1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
Politics

CSU calls AfD 'un-Bavarian' 'brown dirt'

May 12, 2018

Bavarian State Premier Markus Söder has launched a war of words with Germany's far-right AfD. Bavaria's Christian Social Union is vying to win back voters ahead of October's state election.

https://p.dw.com/p/2xbiD
Bavarian State Premier Markus Söder
Image: picture alliance/dpa/P. Kneffel

The Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) on Saturday launched a vehement attack against the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), laying the foundation for what could be a heated and ill-tempered state election in the southern German state later this year.

Bavarian State Premier Markus Söder was quoted as telling ministers during a closed-door meeting that the AfD was "un-Bavarian" and "had absolutely nothing to do with Bavaria."

Read more: Biggest Munich protest 'in years' against hard-line CSU police bill

Those remarks were escalated by CSU General Secretary Markus Blume in an election strategy paper, who described the anti-immigrant AfD as an "enemy against everything Bavaria stands for." He went on to imply that the AfD was effectively a fascist party, saying "brown dirt has no place here." In Germany the colour brown is strongly associated with Nazi groups, referring to their uniforms.

Saturday's meeting marked the first preparations ahead of October's Bavarian state elections. The CSU is hoping to maintain its absolute majority in the state parliament. However, recent polls suggest this may be hard to come by. Latest figures suggest the CSU will take around 41 percent of the vote — almost 7 percentage points less than in the previous election.

Chancellor Angela Merkel's Bavarian sister-party has also been licking its wounds in the aftermath of last year's federal election, which saw it take just 38.8 percent of the vote in its home state, a 10-point drop from the last election in 2013.

Read more: 'The AfD is the new CSU' – How the far-right won big in Germany's Bavaria

Reclaiming lost AfD voters

The AfD, currently polling at 12 percent in Bavaria, could prove to be one of CSU's main rivals come October.

Most of the CSU's lost voters in September's general election migrated to the AfD. The Bavarian party has been vying to win them back since with a marked political shift to the right, particularly on refugees and migration policies.

Read more: Angela Merkel's Bavarian allies CSU threaten rightward shift

AfD campaign poster in Bavaria
The AfD scored around 12 percent in Bavaria in last year's federal elections, pinching most of its voters from the CSU.Image: DW/R. Staudenmaier

Senior ministers including Söder and German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer remained hopeful on Saturday that they would reclaim lost voters. "Our voter base is much wider; it's the middle class and that's who we will be canvassing," Söder told ministers.

Referring to the AfD, Seehofer said: "In the areas where they advocate absurd policies — and there are plenty of them — we will absolutely take them to task. But otherwise we will stand for our policies and for the middle class."

AfD jumps on the defensive

The AfD's co-chair Jörg Meuthen was quick to defend the party once the CSU ministers' remarks were made public. 

"The AfD is clearly conservative, bourgeois-free and patriotic," Meuthen told the Augsburger Allgemeine newspaper. "Despair in the CSU must be running high if that's what they call un-Bavarian."

The far-right leader also accused the CSU of suffering "a steep loss of prestige" by dabbling in "Antifa jargon," referring to far-left, anti-fascist and often violent movement.

Europe's far right: Can the established parties stop them?

Each evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.

dm/aw (dpa, AFP)