German court upholds expulsion of far-right party member
A federal German court on Saturday upheld the expulsion of a
prominent regional leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany party.
Andreas Kalbitz had won an emergency injunction against
expulsion last month but the federal arbitration court ruled the party had the
right to kick him out.
The national leadership of the party, known as AfD, in May
voted to void the membership of Kalbitz, its chief in the eastern state of
Brandenburg, for failing to disclose his ties to extremist groups.
The party is under pressure to distance itself from
extremists in its midst after coming under growing scrutiny from Germany’s
domestic intelligence agency. AfD came third in the country’s 2017 national
election but has recently lost ground in opinion polls.
Kalbitz has a long history of involvement in groups that
promote a revisionist interpretation of Germany’s war-time history and was
photographed in 2007 at an event hosted by the HDJ, a neo-Nazi youth movement
that has since been banned.
Ahead of the decision in federal court, he vowed to fight it
if the decision was not in his favor.
Much of AfD’s branch in Brandenburg has stood behind
Kalbitz, one of the leading figures on the party’s right wing. He has remained
a member of the party’s caucus in the regional parliament.
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