NAfter the anti-terror raid on so-called Reich citizens and individual AfD politicians, CDU leader Friedrich Merz rejected a ban on the party as useless. “I don’t believe in such ban procedures at all,” he said on broadcaster Welt on Wednesday evening. “They reorganize themselves the next day and are in another party. And then the game starts all over again,” he said. What is needed is a political debate, not a legal one.
On the other hand, Merz can certainly imagine a tightening of gun laws, as planned by Interior Minister Nancy Faeser (SPD). “If it turns out that people from this scene have come into possession of weapons legally, then you really have to check that.” But that alone won’t do any good, he said. “I’m just warning us against the fallacy of thinking that if you take these people’s guns away, their attitude has changed. That’s the real problem.”
Greens want to check AfD ban
The FDP, among others, is critical of the gun law plans. On the one hand, this involves a better exchange between the police and the weapons authorities. Faeser also wants to ban privately owned semi-automatic weapons similar to war weapons.
The Green Party leader Ricarda Lang told the Welt broadcaster that an AfD ban should not be taboo. “It has to be checked very carefully. Because what we do see is that right-wing extremism has a parliamentary arm – and that is the AfD.” There are good reasons for a ban on the matter: “There is a party that supports this democracy – and ultimately this country too – deeply despised. Who is currently making herself the mouthpiece of Vladimir Putin.”
A week ago, 25 suspected “Reich citizens” were arrested. 22 of them are accused of being members of a terrorist organization that wanted to overthrow the political system. “Reich citizens” are people who do not recognize the Federal Republic and its democratic structures. Weapons were also seized during the raids. Birgit Malsack-Winkemann, a former member of the AfD Bundestag, was among those arrested.
AfD federal spokesman Tino Chrupalla said in the program “RTL Direkt” that there were no close connections between his party and the so-called Reich citizens. The AfD has “nothing at all to do with these cranks”. In general, it is to be welcomed that the state is cracking down on “Reich citizens”. But to speak of a state coup in the specific case, “that can no longer be said here,” he qualified.
When asked how the AfD would deal with the arrested Malsack-Winkemann, he said that if the accusation were to be confirmed, the necessary consequences would be drawn. When asked if this would lead to expulsion from the party, Chrupalla said: “Absolutely”. Anyone who is committed to the Reich Citizens’ Scene has no place in the AfD.