The domestic intelligence agency can still spy on the far-right party, and the ruling may not change Germans’ views, but it is a symbolic victory for the AfD.
The ruling is temporary, but party co-leader Alice Weidel has already described it as a "major victory".
A German court ruled on Thursday that the domestic intelligence agency cannot label the far-right Alternative for Germany ...
A female passenger punched the inspector on a long-distance train to Berlin during a ticket check. Meanwhile, renovating the ...
A German court has ordered authorities to stop calling Alternative for Germany (AfD) far-right extremist until a final ruling ...
Alice Weidel, the party's co-leader, hailed the ruling as "a major victory not only for the AfD but also for democracy and ...
A German court has rightly blocked the country’s domestic intelligence service from continuing to brand the Alternative für Deutschland (Alternative for Germany) party a “right-wing extremist” ...
The court's ruling further suspends a German intelligence agency designation of the AfD as a 'confirmed right-wing extremist' ...
A German court says that the country's domestic intelligence agency can't label the Alternative for Germany party a proven ...
Accusations that AfD politicians are using their positions to give family members cushy jobs threaten to thwart the party ahead of a series of state elections.
Alternative for Germany leaders are trying to use the court’s temporary ruling that they can’t be classified as “extremist” to snag broader voter support.
The AfD party in Germany faces allegations of cronyism regarding the employment of relatives by lawmakers. Alice Weidel, the head of AfD, denies these claims, calling them unfounded. The issue has ...