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German court partly sides with AfD in funding case

February 22, 2023

The far-right party had filed a lawsuit complaining that a foundation affiliated with it was not receiving state funding — unlike some organizations linked to other parties.

The BVerfG in Karlsruhe
Image: dapd

The German Federal Constitutional Court (BVerfG) ruled on Wednesday that a far-right populist party's right to equal opportunity was violated in 2019 because its affiliated foundation was not given state funding.

The Alternative for Germany (AfD) had complained that the Desiderius Erasmus Foundation (DES), which is close to the far-right party, was not receiving state funding while other partly-affiliated foundations were.  

In 2019, all foundations close to the political parties represented in Germany's lower house of parliament, the Bundestag, received state funds, except for DES. The AfD had only entered the Bundestag two years earlier.

The party had also complained to the court about the lack of funds for DES in the following years. The judge declared the lawsuits for 2020 and 2021 inadmissible, and a seperate decision on the 2022 fiscal year will be announced at a later date. 

Court says rules must be laid in new law

The Bundestag has so far made the decisions on funding for party-affiliated organizations as part of budget negotiations. 

Such decisions are partly based on the influence of a party in German politics. For example, how much it is represented in the Bundestag and for how many terms in a row. 

The court said on Wednesday that the criteria for government grants to political foundations should be laid down in law, rather than rely on negotiations. 

According to German media reports, foundations affiliated with political parties are funded with around €660 million ($702 million) annually.

 

fb/nm (dpa, AFP) 

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