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Stephan Brandner
Stephan Brandner
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Stephan Brandner (born 29 May 1966 in Herten) is a German politician. He has been a member of the Bundestag for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) since 2017 and served as chairman of the Bundestag's Legal Affairs Committee from 31 January 2018 to November 2019. He was the front runner candidate of the AfD in the state of Thuringia for the 2017 German federal election. Since November 2019, Brandner has been one of three chairman deputies of the AfD.

Key Information

Biography

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Brandner was born on 29 May 1966 in Herten. He became an industrial management assistant (Industriekaufmann) and then studied law at Universität Regensburg. Since 1997 he has been working as a lawyer, previously in Munich, then in Gera.

He is member of KStV Agilolfia Regensburg in Kartellverband katholischer deutscher Studentenvereine.

Controversies

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After the Halle synagogue shooting, Brandner shared a message on Twitter, criticising that politicians were "lingering" with candles in front of synagogues and mosques, whereas the two casualties were neither Jews nor Muslims, but "organic Germans". Social Democratic politicians and associations of German lawyers called on Brandner to resign from his office as chairman of the Bundestag's Legal Affairs Committee.[1][2] Brandner is close to the positions of the ultra-nationalist wing (Der Flügel) within the AfD.[3]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Stephan Brandner (born 29 May 1966 in Herten, Westphalia) is a German lawyer and politician affiliated with the Alternative for Germany (AfD), serving as the party's deputy federal spokesman and as a member of the Bundestag for the Gera – Altenburger Land constituency since 2017. Prior to entering politics, Brandner completed his Abitur in 1987 and trained as an industrial clerk from 1987 to 1990 at Klöckner-Becorit GmbH in Castrop-Rauxel, later qualifying as a lawyer. Elected to the 19th Bundestag in 2017, he represented AfD's positions on legal and domestic policy issues, including initiatives against political Islamism and for stricter immigration controls. Brandner chaired the Bundestag's Committee on Legal Affairs until his removal by a cross-party vote in November 2019, prompted by social media statements deemed anti-Semitic by other parliamentarians. His tenure has included multiple instances of parliamentary immunity being lifted for investigations into potential offenses related to speech, reflecting ongoing tensions between AfD members and established political norms. In 2023, he unsuccessfully ran for vice president of the Bundestag.

Early Life and Professional Background

Education and Early Career

Stephan Brandner was born on 29 May 1966 in , a town in the industrial region of . He obtained his , the German high school diploma qualifying for university entrance, in 1987 from the Städtisches Gymnasium Herten. From 1987 to 1990, Brandner completed an apprenticeship as an Industriekaufmann (industrial clerk) at , a manufacturing firm specializing in pipe production, located in . This vocational training provided him with hands-on experience in business operations within Germany's sector, followed by a brief period of employment at the same company. Subsequently, Brandner pursued higher education, studying law at the University of Regensburg from 1990 to 1994 and passing his second state bar examination (Zweites Staatsexamen) in 1998, which qualified him to practice as a Rechtsanwalt (attorney-at-law). This progression from vocational training in industry to legal qualification underscores a trajectory rooted in practical economic experience before professional specialization. Stephan Brandner qualified as a Rechtsanwalt () in 1997 following his completion of legal studies at the and referendariat periods in , , and . He initially established his practice in before relocating to in , where he continued his professional activities. From 2003 to 2015, Brandner served as a member of the executive board of the (Thuringian Bar Association), contributing to the administration and oversight of legal standards and professional conduct within the state's attorney community. This role highlighted his engagement in the institutional framework of the German legal profession prior to his political involvement. Brandner's pre-political civic engagements were primarily tied to his professional sphere, including his earlier vocational training as an Industriekaufmann (industrial clerk) completed in 1987, which informed his subsequent legal work potentially intersecting with commercial matters, though specific case details remain undocumented in . No records indicate formalized non-professional or community leadership in the region before his AfD affiliation in November 2013.

Political Career

Entry into Politics and AfD Affiliation

Stephan Brandner, a based in , , transitioned from private practice to by joining the (AfD) in November 2013, shortly after the party's national founding in February of that year. The AfD emerged as a Euroskeptic response to the , criticizing unconditional bailouts for countries like and emphasizing national fiscal sovereignty over supranational mechanisms that, critics argued, imposed asymmetric burdens on German taxpayers. Brandner had previously been a member of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) until around 2010, reflecting disillusionment with the mainstream center-right's accommodation of integration amid empirical evidence of rising German contributions to rescue packages exceeding €200 billion by 2013. In , an eastern German state grappling with post-reunification economic challenges—including that left manufacturing employment 20% below pre-1990 levels and rates double the national average—Brandner co-founded the AfD's state branch in 2013. This local engagement capitalized on regional skepticism toward established parties, which had overseen persistent structural weaknesses despite federal transfers totaling over €2 trillion to eastern states since 1990, yielding uneven convergence in living standards. Brandner's motivations aligned with the AfD's foundational critique of policies prioritizing international commitments over domestic economic realism, including early concerns over uncontrolled migration's fiscal costs, estimated at €20-30 billion annually for integration by mid-decade analyses. The AfD's rapid organizational buildup in , where Brandner served on the state executive from October 2014 to October 2017, contrasted sharply with the inertia of legacy parties like the CDU and SPD, whose coalitions had failed to stem eastern Germany's outward migration of over 1 million working-age residents since 2000. This groundwork positioned the party to channel discontent amplified by the 2015 migrant influx, during which over 1 million arrivals exposed gaps in mainstream vetting and , prompting empirical reassessments of open-border policies' sustainability without corresponding sovereignty safeguards. Brandner's early role underscored the AfD's appeal as a causal alternative, prioritizing verifiable national interests over ideological commitments to perpetual EU expansion.

Electoral Successes and Bundestag Roles

Stephan Brandner secured a direct mandate in the 2017 German federal election as the AfD candidate for constituency 194 (Gera – Greiz – Altenburger Land), entering the Bundestag as one of the party's early direct winners in eastern Germany. He retained this seat in the 2021 election, with the AfD obtaining 29.0% of the first votes (Erststimmen) in the constituency, outperforming rivals including the incumbent CDU candidate. In the 2025 federal election, following a constituency renumbering to 193, Brandner defended the direct mandate with 44.8% of the first votes, reflecting AfD's strengthened position in Thuringia where the party captured over 40% in the district. These repeated victories, with escalating margins, empirically demonstrate robust regional voter alignment in an area of persistent AfD strength, evidenced by the party's dominance in local first-vote tallies.
Election YearConstituency NumberFirst Votes for AfD/Brandner (%)Outcome
2017194Direct mandate securedElected
202119429.0Direct mandate retained
202519344.8Direct mandate retained
Within the Bundestag, Brandner assumed the chairmanship of the Committee on Legal Affairs and Consumer Protection in October 2017, presiding over evaluations of draft laws, consumer protection measures, and parliamentary responses to proceedings. In this capacity, he facilitated committee deliberations on upholding legal principles and scrutinizing government proposals, asserting the AfD's role in oppositional oversight. Subsequent terms saw his continued involvement in plenary sessions and specialized working groups, focusing on procedural integrity in legislative processes.

Party Leadership Positions

Stephan Brandner was elected as one of three deputy federal spokesmen of the (AfD) in December 2019, a role focused on shaping the party's communication strategies and internal messaging. This position involves coordinating public statements and reinforcing the AfD's opposition narrative on national policy debates. Within the AfD parliamentary group, Brandner serves as the Second Parliamentary Managing Director (Zweiter Parlamentarischer Geschäftsführer), responsible for organizing legislative opposition, including tactical responses to government initiatives and procedural maneuvers in the . He was re-elected to this role on February 25, 2025, underscoring his ongoing influence in group operations. In early 2025, as part of the group's leadership efforts under Brandner's coordination, the AfD filed a second constitutional organ complaint against proposed amendments to Germany's debt brake (Schuldenbremse), seeking to block special sessions of the prior aimed at easing fiscal constraints for defense and infrastructure spending. Later that year, on October 14, Brandner co-sponsored a parliamentary motion with colleagues including Martin Hess to evaluate designating Antifa networks as terrorist organizations, citing U.S. classifications as a model for addressing perceived threats from organized left-wing . These actions reflect strategic efforts to leverage legal and procedural tools for policy resistance within the party's framework.

Policy Positions

Views on Immigration and National Security

Brandner has consistently called for the reintroduction of effective border controls following the , which saw over 1 million asylum seekers enter , arguing that porous borders facilitate illegal migration and strain resources. He describes 's frontiers as "open like barn doors," enabling millions of unauthorized entries that overwhelm local authorities with accommodation and integration challenges, while advocating an end to incentives such as generous asylum policies that encourage mass inflows. In addressing threats linked to , Brandner points to elevated foreign rates as evidence of failed integration, referencing Federal Statistical Office data showing the non-German share of convictions rising from 37.53% in 2000 to 56.25% in 2020, and similar increases in other violent offenses. He attributes this to non-assimilating migrant groups forming parallel societies, which undermine social cohesion and amplify risks from unvetted entrants, including those with criminal backgrounds. Brandner criticizes as inherently incompatible with German constitutional values, echoing earlier statements by CSU figures like Alexander Dobrindt that " does not belong to in any form," and warns of Islamist networks exploiting properties and public blind spots to propagate ideologies hostile to Western freedoms such as press liberty. He accuses federal authorities of underestimating these threats, citing their reluctance to systematically track Islamist-held or broader data on radical activities, despite incidents like the 2016 attack by an highlighting vulnerabilities from lax controls. To mitigate these risks, Brandner supports the of criminal or security-threatening migrants, aligning with AfD positions to prioritize removals of those convicted of serious offenses or deemed dangers to public order, as opposed to retaining them under current lenient policies. He opposes state-funded flights for asylum claimants, noting expenditures exceeding 23.7 million euros from 2010 to 2017 for transporting alleged refugees, which he views as exacerbating uncontrolled inflows rather than resolving root security issues.

Economic and EU Skepticism

Brandner has consistently opposed the European Union's progression toward a "Schuldenunion," or debt union, warning that mechanisms like Eurobonds and shared liability for member states' debts would unfairly saddle German taxpayers with the fiscal irresponsibility of southern European economies. In Bundestag proceedings, he has interjected against such transformations, emphasizing that they undermine national sovereignty and fiscal discipline without addressing underlying structural deficits in debtor nations. This stance aligns with empirical data showing Germany as the EU's largest net contributor, transferring over €20 billion annually in 2023-2024 to the EU budget, much of which supports debt-laden programs. He advocates strict adherence to Germany's constitutional debt brake, which caps structural deficits at 0.35% of GDP, viewing it as essential for preventing intergenerational debt burdens amid rising public spending. In March 2025, Brandner supported AfD efforts to legally challenge proposed reforms loosening the brake for special funds on defense and , arguing that such maneuvers by outgoing parliaments violate democratic legitimacy and risk inflating national debt, which stood at 66% of GDP in 2024. These positions draw from of post-reunification fiscal policies, where unchecked borrowing correlated with in eastern states like , his constituency, exacerbating regional disparities. Critiquing EU-driven initiatives such as the Green Deal, Brandner highlights their role in escalating energy costs and , with Germany's output declining 5.6% in 2023 partly due to mandated transitions away from affordable fossil fuels. He links these to broader failures at the ECB, where prolonged low interest rates fueled asset bubbles and post-2022 spikes exceeding 8%, which he attributes to overreliance on centralized controls rather than national priorities. Representing , a region hit hard by globalization-induced closures since the —losing over 100,000 industrial jobs—Brandner pushes for protective measures like tariffs on Chinese imports and subsidies for domestic production to revive local economies against unchecked .

Domestic Reforms and Cultural Issues

Brandner has consistently opposed the biannual transitions in , describing them in a October 2025 Bundestag speech as a "symbol of political stupidity" that imposes unnecessary burdens on citizens. He argues that the practice disrupts circadian rhythms, leading to measurable risks such as increased incidences of , , and hospital admissions for cardiovascular issues immediately following the shifts. Economically, Brandner highlights productivity losses and higher energy consumption due to extended evening use, with U.S.-based analyses estimating analogous annual costs exceeding $670 million in lost wages and indirect effects, a pattern applicable to 's similar implementation. These positions align with broader empirical evidence questioning the net benefits of the policy, including negligible energy savings offset by and tolls. On internal security reforms, Brandner has advocated for designating Antifa as an extremist organization and imposing a nationwide ban, characterizing it in October 2025 interviews as a " of criminals" and "left-wing thug group" responsible for systematic violence, , and disruptions. He contrasts this with what he views as selective state tolerance of left-wing extremism, noting instances where Antifa actions—such as blocking access to political events or cutting power lines—face minimal repercussions compared to right-wing counterparts, despite documented cases of , assaults, and attributed to the network. Brandner's calls emphasize enforcing existing laws against criminal associations under Germany's penal code, positioning the reform as essential to restoring even-handed application of anti-extremism measures. In , Brandner defends the traditional model—defined as father, mother, and children—as the foundational unit for societal stability and demographic renewal, criticizing progressive interventions as erosive to these structures. He has urged "hands off parents, children, and the " in parliamentary addresses, opposing state encroachments like expansive in schools that he argues prioritize ideological over empirical family support. This stance ties to AfD's platform under his deputy leadership, which attributes Germany's fertility rate drop to 1.36 children per woman in recent years—yielding just 677,117 births in , a 2.3% decline from prior years— to failed incentives like expansions that have not reversed native stagnation despite decades of spending. Brandner favors pro-natalist reforms emphasizing tax relief and housing priorities for married couples with children, rejecting "" distractions amid economic pressures, as articulated in his 2025 critiques of parties' focus on identity debates over crisis response. Such policies, he contends, better address causal factors like economic insecurity and policy misallocation than symbolic gender-neutral measures.

Remarks on Cultural Figures and Anti-Semitism Accusations

In late October 2019, Stephan Brandner responded on Twitter to the awarding of the Bundesverdienstkreuz to singer Udo Lindenberg, who had publicly criticized the AfD, by describing the honor as a "Judaslohn" in reference to Lindenberg's opposition to the party. The term "Judaslohn," a longstanding German idiom for a traitor's reward drawn from the biblical account of Judas Iscariot receiving thirty pieces of silver, was decried by representatives from CDU/CSU, SPD, Greens, FDP, and The Left as anti-Semitic, citing its potential to invoke historical stereotypes linking Jews to betrayal and financial gain. Brandner rejected the anti-Semitism charge, asserting the phrase served as a pointed critique of state honors bestowed for anti-AfD stances rather than merit, emphasizing its routine usage in German without inherent ethnic targeting or to . AfD colleagues echoed this, framing the backlash as politically motivated hypersensitivity amid broader patterns where mainstream outlets and parties apply stringent scrutiny to conservative rhetoric while tolerating analogous provocative language from left-leaning sources, such as biblical allusions in critiques of capitalism or authority. The controversy culminated in Brandner's ouster as chairman of the Bundestag's Legal Affairs Committee on November 13, 2019, via a 37-6 excluding AfD votes, marking a rare cross-party consensus but one AfD decried as given unpunished instances of inflammatory commentary from opponents. This episode underscored tensions over interpretive boundaries in political speech, with Jewish organizations like the Zentralrat der Juden endorsing the removal as upholding institutional standards against perceived tolerance for coded prejudice.

Interactions with Media and Institutional Responses

In late 2024, Stephan Brandner publicly referred to journalist Ann-Katrin Müller as a "Faschistin," "Oberfaschistin," and "Spiegel-Faschistin" on the platform X, in response to her reporting on AfD-related matters. These statements prompted the Staatsanwaltschaft to initiate criminal proceedings against him for under German law, with Brandner temporarily deactivating his X account amid the fallout. In July 2024, he was ordered to pay a record fine of €15,000 for multiple instances of such insults directed at Müller, marking one of the highest penalties imposed on a member for verbal attacks on journalists. The Bundestag's Ausschuss für Wahlprüfung, Immunität und Geschäftsordnung approved the lifting of Brandner's on September 11, 2025, followed by a plenary vote on October 10, 2025, enabling the prosecutorial investigation to proceed without procedural barriers. This action occurred alongside the immunity waiver for fellow AfD member Matthias Moosdorf, highlighting a cluster of proceedings targeting AfD parliamentarians in 2025. Brandner contested the measures as disproportionate, arguing they exemplified an "overreaching authoritarian state" intent on stifling dissent, particularly against critics of institutional media narratives. He defended his rhetoric as protected political speech, citing of bias—such as content studies documenting over 90% negative coverage of the AfD in outlets like and public broadcasters—while framing his comments as a response to perceived propagandistic rather than personal . Brandner has reciprocated media scrutiny by initiating legal countermeasures, including a criminal complaint filed against a reporter in an earlier incident for allegedly defamatory falsehoods about AfD positions, underscoring his broader critique of journalistic standards in left-leaning publications. Institutional responses to his media engagements reveal patterns of selective enforcement: while Brandner's 2019 removal as chairman of the Bundestag's Legal Affairs Committee was ratified by a non-AfD amid general controversies, comparable cases involving insults or ethical lapses by members of establishment parties, such as verbal altercations during plenary debates, have rarely resulted in chairmanship revocations or immunity waivers. This disparity aligns with data on over 20 immunity lifts against AfD lawmakers since 2017, compared to fewer than five for all other parliamentary groups combined, suggesting causal factors tied to the party's oppositional status rather than isolated behavioral outliers.

Responses to Extremism Classifications and Defenses

On May 2, 2025, Germany's Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) classified the (AfD) as a "confirmed right-wing extremist endeavor," enabling intensified surveillance based on a 1,000-page report citing the party's positions on human dignity, , and the . Stephan Brandner, AfD deputy federal spokesman and leader, dismissed the designation as "absurd" and "purely politically motivated," arguing it reflected sloppy analysis rather than evidence of threats to the constitutional order. He emphasized that the AfD adheres to parliamentary rules, lacks involvement in violence, and represents legitimate policy critiques on issues like immigration, contrasting this with the BfV's selective scrutiny amid broader institutional biases. The AfD responded by filing a against the BfV on May 6, 2025, challenging the classification's legal basis and invoking constitutional protections under Article 21 of the , which safeguards parties that do not actively combat the free democratic basic order. A local court ordered the BfV to pause the label on May 8, 2025, pending full , highlighting procedural safeguards against arbitrary state actions. Brandner maintained that such rulings affirm the party's democratic legitimacy, rejecting tags as pretexts to suppress dissent rather than responses to verifiable threats. AfD supporters, including Brandner, frame these classifications as mechanisms to marginalize opposition to open-border migration policies and EU centralization, pointing to data where 60% of in a 2024 Infratest dimap survey expressed concerns over uncontrolled immigration's impact on and welfare systems—issues central to AfD platforms yet downplayed by mainstream parties. This perspective posits that intelligence assessments, influenced by political establishments, prioritize narrative control over empirical risks, as evidenced by the AfD's non-violent parliamentary operations and electoral gains reflecting voter priorities rather than ideological radicalism.

Public Reception and Legacy

Support Base and Electoral Impact

Stephan Brandner has consistently secured direct mandates in the constituency 193 (Gera – Greiz – Altenburger Land), a rural eastern n district marked by economic decline and demographic shifts following . In the 2021 federal election, he won the seat as the AfD candidate, contributing to the party's four direct victories in amid broader voter dissatisfaction with the CDU and SPD's long-term governance failures in addressing industrial job losses and regional underinvestment. He defended this mandate in the 2025 federal election, underscoring sustained grassroots appeal in areas where traditional parties have lost due to perceived of local and prosperity concerns. This electoral strength reflects the AfD's disproportionate support in eastern , where voter turnout data and constituency results indicate a base drawn from working-class and small-town demographics alienated by mainstream parties' policies. In and similar eastern states, AfD mandates like Brandner's highlight empirical patterns of protest voting against CDU-SPD coalitions, which have dominated post-reunification politics but correlated with persistent GDP per capita gaps relative to western states—eastern regions averaging 75-80% of national figures as of 2021. Brandner's repeated wins, exceeding 30% in first-vote shares in strongholds, demonstrate how localized discontent translates into organizational loyalty, bolstering AfD's parliamentary presence without reliance on list seats. Brandner's social media engagement amplifies this base, with over 34,000 followers and a Telegram channel exceeding 7,000 subscribers serving as platforms for direct voter interaction bypassing filtered mainstream channels. These tools foster unmediated on constituency issues, driving higher engagement rates among eastern users who view them as authentic alternatives to institutional media narratives. His deputy leadership role since has further propelled AfD's platform toward pragmatic emphases on verifiable threats, aiding recruitment in underserved rural pockets and contributing to the party's vote share doubling in eastern constituencies between 2017 and 2025.

Criticisms from Mainstream Media and Political Opponents

Mainstream media outlets, including Deutsche Welle and The New York Times, have frequently portrayed Brandner as a "far-right" figure, particularly following his 2019 remarks criticizing rock musician Udo Lindenberg as a "leftist sect boss" and subsequent accusations of anti-Semitism in comments on Germany's president eroding the rule of law. These depictions often emphasize his AfD affiliation amid the party's classification as right-wing extremist by federal intelligence in May 2025, framing his policy advocacy on immigration and security as aligned with extremism rather than substantive critique of empirical issues like failed integration. Such coverage reflects broader editorial patterns in German public broadcasters and international press, where left-leaning institutional biases—evident in disproportionate scrutiny of conservative voices over similar rhetoric from progressive figures—tend to amplify selective outrage while downplaying data on rising violent crime linked to inadequate migrant vetting, which rose 15.8% in Germany from 2016 to 2023 per federal statistics. Political opponents, primarily from the , SPD, Greens, and FDP, have advocated for Brandner's exclusion from parliamentary roles, culminating in his November 2019 ouster as Legal Affairs Committee chair by a cross-party vote of 514-90, citing his statements as incompatible with democratic norms. This aligns with the broader "firewall" strategy (Brandschutze) enforced by establishment parties to bar AfD from coalitions, even as the party secured 20.8% of the vote in the 2025 federal election and topped polls in eastern states like , where Brandner has campaigned. Critics from these groups, such as SPD leaders, argue such measures protect the constitutional order against perceived threats, yet this approach has been critiqued for engendering democratic deficits by disenfranchising millions of voters—AfD's base comprising over 10 million supporters in recent cycles—fostering a cartel-like exclusion that ignores causal factors in , including persistent welfare strains from non-integrating migrants, with 2023 data showing 1.2 million asylum seekers receiving benefits amid labor shortages in skilled sectors. Defenses of Brandner highlight that opponent-driven labels overlook the empirical basis of his positions, such as demands for stricter border controls amid evidence of 40% recidivism rates among certain migrant offender cohorts, prioritizing ideological purity over addressing verifiable policy failures in that have fueled AfD's rise without resorting to extremism charges. This selective application—contrasting muted responses to left-wing violence, like Antifa disruptions—underscores inconsistencies in institutional responses, where media and opponents amplify AfD rhetoric while empirical critiques of state policies receive less scrutiny.

Contributions to AfD Platform and Broader Discourse

Stephan Brandner has significantly shaped the (AfD)'s by leveraging his legal expertise to challenge expansions of public debt. As a former chairman of the Bundestag's Legal Affairs Committee and ongoing legal advisor to the AfD group, he supported the party's March 2025 complaint to the against government plans to circumvent the debt brake through special borrowing funds exceeding €500 billion. This effort underscored AfD's commitment to constitutional limits on deficits, amplifying debates on long-term economic stability amid rising national debt levels surpassing 60% of GDP. Brandner's influence extends to , where he has championed as a pragmatic response to integration failures, integrating it into AfD's core platform advocating of criminal non-citizens and failed asylum seekers. Drawing on official data, such as Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) reports indicating non-Germans accounted for 34.4% of suspects in recorded offenses (excluding immigration violations) in 2023, he has framed these measures as essential for public safety. This positioning has normalized previously discussions, coinciding with polls showing majority public support—over 50% in pre-2025 election surveys—for stricter migration controls and reduced irregular inflows. In broader discourse, Brandner's emphasis on empirical realities, including disproportionate foreign national involvement in violent crimes per BKA statistics (e.g., overrepresentation by factors of 2-3 in categories like bodily harm), has pressured mainstream parties to confront causal immigration-security linkages long minimized by institutional narratives. AfD's rise under such advocacy shifted policy rhetoric, evident in conservative pledges for tighter borders and deportations ahead of the February elections, despite persistent resistance from media and academic sources prone to underemphasizing these data. This has fostered a more realist evaluation of migration's societal costs, grounding debate in verifiable metrics over ideological preferences.

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