Constitutional protection chief Haldenwang, Interior Minister Seehofer: The reason for AfD observation should be absolutely legally secure
Photo: Tobias Schwarz / AFP
Federal Interior Minister Horst Seehofer (CSU) has not yet given the green light for the AfD to be monitored by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution.
According to SPIEGEL information, he instructed the lawyers of his house to thoroughly bend over the 1000-page long secret report with the experts of the Federal Office (BfV), with which the entire party could be declared a suspected right-wing extremism case in January.
The reason should be absolutely legally secure, a successful claim by the AfD in the Bundestag election year should be excluded.
The Federal Ministry of the Interior was "involved in the process as part of the service and technical supervision and is currently reviewing the documents submitted by the BfV," said a spokesman.
"It remains to be seen when this test will be completed."
The AfD wants to prevent the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution from classifying it as a suspected case in court.
The party is therefore suing the Cologne Administrative Court against the office located there and has filed several lawsuits and urgent motions.
The party requested, among other things, to forbid the Office for the Protection of the Constitution to classify it as a suspected case and to make this public.
In addition, the AfD requests that the protection of the constitution should not be allowed to announce how many members the völkisch-nationalist "wing" had until its official self-dissolution or, according to information from the protection of the constitution, still has today.
Among other things, the AfD invokes the parties' right to equal opportunities.
The administrative court announced a first interlocutory decision for Monday.
Poggenburg explores candidacy as a non-party
The Office for the Protection of the Constitution is already observing parts of the AfD, the "wing" around the Thuringian state and parliamentary group leader Björn Höcke, since March 2020 the Federal Office has classified it as "proven extremist".
In 2015, Höcke and André Poggenburg wrote the »Erfurt Resolution«, which is considered the founding document of the »Wing«.
Poggenburg left the AfD two years ago after falling out with party friends for political and private reasons.
But now, according to SPIEGEL information, he is checking his chances of success to run for the state parliament as a non-party on the Saxony-Anhalt AfD state list.
The state election will take place on June 6th.
According to several AfD officials, the party's former head of state has held talks about a possible candidacy in recent weeks.
Accordingly, several district associations encouraged Poggenburg to apply on the list between the promising places 15 and 20.
Now he is trying to find more supporters.
The AfD state party conference for the list will take place this weekend.
According to reports, Poggenburg wants to make the decision on a candidacy shortly beforehand.
He did not want to comment publicly, he said when asked.
Even at the top of the federal government, it should cause annoyance if Poggenburg is put on the electoral list by the regional association.
Poggenburg was considered one of the main drivers of the AfD's right-wing course, especially in the early days.
Several times he triggered outrage with racist remarks and received two reprimands from the federal executive committee.
The AfD chairman Jörg Meuthen criticized Poggenburg again and again and expressly welcomed his departure from the AfD at the time.
If Poggenburg should stand as a candidate, he should criticize Meuthen heavily in his application speech, according to the party.
Icon: The mirror
kno / wow / til