Winter Sports Face Reality Check with Roller Biathlon Exhibitions
The International Biathlon Union is confronting climate change head-on with experimental roller-ski competitions, staging the Loop One Festival in Munich's Olympic Park as both a public...
German Industrialist Clashes with Town Over Traffic Calming Measures
The small German municipality of Schwanau in Baden-Württemberg has become the unlikely stage for an escalating conflict between local government and one of the region's largest employers. The...
Berlin Protesters Challenge Merz With Diversity Rally at Brandenburg Gate
Hundreds of demonstrators gathered at Berlin's Brandenburg Gate on Sunday evening, forming a sea of lights with mobile phone torches and lighters to protest for diversity and against racism....
German Naval Builder TKMS Sees Shares Jump 23% in IPO Launch
Thyssenkrupp Marine Systems (TKMS), Germany's largest naval shipbuilder, made a strong debut on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange Monday, with shares trading significantly above initial...
Holcim to Acquire German Building Materials Firm Xella in €1.85 Billion Deal
Swiss cement conglomerate Holcim has agreed to acquire German building materials manufacturer Xella for €1.85 billion, marking a significant strategic move in the European construction sector....

CSU's Guttenberg Defends Party's Incompatibility Resolution With Far-Right AfD

20-10-2025


Former German Defense Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg has firmly rejected media interpretations suggesting he supports softening the Christian Democratic Union's so-called "firewall" against the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD). The CSU politician told Deutsche Presse-Agentur in Berlin that contrary to some reports, he has never advocated for weakening the party's official stance toward the AfD.

"Contrary to some false representations, I have at no point advocated for a softening of the so-called firewall toward the AfD," Guttenberg stated. "On the contrary. In my 'Stern' interview last week, I explicitly spoke in favor of maintaining the incompatibility resolution toward the AfD." The clarification comes after several media outlets, including dpa, interpreted his recent comments as signaling a potential shift in the Union's approach to the rising far-right party.

In his original interview with Stern magazine, Guttenberg had emphasized the need for "substantive confrontation" with the AfD, questioning why established parties seemed hesitant to engage in political debate. "What are we afraid of?" he asked, suggesting that merely boycotting the party wouldn't effectively diminish its appeal to voters. However, he now insists these comments were misinterpreted as endorsing a change in the Union's official policy.

The former minister reinforced his position that no mainstream party should be electable if it flirts with coalition partners who tolerate neo-Nazis, extremists and enemies of the constitution within their ranks. "As long as the AfD provides a home for such people, this incompatibility resolution must remain in place," Guttenberg asserted, referring to the CDU/CSU's formal policy prohibiting cooperation with both the AfD and Left Party at any political level.