Germany’s Most Popular Party, the AfD, Is Being Brutally Targeted in a One-Sided Wave of Political Violence
May 20, 2026
New government data out of Germany is fueling fierce debate, as figures reveal that the country’s most popular opposition party—the right-wing anti-globalist Alternative for Germany (AfD)—has become the primary target of political violence, raising serious questions about the state of democracy in Europe’s largest economy.
According to official statistics, reported on by several German outlets, nearly two-thirds of all violent attacks against politicians in 2025 were directed at members of Alternative for Germany (AfD), a party that has surged in popularity in recent months.
The numbers are stark. Out of 183 recorded violent attacks against political figures, 121 targeted AfD representatives—more than all other major parties combined.
The figures, for or supporters of the party, confirm what they have long argued: that Germany’s political establishment and media have created a climate of hostility that has now spilled over into physical violence.
AfD MP Martin Hess pulled no punches in his response to the data.
“Those who constantly defame, delegitimize and dehumanize the AfD and its supporters shouldn’t be surprised when enemies of democracy see in this a call to violence,” he said.
The sheer scale and consistency of the attacks leads critics point to something deeper than isolated incidents. The violence is not evenly distributed across the political spectrum.
Government data indicates that roughly 60 percent of violent politically motivated crimes were attributed to left-wing extremist suspects, compared to just 11 percent linked to right-wing perpetrators.
The imbalance directly contradicts the dominant narrative often promoted in mainstream political discourse.
And violence goes beyond physical attacks.
AfD members were also the most frequent targets of so-called “speech offenses,” including threats, defamation, and harassment, accounting for over a third of such cases nationwide.
In total, more than 1,800 politically motivated crimes were recorded against AfD figures in 2025 alone. Party infrastructure has also been under sustained pressure.
AfD offices were targeted in 239 separate incidents, ranging from vandalism to arson, placing them among the most attacked political facilities in the country.
Even Germany’s ruling, globalist establishment parties have not been immune.
The CDU/CSU bloc saw a sharp increase in attacks on its own facilities, particularly after cooperating with AfD votes on a parliamentary migration proposal earlier in the year.
In one week alone, 30 attacks were recorded against CDU buildings following that vote, highlighting the intensity of political tensions surrounding immigration policy.
Despite this, the pattern remains clear: the party that challenges the political status quo—with that clearly being the AfD—bears the brunt of the backlash.
The AfD’s platform—centered on stricter immigration controls, national sovereignty, and opposition to EU policies—has made it a lightning rod in Germany’s increasingly polarized political landscape.
At the same time, the party’s rising popularity has only heightened tensions.
Recent polling has placed the AfD well ahead of traditional liberal CDU, marking a significant shift in German politics.
The AfD has surged to a record 29%—matching the SPD, FDP, and Greens combined—marking a sudden collapse of Germany’s political establishment as voters across Europe reject what elites call extremism and instead see it as failed governance.
The AfD just hit 29% in Germany’s latest INSA poll, an all-time high.
One party now equals the SPD, FDP, and Greens combined.
Germany’s political establishment didn’t lose ground gradually. It collapsed it all at once.
This is the same wave reshaping France, the… https://t.co/m2g7hu8jSg pic.twitter.com/JMZUpjNK1P
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) May 16, 2026
Ostdeutschland wird immer größer. pic.twitter.com/8wTkthg3tq
— Dr. Maximilian Krah MdB (@KrahMax) May 17, 2026
For critics of the current system, of which there is an ever-increasing number, the surge reflects growing dissatisfaction with mainstream parties, particularly on issues such as migration and economic policy.
But that shift has also triggered fierce resistance from an entrenched system unwilling to relinquish power.
Large-scale protests, media campaigns, and political isolation efforts have been directed at the party, with opponents frequently labeling it as beyond the democratic mainstream.
AfD figures argue that such rhetoric has consequences. They claim that constant public vilification creates an environment in which violence becomes normalized—or at least excused.
“This development is the result of years of political and media disinhibition,” Hess said, pointing to what he sees as a broader breakdown in civil discourse.
The broader question now facing Germany is whether political competition can remain peaceful in such a climate.
For a country that prides itself on democratic stability, the rise in politically motivated violence presents a serious challenge.
It also raises concerns about the ability of opposition movements to operate freely without intimidation.
While the government insists there is no organized campaign behind the attacks, others argue that the data tells a different story.
They point to the concentration of incidents, the ideological imbalance among perpetrators, and the sustained targeting of a single political force.
The issue goes beyond party politics.
It touches on the fundamental principles of democratic engagement: the right to participate, to campaign, and to express political views without fear of violence.
As Germany moves toward its next electoral cycle, these concerns are almost cetrain to intensify.
The combination of rising political polarization, shifting voter preferences, rising political violence, and a general escalation of tensions on the ground, in the media, and in the parliament, suggests a volatile period ahead.
The post Germany’s Most Popular Party, the AfD, Is Being Brutally Targeted in a One-Sided Wave of Political Violence appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
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Author: Robert Semonsen
The AfD just hit 29% in Germany’s latest INSA poll, an all-time high.