The AfD Saxony is the state association of the Alternative For Germany (AfD) party in the German state of Saxony. The state association is led by a member of the Landtag of Saxony named Jörg Urban. The party holds the second most seats in the Landtag of Saxony and ideologically is positioned on the right-wing, specifically on the radical Right a subset of the far-right that does not oppose democracy.[1][2]
History
The Founding of the AfD regional association in Saxony was decided on March 17, 2013, in Döbeln. The founding conference took place on April 28, 2013, as a general meeting. The 133 voting members percent elected three bored members, assessors and a Treasurer. Frauke Petry was elected as chairwoman of the party and the decision was made to take part in 2013 German Federal election.[3]
At the beginning of January 2016, It became known through media reports that AfD member of the state parliament Detlev Spangenberg worked as an unofficial employee for the Stasi during his military service with the National People's Army of East Germany and had provided the Stasi with several reports about other soldiers.[5] The AfD state parliamentary group confirmed Spangenberg's involvement with the Stasi and criticized the information becoming public.[6] According to the Constitution of the Free State of Saxony, Stasi activity can lead to the loss of the parliamentary mandate. In addition, AFD elected officials had to affirm that they had not worked with the Stasi.[6]
Inter-party Conflicts
Inter-party conflicts at state and Federal levels led to the resignation of the chairwoman Frauke Petry from the parliamentary group on September 26, 2017, and from the party on September 29, 2017. as a result, there were further resignations in the parliamentary group and state executive bored.[7] In October 2017, an emergency board had to be appointed by the parties arbitration court because a total of six board members resigned after Petry's resignation and board members were no longer able to act.[8] The new Chairman of the AfD in Saxony, Jörg Urban announced increased cooperation with Pegida in order to strengthen the party and to became Minister president of Saxony after the state elections in 2019.[9] However, at the end of June 2019, the party submitted a list of candidates that, even after several improvements still contained numerous formal errors.[10] The states election committee shortened the list of AfD candidates from 61 to 18.[11] The state association filed a lawsuit against the decision with the state Constitutional court after the chairman Jörg Urban spoke of an "arranged plot" against the party.[11][12] The Saxon constitutional court decided on July 25, 2019, that the list of 30 candidates must be approved. On August 16, 2019, the state constitutional court confirmed the decision on July 25, in which the AFD was only allowed to run 30 candidates. AFD's Saxony party leader Jörg Urban announced a complaint in the case to the election audit committee of the Saxon state parliament after the election.[13]
2021 German federal elections
Even before the 2021 German federal election, the state of Saxony had increasingly became known as a strong hold for Alternative for Germany. After the federal election in Germany, where the AfD made gains as the largest vote share in Saxony, which continued the trend of the AfD making gains in the former states of the eastern German Democratic Republic.[15][16]
^ abcAlexander Häusler, Rainer Roeser: Die rechten ›Mut‹-Bürger. Entstehung, Entwicklung, Personal & Positionen der »Alternative für Deutschland«. VSA Verlag, Hamburg 2015, ISBN 978-3-89965-640-4, S. 103 f.