AfD leader believes far-right party will govern Germany from 2029
The co-chief of the alternative for Germany (AFD) is optimistic that the anti-immigrant party will lead during the next general elections of the country planned for 2029, according to the supporters on Monday.
“We put this ship back in shape,” Tino Chrupalla told a few hundred participants during a political event in the Bavarian city of Abensberg.
AFD, which is the largest opposition party in Germany, won the regional elections in the eastern state of Thuringia last year – marking the first time since the defeat of Nazi Germany during the Second World War that a far -right party won an election across the country in the country.
Opinion polls after the February legislative elections, which saw AFD, obtain its best result at the national level, suggest that support for the party continues to grow.
Chrupalla, who directs AFD with Alice Weidel, said that the party has the answers and the ideas that citizens want to hear, promising to paint the blue of the country – in reference to the colors of the party.
He also took excavation to Bavarian chief Markus Söder and Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who directed the conservative block who came out in the lead during the February vote.
Chrupalla described Söder as the “chief comic”, while saying that Merz was a “real brandard” who had broken all the campaign promises since he had taken office in May.
The AFD leader and the party leader in the Bavarian state parliament, Katrin Ebner-Steiner, called for large-scale deportations of criminal migrants and those who do not have the right to stay.
All those who are in Germany illegally, said Ebner-Steiner, “will be removed from the country by hundreds of thousands”.
“We will expel, expel, expel until the Munich tracks shine.”




