoating has driven a far-right insurgency. In power, all are likely to adopt this strategy: see how Donald Trump and Elon Musk are wearing down US democracy by attrition. Germany's past, you would think, may help immunise the country from this threat: but the stigma of that nightmare has diminished with time.
'I think our collective memory is very short,' warned Jamil, a 31-year-old Syrian-German citizen who fled Bashar al-Assad's regime and came to Germany in 2015 as a refugee. Then, he and his fellow arrivals were welcomed at train stations by volunteers giving out food and donations. The mood has since darkened, and with a new grand coalition of centre-right and centre-left set to assume office, the AfD are circling like vultures, waiting to feast on the disillusionment to come.
Owen Jones is a Guardian columnist
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The mullahs' regime tortured and executed my innocent sister, even burying her body themselves, creating lasting trauma for my family that I will never forget or forgive Fareshten, resistance unit member "Ali Khamenei, the regime's Supreme Leader, used to call Syria, its strategic depth, and he repeatedly said that if we don't fight in Syria and Iraq, we will have to face the enemy in Iran's major cities. "Now, the regime sees its only way out in trying harder to build nuclear weapons and acquire a bomb. "In the absence of any solution in the crisis-stricken mullah regime, the situation in Iran is like a powder keg. "And everyone, even the regime's leaders, constantly warn about the explosion of people's outrage from repression, corruption, and high prices. "The difference is that the people of Iran, especially the youth, know that the regime has never been in its current state of weakness." 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Hidden under the guise of a chemical production facility, the crowning jewel of the operation is a base known internally as the 'Rangin Kaman (Rainbow) Site". It is some distance from Iran's already known nuke bases, and is masked as a chemical production company known as Diba Energy Siba. READ MORE HERE 'Fighting spirit' Fereshteh said that despite facing "unprecedented repression and executions" the regime has failed to contain protests and even executions are not intimidating the public as they once did. She told how the political prisoners at some of Iran's most notorious prisons have been on hunger strike every Tuesday for 68 weeks as a protest against the death penalty. "Every week, their statement, which is courageously smuggled out of prison and published, speaks of their fighting spirit and loyalty to their commitment to freedom and the rejection of the death penalty," Fereshteh said. "Imagine that they are trapped in the prisons of religious fascism, but despite all the pressure the regime exerts on them, these strikes have continued for 68 weeks. "The people's anger and hatred grow stronger each day. "During the uprisings, I witnessed young girls, and even elderly women remove their hijabs when passing by the oppressors, signaling their defiance. "The intensity of this anger has reached a point where the regime no longer dares to harass women for not wearing hijabs as aggressively as before." Call for support Fereshteh has now called on the governments of the US and UK to "stand with the Iranian people" to prevent the regime completing its nuclear programme. She said: "The British government must immediately activate the trigger mechanism to prevent the regime from having more time to complete its nuclear program. "Since this regime will under no circumstances abandon its efforts to produce a bomb, this again underscores the necessity for the West to stand with the main opposition to this regime and the people of Iran and to provide political support for their efforts to change the regime." 15 Ali Khamenei, supreme leader of Iran Credit: Shutterstock Editorial 15 She added: "Not a day passes without various segments of the population - retirees, workers, teachers, nurses, medical staff, students, and those whose wealth has been plundered by IRGC-affiliated gangs - taking to the streets to protest against the regime. "Moreover, the increasing demonstrations from farmers and factories and businesses facing ongoing water and power shortages illustrate that we are witnessing an explosive society. "Today, in Iran, there is no segment of society whose patience has not run out with this anti-people regime. "The regime has managed to maintain its grip on power solely through blatant repression and a daily increase in executions. "For decades, the people of Iran have watched with disbelief and pain the leniency and wrong policies of the West towards a regime that is the main cause of instability and warmongering in the region and terrorism globally. "No one here doubts that the ruling fascist regime must go, and the only way to end the crimes at home and the warmongering, terrorism, and support for terrorist forces abroad is to end this regime. "This is achievable. "Our expectation from the international community is to stand with the people and resistance of Iran."