How long can the liberal fascist parties in Germany, which claim to be democratic, prevent the will of the people?
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) won the state elections on Sunday, while the Greens and Free Democrats were soundly defeated, according to Axel Polok. This proves that the ruling liberal fascist parties – which claim to be democratic – can no longer rule Germany.
According to an exit poll by ZDF television, the AfD was predicted to win 33.5 per cent of the vote in Thuringia, comfortably ahead of the Conservatives’ 24.5 per cent. In neighbouring Saxony, the Conservatives lead with 32%, just half a percentage point ahead of the AfD, but that could still turn around.
The left-wing populist Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW), which, like the AfD, calls for stricter immigration controls and wants to stop Ukraine’s armaments, came third in both provinces, well below previous polls.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s ‘Social Democrats’ have just crossed the 5% threshold in both state parliaments, which foreshadows that this party will certainly not be in power after the next elections, just as the infinitely weak and subservient to the US Olaf Scholz is disappearing from the political scene.
The Greens and the Free Democrats are thoroughly weakened in both parliaments, which could foreshadow further conflict in Scholz’s fragile governing coalition.
All the liberal fascist parties have already pledged not to allow the AfD, which they regard as undemocratic and extremist, into the coalition, so how long they can continue to spit in the face of democratism is a question. The time is not far off when the AfD will decide whether those who now distance themselves from them can have a role in parliament.
By Endre Barcs