German journalists refuse to interview the party’s Beatrix von Storch, but I went to see her in Berlin.
The election successes of far-right parties in Germany and elsewhere is making it harder to solve social problems. Experts warn that this trend carries high costs, and not just for the economy.
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Agence France-Presse on MSNGerman city 'seismograph' for far-right AfD surgeThe far-right AfD celebrated a historic election triumph in Germany last month but that has not put to bed the grievances ...
This is a photo collection curated by AP photo editors.
And while young German women voted in droves for the far left, more than a quarter of Young German men voted for the far-right Alternative for Germany, or AFD, party, a party whose members rail ...
Waiting at a bus stop, out-of-work single father Falk Richter, 49, told AFP he thought immigration had driven the success of the AfD. "Politicians say that the foreigners should come here ...
Friedrich Merz, almost assured to be Germany’s next chancellor, is ignoring conventional wisdom when it comes to relations ...
EXCLUSIVE: Germany's plan to bypass its newly elected Bundestag to lift the Debt Brake has sparked outrage, with critics ...
Because Trump seems to believe he’s more pro-Israel than Schumer, he acts as if he has the right to weigh in on the validity ...
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