First mayor in two weeks?: AfD candidate leads in Thuringian local elections

First OB in two weeks?
AfD candidate leads in Thuringian local elections

Listen to article

This audio version was artificially generated. More info | Send feedback

The proven right-wing extremist Thuringian AfD leader Höcke is certain: in two weeks his party will appoint its first mayor. He has Jörg Prophet to thank for this. The 61-year-old entrepreneur is the favorite in the runoff election in the former SPD stronghold of Nordhausen.

The AfD has another chance to win a top municipal office in Thuringia. Their candidate, 61-year-old entrepreneur Jörg Prophet, received 42.1 percent of the vote in the mayoral election in the Thuringian industrial and university town of Nordhausen, as a spokeswoman for the city administration announced. He achieved by far the best result among five other applicants. In the runoff election on September 24th, Prophet will have to compete with the independent incumbent Kai Buchmann, who received 23.7 percent of the vote.

The voter turnout was 56.4 percent. In the 2017 election it was 44.6 percent in the first round. A runoff election is necessary if none of the applicants reaches the 50 percent threshold in the first round.

The AfD, which is classified as a suspected right-wing extremist case by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, has won a district election in Thuringia and a mayoral election in Saxony-Anhalt since the end of June. It all started with the district of Sonneberg in southern Thuringia, where the AfD politician Robert Stuhlmann was elected the first district administrator of the AfD.

Höcke reacts confidently

“This means that another success like in Sonneberg seems possible, even though Nordhausen was not considered a stronghold of the AfD just a few months ago,” said Thuringia’s AfD state spokesman Stefan Möller, commenting on the result in Nordhausen. State party leader Björn Höcke wrote on X, he was sure that the AfD could appoint its first mayor in two weeks.

AfD candidate Prophet primarily focused on local political issues in Nordhausen’s election campaign. According to his own statements, he has gained experience as a member of the district council and the city council.

Disputes and disputes

Nordhausen is the district town and has around 42,000 inhabitants. Almost 37,000 people were eligible to vote. The SPD candidate and mayor Alexandra Rieger received 18.6 percent of the vote, the non-party school principal Andreas Trump, who ran for the CDU, received 11.2 percent. The other candidates scored in the low single digits.

Nordhausen has long been an SPD stronghold, but has seen many changes at the top of the city in the past eleven years. This year’s mayoral election is also marked by internal disputes and personal disputes. Incumbent Buchmann was temporarily suspended in the spring; following an administrative court decision, he has been back in office since August. The district accuses him of breaches of duty.

Proven right-wing extremist

The AfD, on the other hand, is currently experiencing a poll high. In Saxony it was 35 percent in a survey at the beginning of September, in Thuringia it was 34 percent a few weeks ago and in Brandenburg it was 28 percent.

Thuringian state politicians such as the parliamentary group leader of the Left in the state parliament, Steffen Dittes, fear the “normalization of a right-wing extremist party”. In Thuringia, the AfD with its boss Höcke is classified and observed by the State Office for the Protection of the Constitution as a proven right-wing extremist. Dittes feared that normalizing the AfD at local level would in the long term remove barriers “that still exist at the state and federal level.”


source site-34