Current:Home > StocksGerman opposition figure launches a new party that may have potential against the far-right -ProgressCapital
German opposition figure launches a new party that may have potential against the far-right
View
Date:2025-04-14 00:27:39
BERLIN (AP) — A high-profile German opposition politician on Monday formally founded a new party that combines left-wing economic policy with a restrictive approach to migration and other positions that some observers believe could help it take votes away from the far-right Alternative for Germany.
Sahra Wagenknecht said her “Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance — Reason and Fairness” will make its electoral debut in the European Parliament election in June. She said she is confident that it also will run in three state elections in September in eastern regions where Alternative for Germany, or AfD, is very strong.
Wagenknecht broke in October with the Left Party, an opposition party in which she was long one of the leading figures, and announced her intention to launch the new venture. She and nine followers who quit the Left Party with her kept their seats in the German parliament.
Wagenknecht offers a mixture of left-leaning economic policy, with high wages and generous benefits, and a restrictive approach to migration. She also questions some environmentalists’ plans to combat climate change and opposes current sanctions against Russia, which was once Germany’s leading gas supplier, as well as German arms supplies to Ukraine.
The new party’s real potential remains unclear. But there has been widespread speculation that its positions could appeal to voters who might otherwise choose the nationalist, anti-migration AfD, particularly in the less prosperous, formerly communist east.
Wagenknecht took aim at center-left Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s unpopular government and asserted that many in Germany feel similarly to farmers, who were protesting Monday against a government plan to reduce their fuel subsidies.
“They see a government that has no plan other than to take the money that has already become tighter out of their pockets,” she told reporters in Berlin.
She rejected left-wing and right-wing labels. Wagenknecht said her party is in a left-wing tradition of working for “social justice” and standing up for people “who have been forgotten for years by politicians,” but that many now associate the left with “gender questions and lifestyle questions, and they no longer feel represented.”
Wagenknecht said the party will retain its current title until the next German national election, due in the fall of 2025, but will later choose a new one that doesn’t include her own name. She and longtime ally Amira Mohamed Ali are its joint leaders.
National polls currently show mainstream opposition conservatives leading and AfD in second place with over 20% support.
veryGood! (48)
Related
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Andy Cohen Apologizes to Brandi Glanville Over Inappropriate Joke About Sleeping With Kate Chastain
- Love Is Blind Season 6 Reunion Date Revealed
- Reigning Olympic champ Suni Lee headlines USA Gymnastics Winter Cup. What to know
- Tropical rains flood homes in an inland Georgia neighborhood for the second time since 2016
- Best Home Gym Equipment of 2024: Get Strong at Home
- Denver police seek help finding a former funeral home owner after body kept in hearse for 2 years
- Handwritten lyrics of Eagles' classic Hotel California the subject of a criminal trial that's about to start
- Chief beer officer for Yard House: A side gig that comes with a daily swig.
- Dashiell Soren's Business Core: Alpha Elite Capital (AEC) Business Management
Ranking
- Residents in Alaska capital clean up swamped homes after an ice dam burst and unleashed a flood
- Herbstreit, Fowler to be voices in EA Sports college football game that will feature every FBS team
- A work-from-home tip: Don’t buy stocks after eavesdropping on your spouse’s business calls
- Here's the Corny Gift Blake Shelton Sent The Voice's Season 25 Coaches
- Shilo Sanders' bankruptcy case reaches 'impasse' over NIL information for CU star
- U.S. Army says Ukraine funding vital as it's running out of money fast for operations in Europe
- Atlanta is the only place in US to see pandas for now. But dozens of spots abroad have them
- Horoscopes Today, February 22, 2024
Recommendation
Southern California rocked by series of earthquakes: Is a bigger one brewing?
Pennsylvania seeks legal costs from county that let outsiders access voting machines to help Trump
Frog and Toad are everywhere. How 50-year-old children's characters became Gen Z icons
The suspect in a college dorm fatal shooting had threatened to kill his roommate, an affidavit says
PHOTO COLLECTION: AP Top Photos of the Day Wednesday August 7, 2024
Bail is set at $4 million for an Ohio woman charged in her 5-year-old foster son’s suffocation death
Patients of Army doctor accused of sexual abuse describe betrayal of trust, fight to endure
Maryland lawmakers look to extend property tax assessment deadlines after mailing glitch