Shropshire Star

Musk to host chat with German far-right leader amid political interference fears

The forays into politics by the Tesla and SpaceX chief executive is raising alarm across Europe.

By contributor By Vanessa Gera, Associated Press
Published
Elon Musk (Evan Vucci/AP)
Elon Musk (Evan Vucci/AP)

Tech billionaire Elon Musk is preparing to host a live-streamed chat with a leader of Germany’s far-right Alternative for Germany party, amplifying concerns across Europe about potential meddling in the upcoming national election.

Mr Musk worked last year to help re-elect Donald Trump in the United States. Now Mr Musk, in control of an influential social media platform that often spreads disinformation, is using it to endorse the far right in Germany ahead of the February 23 election.

“Only the AfD can save Germany,” Mr Musk wrote on X on December 20, using the acronym for the party, known in German as Alternative fur Deutschland.

Germany Politics
Leader of right-wing AfD Alice Weidel (Markus Schreiber/AP)

He later doubled down on support for the AfD in an article for the Welt am Sonntag newspaper, claiming Germany under centre-left Chancellor Olaf Scholz is “teetering on the edge of economic and cultural collapse”.

He will host a chat on X-Space with Alice Weidel, a co-leader of the party and its candidate for chancellor in Germany’s election next month.

The forays into politics by the Tesla and SpaceX chief executive is raising alarm across Europe.

In addition to endorsing the AfD, Mr Musk has demanded the release of jailed UK anti-Islam extremist Tommy Robinson and called Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer an evil tyrant who should be in prison.

In Poland, there are concerns he could use his influence to interfere in the country’s presidential election in May.

Ms Weidel and the party do not have widespread support ahead of the election, but AfD has been rising in popularity as some of the criticism around it weakens.

Still, the AfD has been put under observation by Germany’s domestic intelligence agency for suspected extremism, and mainstream parties have shunned working with it.

The AfD has strongly rejected the designation and portrayed it as a political attempt to discredit the party.

AfD was formed in 2013 and has moved steadily to the right. Its platform initially centred on opposition to bailouts for struggling eurozone members, but its vehement opposition to then-chancellor Angela Merkel’s decision to allow in large numbers of refugees and other migrants in 2015 established the party as a significant political force.

AfD has seen its support grow as a result of discontent with Mr Scholz’s three-party coalition government.

It hopes to emerge as the biggest party in three state elections in the formerly communist east, where it has its strongest support, in September.

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