Vance tells German leaders to let populist opinions in

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ASPartOfMe
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Today, 8:09 am

JD Vance tells German leaders to abandon their ‘firewall’ against the far-right

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In a speech in Munich, Vice President J.D. Vance scolded European leaders for boycotting populist parties, and said German politicians should abandon their policy of maintaining a “firewall” against the far-right.

Vance’s speech to the Munich Security Conference on Friday was greeted with murmurs from the audience and backlash from German officials. It comes as the country’s far-right party, Alternative for Germany, is polling second ahead of national elections next week. The country’s center-right and center-left parties have long refused to work with the party, known as AfD.

“What German democracy — what no democracy — American, German or European — will survive is telling millions of voters that their thoughts and concerns, their aspirations, their pleas for relief, are invalid or unworthy of even being considered,” Vance said.

Democracy rests on the sacred principle that the voice of the people matters. There’s no room for firewalls.”

Vance never directly mentioned AfD in his speech, which came one day after he visited the site of Dachau, the Nazi concentration camp, alongside a Holocaust survivor.

But the theme of the address was taking European leaders to task for what he called antidemocratic practices, including suppressing speech and refusing to work with populist politicians.

“The organizers of this very conference have banned lawmakers representing populist parties on both the left and the right from participating in these conversations,” Vance said. “Now, again, we don’t have to agree with everything or anything that people say. But when people represent, when political leaders represent, an important constituency, it is incumbent upon us to at least participate in dialogue with them.”

Vance also championed AfD’s central issue, opposing migration to Europe. His remarks echoed his seeming defense of AfD’s policies in December, when he wrote a post on X pushing back against criticism of the party’s immigration policy.

“Of all the pressings challenges that the nations represented here face, I believe there is nothing more urgent than mass migration,” Vance said on Saturday. “No voter on this continent went to the ballot box to open the floodgates to millions of unvetted immigrants… More and more, all over Europe, they’re voting for political leaders who promised to put an end to out-of-control migration.”

He also defended comments made by Elon Musk, the multibillionaire and top Trump adviser who has endorsed AfD and spoke at one of its rallies.

Vance’s words were met with criticism from German leaders.

“I don’t think it is right for foreigners, including those from friendly foreign countries, to interfere so intensively in an election campaign in the middle of an election period,” a government spokesperson said, according to Reuters. The German defense minister called Vance’s criticism of European democracy “unacceptable.”


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MaxE
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Today, 8:31 am

Free speech or suppress Fascism. I guess there's no choice?

But if a huge plurality of Europe's voters are supporting parties like AfD you can't just dismiss those people as Deplorables, if history has anything to teach us.


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16 minutes ago

Germany's Scholz slams American interference after US VP Vance's speech

Chancellor Olaf Scholz spoke out at the Munich Security Conference, on Saturday, rejecting US Vice President JD Vance's statements calling for German democratic parties to work together with the far right.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Saturday, February 15, said that Germany rejects "outsiders intervening in our democracy," a day after US Vice President JD Vance told Europe in a blistering speech to open up political cooperation with far-right parties.

Scholz, who faces elections on February 23, spoke in Munich, where Vance, on Friday, launched his broadside against Germany and the EU on immigration, free speech and other topics, in a speech later praised by US President Donald Trump.
Vance also met with Alice Weidel, the top candidate of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, which has also received strong backing from technology billionaire and Trump ally Elon Musk.

Speaking at the Munich Security Conference, Scholz pushed back against Vance's speech and defended Germany's taboo against cooperating with extremist parties, often dubbed a "firewall."

"We will not accept outsiders intervening in our democracy, in our elections," Scholz said. "That is not appropriate – especially not among friends and allies."
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France's Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot also defended European policies after Vance's speech. "Freedom of expression is guaranteed in Europe," Barrot said on X, after Vance alleged it was "in retreat." "Nobody is obliged to adopt our model, but nobody can impose theirs on us," the French minister added.

Scholz started his speech by mentioning Vance's earlier visit to the Nazis' Dachau concentration camp near Munich, and the US vice president's commitment to "never again" allow such crimes to be committed. The Holocaust was the reason "the vast majority of Germans are firmly opposed to those who glorify or justify" the Nazis, Scholz said, recalling that AfD senior figures have trivialized Nazi crimes. "A commitment to 'never again' cannot be reconciled with support for the AfD," Scholz said.


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