Meet Germany’s far-right leader Alice Weidel, a study in contradictions
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AfD party co-leader and chancellor candidate Alice Weidel at the TV debate 'Quadrell' on the German federal election campaign on Feb 16.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
Christopher F. Schuetze and Jim Tankersley
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BERLIN – When US Vice-President J.D. Vance criticised his German hosts
But soon after his speech at the Munich Security Conference, in which he stunned the room by comparing democracy in today’s Europe with Soviet-era totalitarianism, Mr Vance met Dr Alice Weidel, the leader of the AfD.
A former investment analyst who is raising two sons with her Sri Lankan-born wife in Switzerland, Dr Weidel, 46, has become the unlikely face of the AfD. Her nationalist party campaigns on a platform that is anti-immigrant and defines family as a father and a mother raising children.
A favourite of the new US administration – receiving an endorsement from Mr Elon Musk – she has been essential to AfD’s effort to break into the mainstream, helping to vault the party into a comfortable second place before Feb 23’s national election.
Dr Weidel, whose turtleneck sweaters or open-collared shirts and pearl necklaces have become signatures, has lent a more cosmopolitan image to a party that has been linked to neo-Nazis and plots to overthrow the state.
But her AfD is no less extreme.
“With Alice Weidel at the helm, the AfD has steadily become more radical,” said Ms Ann-Katrin Muller, an expert on the AfD who reports for Der Spiegel, one of Germany’s most prominent news outlets.
The AfD is polling well ahead of the centre-left Social Democrats of incumbent chancellor Olaf Scholz and behind the conservative Christian Democrats of Mr Friedrich Merz, the front runner to be the next chancellor.
Those parties insist that they would never partner with Dr Weidel’s party to form a government. But her latest success in presenting the AfD as just another party came on Feb 16, when she joined a televised debate with her mainstream rivals, who also included Mr Robert Habeck, running for the Greens.
Dr Weidel’s performance was widely judged to be uneven, but she left the event a winner nonetheless – it was the first time that AfD had been invited to such a debate, watched by millions of voters. At one point in the campaign, polls ranked her as the most popular chancellor candidate, across all parties.
But if Dr Weidel’s professorial air and personal story suggest a softening of the party line, her language does not. She has promised to tear down wind turbines and dismiss gender studies professors. She has spoken about “remigration”, a term used by the far right that is widely interpreted as code for deportations.
“Make it absolutely clear to the whole world: German borders are closed,” she told a cheering crowd when the AfD officially nominated her as its candidate in January.
Dr Weidel declined to speak to The New York Times for this article. In interviews with the German news media, she has been alternately charming and biting.
She has consistently refused to distance herself from her party’s most extreme members, some of whom have minimised the Holocaust and Germany’s Nazi past.
“She and the people behind her now dominate the party – and they are ideologically very close to Bjorn Hocke,” Ms Muller said, referring to an AfD state leader who has been fined by a court for using Nazi language.
On Feb 16, Dr Weidel told Bild, Germany’s largest tabloid, that she would put Mr Hocke into her Cabinet if she were to become chancellor.
Alternative for Germany (AfD) party co-leader Alice Weidel has been endorsed by Mr Elon Musk.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Dr Weidel grew up in a middle-class Catholic family in Harsewinkel, a town in North Rhine-Westphalia, in the country’s west, with two siblings and a dachshund. Her father was a salesman and her mother was a homemaker.
Her grandfather was a Nazi party member and was named a military judge in occupied Warsaw, Die Welt, a conservative daily, reported. Dr Weidel responded that she did not know her grandfather, who died when she was six, and that the Nazi past was never a topic of discussion in her family.
While finishing a doctorate in economics in Bavaria, she spent time in China. By her own account, she learnt Mandarin. She later worked at Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs as an analyst. In interviews with the German news media, she has spoken about her love of feng shui, and of swimming and tennis when she was a girl.
Officially she divides her time between her home in a small town in central Switzerland and a house in her voting district on Lake Constance, in southern Germany. But Dr Weidel admitted that she does not spend much time at the German address.
She says it is because of safety concerns. Despite her party’s gains, she remains a lightning rod of public outrage in a country where a majority of Germans believe the AfD should be shunned.
Her absence from Germany has become something of a sore subject for the leader of a nationalist party. She walked out of an interview aired this week with a public broadcaster when she was asked how many nights she had slept at her German address. In the same interview, she admitted she did not know how many people lived in the district she represents as a Member of Parliament.
In November, Dr Weidel told a group of business leaders in Zurich that her security situation had grown so difficult that it was hard even to spontaneously go out dancing or to dinner with her spouse, Ms Sarah Bossard, a film-maker.
“I am incredibly grateful to my wife for putting up with it,” she said.
Despite having been asked many times, Dr Weidel refuses to explain how she reconciles the apparent contradiction between her personal life and the vision of society her party represents.
“I am not queer,” Dr Weidel told an interviewer this past summer, using the English word, “but I am married to a woman I have known for 20 years.”
Dr Alice Weidel of the nationalist, anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany lives in Switzerland and is married to a Sri Lankan-born woman. She had led her party to second place before Sunday’s election.
PHOTO: SARAHSEPABOSSARD/INSTAGRAM
Experts say the fact that Dr Weidel’s personal life defies party orthodoxy actually enhances her claim to carry the AfD banner and makes the party appear more mainstream.
“Dr Weidel has become the face of the party because of her biography and her background, and also because of her ability to speak clearly – even if it is without much empathy,” said Professor Werner Patzelt, a political scientist who has long studied the AfD.
Dr Weidel joined the AfD in 2013, when it was virtually a single-issue party built on opposition to the common European currency, before working her way up to become its chancellor candidate – the party’s first.
Partially owing to the fact that no one will work with her party, she has never held any government post before. She was elected to Parliament for the first time in 2017.
Even before her prominent new role, she was a fixture on political debate shows on German television. She argues that her party is libertarian, not right-wing nationalist, a position that puts her at odds with some of the AfD’s more fervent members.
Her fluent English has helped her build a relationship with Mr Musk, President Donald Trump’s billionaire adviser, who interviewed Dr Weidel on his social media platform X.
Mr Musk surprised the party in December when he was beamed onto a big screen, at a campaign event in Halle, where he endorsed the AfD and told assembled members that Germans had “too much of a focus on past guilt”.
Mr Musk stirred controversy by giving what was widely interpreted as a Nazi salute
Despite efforts to downplay associations with the Nazi past, some party faithful seem to have missed the message.
As Dr Weidel took the stage in Halle, the crowd started a chant that was a not-too-subtle play on a Nazi slogan, “Alles fur Deutschland” or “Everything for Germany”, a phrase once carved on the knives of Nazi storm troopers. It is banned in Germany.
The crowd tweaked it ever so slightly. “Alice fur Deutschland!” they cried. NYTIMES

