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AfD leader vows restore German-Russian relations as she seeks chancellery

Alice Weidel, leader of the far right Alternative for Germany (AfD), said that Germany should stop a boycott against Russian oil and gas in order to boost its flagging economy. She was describing the ambitions of her party to become the next national government.

Weidel stated that the AfD could win two important federal state elections in the next few months. He described them as a milestone to securing a?post? of German chancellor by the time the 2020 national elections are due.

The success of Made in Germany was due to the cheap energy that Russia provided. Weidel stated that we need to get it back.

"The loss has put us years behind." The loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs has been devastating. "It has made us dependent upon the United States who sells us electricity at much higher prices."

SEES ELECTIONS as 'DECISIVE MOLESTONES

Before sanctions were imposed in 2022 over Moscow's invasion into Ukraine, Russia provided more than a quarter of Germany's crude imports and?more than half its natural gas.

Germany is also struggling to recover from the shock of the shut down of the important undersea Nord Stream Pipeline, which was crippled in September 2022 by explosions.

After a sharp rise in energy prices, the country's industrial sector is still in a rut. Volkswagen, the car giant, is also considering a job cut of up to 100,000.

Weidel's remarks?highlight potential fragility in the Western alliance that supports Ukraine. Germany's government supports Ukraine but the public is divided.

Weidel made the remarks ahead of September elections in two key eastern German states, Saxony-Anhalt and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, where ?the AfD is dominating polls.

If the AfD wins control, regional governments will challenge Berlin's immigration policy, which they claim is too generous. They would also reject the financial burden placed on local governments.

This would be a major shift in the committee style of government that is based on the "consensus" model. It could also give the AfD the opportunity to gain national power.

"Saxony-Anhalt and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern are decisive milestones," Weidel said.

"If we win in Saxony-Anhalt, then Mecklenburg-Vorpommern will probably follow. "I can see AfD at the chancellery by the next election or afterward."

A victory of the far-right party, Saxony-Anhalt, would be a blow for mainstream parties, such as the Christian Democrats of Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who have refused to cooperate with the AfD.

Voters could be influenced by the lower energy costs in Russia and by the possibility of a cheaper alternative.

Germany's relationship to Russia is more important in the East, where the Soviet Union ruled until the fall the Berlin Wall over 35 years ago. There are many who have a positive view of Russia, but a negative one towards Germany's protector and military force, the United States.

"WE WILL NOT TAKE EVERYTHING OFF ITS HEAD"

Weidel made his comments about Russia after a senior AfD legislator Markus Frohnmaier visited Russia earlier in the month. He met Alexei Miller the?head? of Russian energy giant Gazprom and called for a reopening the Nord Stream pipeline.

Frohnmaier rebuffed critics of his trip and said he understood U.S. Investors were examining reopening Nord Stream to Germany. This could mean Germany paying a fee for Russian gas.

He said: "We must be very careful that in Germany we do not miss the opportunity to return to the Russian market." Mr Miller stated that it would be three months before the gas supply was resumed.

Roderich Käsewetter is a Christian Democrat member of the Merz parliament who said that AfD’s pro-Russian position was distorting?the German public debate.

Kiesewetter stated that the AfD is using the romanticisation of Russia, especially with an eye towards the upcoming elections in eastern Germany.

Weidel denied that her party is extremist. This was classified by Germany’s spy agency in the past year.

She said, "The way that we view ourselves and how our political opponents judge us are very different." "People describe us as far-right. We are in fact a party of the average person. "We will not change everything if we are elected." (Reporting by John O'Donnell, Editing by Andrew Heavens).

(source: Reuters)