The Unabashedly Provocative Youth Driving Germany’s Far Right

Young activists are forming a new core of Germany’s nationalist, anti-immigrant party.

They are building on the party’s base, which has traditionally been older, blue-collar men.

These young people, who often revel in being called extremists, are helping to broaden the party’s appeal ahead of the election.

And they are using social media and other modern political tools to get out their anti-establishment message.

Ahead of Sunday’s national parliamentary election, a new band of influencers has found a voice among voters by bringing a more youthful edge to the party known for its provocations and controversies. They welcome the scorn of protesters, journalists and the mainstream political parties. Some of them still trade jokes about Hitler and Jews, along with the occasional Sig Heil salute.

Their party’s energy and ethos has won approving nods from Elon Musk, an adviser to President Trump, and from Vice President JD Vance. And they have helped elevate the party to second in the polls, even as the political establishment has kept the AfD out of government as part of a longstanding commitment to sideline parties deemed extreme.

They are the changing face of the AfD.

When Marie-Thérèse Kaiser, 28, first went to an AfD event in 2017, she was surrounded by retirees. “They could have been my grandparents,” she said. Things have changed. Young people who might have been punks or hippies in a different time are now finding the AfD, she said — and posting about it.

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