Foreign Policy: “The German Election Is a Christian Civil War”

In Foreign Policy is “The German Election Is a Christian Civil War”, the byline of which reads: “Germany’s far-right is saying out loud what Angela Merkel’s party has always quietly believed: that Christian culture depends on Christian demographics.” The piece starts:

The true winner of Germany’s much anticipated chancellor’s debate last week wasn’t even present on stage at the event. Millions of voters tuned in to watch a decisive duel between the leaders of the country’s two largest parties, Angela Merkel of the Christian Democrats and Martin Schulz of the Social Democrats, but what they witnessed instead was a discussion dominated by the specter of a third, ascendant party that has recently burst onto the political scene: Alternative for Germany (AfD), a right-wing organization led by breakaway members of Merkel’s Christian Democratic bloc. According to the latest polls, this populist group has climbed to the number-three spot in the lead up to the general vote on September 24. Political analysts predict it has the potential to become much larger and much more disruptive in the years to come.

Americans would do well to take note of the conflict now unfolding between the AfD and the incumbent chancellor, even if Merkel is widely expected to win a record-tying fourth term. In general, liberals in the United States have been paying far less attention to the German election season compared with the widespread hand-wringing over the growth of populism in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and France earlier this year. But in fact, it will be in stable, boring old Germany where the most dramatic challenge to open borders and multiculturalism comes…

According to the latest polls after the campaign, the AfD will take around 10 percent of the vote, but this may be just the beginning. According to the Berlin political scientist Oskar Niedermeyer, the potential for its brand of populism is great given the way that migration has polarized German society — a potential that has not yet been fully tapped because of the lack of professionalism in the party’s leadership. Indeed, many of the party’s leading lights are academics or experts with little political experience. (In 2015, the press dubbed it the “party of professors.”) The question is whether young German voters, who are becoming increasingly active in political parties compared to generations past, will embrace its message.

Merkel will win re-election, and that is all the MSM will focus on over here in the States, but change is happening slowly.

The Overton Window is inching evermore rightward.

In time, a similar party might emerge here in the States. Trump’s sweep of evangelicals was telling. Should such a party form in the States, I expect it will be more along a secular ‘identity politics for whites’ line and less through an overtly religious line. But coalitions are possible. ‘Defending Western Civilization’ is something that the Dissident Right (of which the Alt Right is a subset) and Christians can agree on.

Craft the right coalition and anything is possible.

Given the Left’s continued racialization of politics, that such a coalition will be a coalition of (like the Tea Party) primarily whites is inevitable.

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