Sign in
Edition of 20:00 CETSunday, July 5, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages180 briefings today
Geopolitics & PoliticsSunday, July 5, 2026

Berlin Weighs Withholding State Secrets from Far-Right AfD Governments

Defence Minister Boris Pistorius signals that federal authorities may deny classified information to any state government led by the AfD, citing the party’s closeness to Moscow, as its congress reaffirms its electoral ambitions.

The German federal government is examining mechanisms to restrict access to classified information for state administrations headed by the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), Defence Minister Boris Pistorius (SPD) disclosed on Sunday. In an interview with Bild, Pistorius said security officials are “looking very closely at the question of whom we can grant access to classified information,” warning that sharing secrets with AfD ministers would be untenable because “their proximity to Putin is impossible to overlook.” The announcement carries immediate operational consequences: under Germany’s federal system, state interior and intelligence authorities hold significant powers, and withholding sensitive material would cut across established security cooperation.

The statement coincided with the AfD’s federal congress in Erfurt, Thuringia, where co-leaders Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla were re-elected with 81.3 and just over 70 percent of delegate votes. From the podium, Weidel depicted an economically ruined country and vowed to restore national greatness through “rigorous spending cuts,” including ending cash benefits for Ukrainian refugees and limiting social transfers to those who have paid into the system. Chrupalla claimed that Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s government is steering toward “catastrophe” and that the AfD is now preparing to govern, first in the upcoming state elections in Saxony-Anhalt and Mecklenburg‑Western Pomerania, and later nationally. The party leadership denies extremism and accuses mainstream parties of fomenting “hatred and incitement” against its supporters.

The congress was met by more than 30,000 counter-demonstrators, with police reporting dozens of criminal offences and some violent clashes, including an attack on journalists from a right‑leaning outlet. Organisers from the “Widersetzen” alliance argued that the AfD represents a fascist danger and that attempts to blockade the venue were legitimate; they noted the symbolic timing: the meeting fell on the centenary of the 1926 NSDAP congress in nearby Weimar. Inside the hall, Thuringian AfD leader Björn Höcke, whom the state’s domestic intelligence service classifies as a right‑wing extremist, declared that Germany needed “psychoanalysis” and a recovery of national identity. Political observers in Berlin note that the party leads national polls with around 29 percent, ahead of the CDU/CSU, and could win an absolute majority in Saxony‑Anhalt in September.

Viewed from European capitals, any move by Berlin to withhold classified information from a state government would be unprecedented in postwar Germany and would deepen the constitutional tension between federal and regional competencies. Simultaneously, Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil’s draft budget foresees net new borrowing of €118.7 billion in 2027, with interest payments projected to rise from €4 billion in 2021 to €80.7 billion by 2030 — a fiscal squeeze that the AfD exploits to attack established parties. The state elections on 6 September represent the next concrete test: if the AfD secures a governing majority, federal‑state security protocols will face immediate strain, and the first AfD‑led state parliament would mark a structural shift in postwar German politics.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

22%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Continental European pressLatin American press
Continental European press
OutrageAlarmRevanchism

The AfD tries to rebrand as a moderate party ready to govern, but the European press exposes its extremist nature: leaders convicted for using Nazi slogans, ties to the radical wing, and a congress date evoking the Nazi past. Economic promises are seen as a facade for an ethno-nationalist agenda, while massive protests highlight civil society's resistance. The party is portrayed as a threat to German democracy.

Latin American press/ Bolivarian / progressive
OutrageAlarm

The AfD congress was scheduled on the same day as the centenary of a Nazi party meeting, a choice seen as an alarming historical continuity. Mass protests with police clashes underscore the threat the party poses. The Latin American press denounces the rise of the far-right in Germany as a global danger.

Broaden your view

Read more
Breaking
Netanyahu invokes India as ally after US vice-president calls America Israel’s only powerful friend·Russia Launches Ballistic Missile and Drone Barrage on Kyiv on Eve of NATO Summit·Ghalibaf: US-Iran Understanding Enforces End to War on Tehran's Allies·Fujimori Declared Peru President-Elect as Rival Rejects Result and Alleges Fraud·India’s passport-citizenship rift deepens as global document rules tighten·At the Foot of Snowdon, an Embrace; in London, an Empty Room·Trump to Meet Zelensky and Syria’s Leader at NATO Summit in Turkey·Gold Tongues, Coin Hoards and a Wine Shipwreck: A Week of Mediterranean Discoveries·Netanyahu invokes India as ally after US vice-president calls America Israel’s only powerful friend·Russia Launches Ballistic Missile and Drone Barrage on Kyiv on Eve of NATO Summit·Ghalibaf: US-Iran Understanding Enforces End to War on Tehran's Allies·Fujimori Declared Peru President-Elect as Rival Rejects Result and Alleges Fraud·India’s passport-citizenship rift deepens as global document rules tighten·At the Foot of Snowdon, an Embrace; in London, an Empty Room·Trump to Meet Zelensky and Syria’s Leader at NATO Summit in Turkey·Gold Tongues, Coin Hoards and a Wine Shipwreck: A Week of Mediterranean Discoveries·
Upd. 03:59 PM2 languages · 5 outlets
PreviousGeopolitics & PoliticsNext
5 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Sunday, July 5, 2026

Berlin Weighs Withholding State Secrets from Far-Right AfD Governments

Defence Minister Boris Pistorius signals that federal authorities may deny classified information to any state government led by the AfD, citing the party’s closeness to Moscow, as its congress reaffirms its electoral ambitions.

The German federal government is examining mechanisms to restrict access to classified information for state administrations headed by the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), Defence Minister Boris Pistorius (SPD) disclosed on Sunday. In an interview with Bild, Pistorius said security officials are “looking very closely at the question of whom we can grant access to classified information,” warning that sharing secrets with AfD ministers would be untenable because “their proximity to Putin is impossible to overlook.” The announcement carries immediate operational consequences: under Germany’s federal system, state interior and intelligence authorities hold significant powers, and withholding sensitive material would cut across established security cooperation.

The statement coincided with the AfD’s federal congress in Erfurt, Thuringia, where co-leaders Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla were re-elected with 81.3 and just over 70 percent of delegate votes. From the podium, Weidel depicted an economically ruined country and vowed to restore national greatness through “rigorous spending cuts,” including ending cash benefits for Ukrainian refugees and limiting social transfers to those who have paid into the system. Chrupalla claimed that Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s government is steering toward “catastrophe” and that the AfD is now preparing to govern, first in the upcoming state elections in Saxony-Anhalt and Mecklenburg‑Western Pomerania, and later nationally. The party leadership denies extremism and accuses mainstream parties of fomenting “hatred and incitement” against its supporters.

The congress was met by more than 30,000 counter-demonstrators, with police reporting dozens of criminal offences and some violent clashes, including an attack on journalists from a right‑leaning outlet. Organisers from the “Widersetzen” alliance argued that the AfD represents a fascist danger and that attempts to blockade the venue were legitimate; they noted the symbolic timing: the meeting fell on the centenary of the 1926 NSDAP congress in nearby Weimar. Inside the hall, Thuringian AfD leader Björn Höcke, whom the state’s domestic intelligence service classifies as a right‑wing extremist, declared that Germany needed “psychoanalysis” and a recovery of national identity. Political observers in Berlin note that the party leads national polls with around 29 percent, ahead of the CDU/CSU, and could win an absolute majority in Saxony‑Anhalt in September.

Viewed from European capitals, any move by Berlin to withhold classified information from a state government would be unprecedented in postwar Germany and would deepen the constitutional tension between federal and regional competencies. Simultaneously, Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil’s draft budget foresees net new borrowing of €118.7 billion in 2027, with interest payments projected to rise from €4 billion in 2021 to €80.7 billion by 2030 — a fiscal squeeze that the AfD exploits to attack established parties. The state elections on 6 September represent the next concrete test: if the AfD secures a governing majority, federal‑state security protocols will face immediate strain, and the first AfD‑led state parliament would mark a structural shift in postwar German politics.

Source divergence

Geopolitics & Politics · 5 outlets · 2 languages

22%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Critical100%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Continental European pressLatin American press
Continental European press
OutrageAlarmRevanchism

The AfD tries to rebrand as a moderate party ready to govern, but the European press exposes its extremist nature: leaders convicted for using Nazi slogans, ties to the radical wing, and a congress date evoking the Nazi past. Economic promises are seen as a facade for an ethno-nationalist agenda, while massive protests highlight civil society's resistance. The party is portrayed as a threat to German democracy.

Latin American press/ Bolivarian / progressive
OutrageAlarm

The AfD congress was scheduled on the same day as the centenary of a Nazi party meeting, a choice seen as an alarming historical continuity. Mass protests with police clashes underscore the threat the party poses. The Latin American press denounces the rise of the far-right in Germany as a global danger.

This story appeared in

5 outlets · 2 languages

Broaden your view

From Economy & Markets

OPEC+ lifts August oil quotas by 188,000 bpd as Hormuz traffic resumes

10 languages · 26 outlets

From Technology

Corporate Reversals and Shifting Hiring Data Challenge AI Automation Narrative

4 languages · 13 outlets

From Science & Health

Modern life's invisible wear: how daily stress becomes physical illness

5 languages · 11 outlets

Read more