Difference between revisions of "Frauke Petry"

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'''Frauke Petry''' was one of three leaders of the German Euro-sceptic party [[Alternative for Germany]] (Alternativ für Deutschland) (AfD) as of January 2015.<ref name="Econ">[http://www.economist.com/news/europe/21640386-how-anti-foreigner-anti-establishment-group-changing-german-politics-gone-boy-right Gone boy on the right], ''The Economist'', 24 January 2015</ref>  
 
'''Frauke Petry''' was one of three leaders of the German Euro-sceptic party [[Alternative for Germany]] (Alternativ für Deutschland) (AfD) as of January 2015.<ref name="Econ">[http://www.economist.com/news/europe/21640386-how-anti-foreigner-anti-establishment-group-changing-german-politics-gone-boy-right Gone boy on the right], ''The Economist'', 24 January 2015</ref>  
  
In July 2015 Petry was elected party leader; her appointment was viewed as a shift to the right, and five MEPs quit the party as a result. Party founder [[Bernd Lucke]] cited 'a rise of xenophobic sentiment in the AfD', and   announced he would form a new party, the [[Alliance for Progress and Renewal]].
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In July 2015 Petry was elected party leader. Her appointment was viewed as a shift to the right, and five MEPs quit the party in protest. Party co-founder [[Bernd Lucke]] cited 'a rise of xenophobic sentiment in the AfD', and announced he was leaving to form a new party, the [[Alliance for Progress and Renewal]].
  
 
Petry's leadership has resulted in closer links to [[Pegida]]:   
 
Petry's leadership has resulted in closer links to [[Pegida]]:   
  
 
:In the past AfD has tried to distance itself from the anti-immigrant, anti-Islamic campaign group Patriotic Europeans against the Islamisation of the Occident ([[Pegida]]) which, like Petry, originated in Dresden. But increasingly her party is being talked about as the political arm of Pegida. Petry has done little to persuade anyone otherwise. <ref> Kate Connolly, [http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/feb/07/frauke-petry-smiling-face-resurgent-right Frauke Petry: smiling face of Germany’s resurgent right], The ''Observer'', 6 February 2016 </ref>
 
:In the past AfD has tried to distance itself from the anti-immigrant, anti-Islamic campaign group Patriotic Europeans against the Islamisation of the Occident ([[Pegida]]) which, like Petry, originated in Dresden. But increasingly her party is being talked about as the political arm of Pegida. Petry has done little to persuade anyone otherwise. <ref> Kate Connolly, [http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/feb/07/frauke-petry-smiling-face-resurgent-right Frauke Petry: smiling face of Germany’s resurgent right], The ''Observer'', 6 February 2016 </ref>
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==Affiliations==
 
==Affiliations==
*[[Alternative for Germany]] - Speaker from 2015 onwards
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*[[Alternative for Germany]] - Leader/speaker from July 2015 onwards
  
 
==External resources==
 
==External resources==

Revision as of 01:31, 14 March 2016

Frauke Petry, Source: Frauke Petry.net

Frauke Petry was one of three leaders of the German Euro-sceptic party Alternative for Germany (Alternativ für Deutschland) (AfD) as of January 2015.[1]

In July 2015 Petry was elected party leader. Her appointment was viewed as a shift to the right, and five MEPs quit the party in protest. Party co-founder Bernd Lucke cited 'a rise of xenophobic sentiment in the AfD', and announced he was leaving to form a new party, the Alliance for Progress and Renewal.

Petry's leadership has resulted in closer links to Pegida:

In the past AfD has tried to distance itself from the anti-immigrant, anti-Islamic campaign group Patriotic Europeans against the Islamisation of the Occident (Pegida) which, like Petry, originated in Dresden. But increasingly her party is being talked about as the political arm of Pegida. Petry has done little to persuade anyone otherwise. [2]


Affiliations

External resources

Notes

  1. Gone boy on the right, The Economist, 24 January 2015
  2. Kate Connolly, Frauke Petry: smiling face of Germany’s resurgent right, The Observer, 6 February 2016