How “remigration” is penetrating Europe’s political mainstream
How “remigration” is penetrating Europe’s political mainstream
THESE DAYS only one word will do for a politician hoping for a career
on the German far right: “remigration”. It is hollered at events hosted by the
Alternative for Germany (afd) party, plonked on
merch and plastered all over social media. Its meaning can be elusive. But its
spread from the extremist fringe towards the mainstream illustrates how
far-right groups are extending their influence in democracies. It also presents
the afd, which leads some opinion polls, with
a dilemma.
The concept
of remigration is closely associated with Martin Sellner, a 37-year-old
Austrian activist and author who has been banned from several European
countries. Mr Sellner tells The Economist that
what distinguishes his movement is an understanding that social change—in
academia, the arts and media—precedes the political sort. Peppering his answers
with references to memes, “metapolitics”, and Antonio Gramsci and Louis
Althusser (two Marxist philosophers), he says right-wing populists who have
secured power have “lacked the intellectual capacity to wield it and bring
about change”.
“Remigration”
spread from French extremist circles to German and Austrian ones over a decade
ago. In January 2024 it burst into the consciousness of ordinary voters
when Correctiv, an investigative outlet, revealed that Mr
Sellner had discussed remigration with afd politicians at a meeting in Potsdam. The revelations
sparked protests across Germany. A group of linguists anointed the term their
“unword of the year”.
Chart: The Economist
All
publicity is good publicity, shrugs Mr Sellner. The idea acquired such purchase
inside the afd that a year later Alice Weidel,
its candidate for chancellor, co-opted the term at a party event and approved
its addition to the manifesto in the run-up to Germany’s federal election. Many afd politicians have now taken to
the cause with gusto (see chart). Some apologise for their belated conversion.
Meanwhile afd activists use the word to signal
to fringe groups that “they are part of the cool kids”, says Bernhard
Weidinger, an expert on the far right at the Documentation Centre of Austrian
Resistance, a research outfit. They post ai-generated
“remigration” memes set to jolly Eurodisco tunes. For some the promise of
remigration carries an electric charge; activists pledge to make German runways
“glow red hot” with the scale of deportations.
What does
remigration mean in practice? Mr Sellner says it targets three groups: illegal
immigrants; the legal sort who drain the state or commit crime; and citizens he
regards as “unassimilated”. This last group presents a “problem”, he accepts.
“You can’t deport citizens, this would be madness.” But you can create
“cultural and economic pressure” for them to leave. He also wants much tougher
naturalisation rules and an end to Germany’s “guilt culture”. He is open to
stripping citizenship from some naturalised Germans.
Yet for many
of its advocates “remigration” is less a set of policies and more a catch-all
term for a vision of Europe with its ethnic and cultural identity rid of what
they call “Afro-Arab replacement migration”. Enacting this in full will take
several decades, Mr Sellner admits. Asylum claims have lately plummeted in
Germany, but that is not the point. The hope is to appeal to those citizens
uneasy at the rapid scale of demographic change they witness around them.
These are
the same voters the afd is targeting. But
there is a crucial difference. The party disavows any suggestion that its
proposals would affect holders of German passports. “There is no difference
between someone whose family has lived here for 200 years and someone who
recently got citizenship,” says Marc Jongen, a member of the afd’s board. Yet some of the party’s
politicians call for “millions” to be deported. Around 230,000 people in
Germany are subject to deportation orders, but there is no way to expel
millions simply by deporting illegal immigrants and criminals.
This is why
Mr Sellner’s remigration crusade is both an opportunity and a threat for the afd, says Jakob Guhl of the Institute for
Strategic Dialogue, a think-tank. The opportunity is clear: the party has
harnessed the energy of right-wing extremist networks that usually stay out of
democratic politics. It may be shocking to see representatives of a party
backed by one-quarter of the electorate bellow slogans once heard only on the
outer fringes, but it is not hurting them in polls. Some have held private or
public meetings with Mr Sellner in recent weeks, especially in the Afd’s more radical eastern branches.
But the afd‘s radical turn risks serious trouble
with the law. Last year a domestic intelligence agency labelled the afd “right-wing extremist”. The
party is contesting that verdict, but calls to ban it have snowballed. Courts
have ruled that Mr Sellner’s remigration concept violates the constitution by
distinguishing between Germans on the basis of ethnicity. Were the afd to hint that it backs his ideas,
it would bolster its opponents’ case. This week it ordered its members to cease
meeting Mr Sellner.
This is
unlikely to stop “remigration” from spreading. In Austria the far-right Freedom
Party has embraced the term with gusto. In Italy the Committee for Remigration
and Reconquest, a far-right group, recently caused an uproar in parliament with
a petition for mass deportations and denaturalisation. Donald Trump’s
administration loves the word: “All America wants for Christmas is
remigration,” posted the Department of Homeland Security in December. As
for Mr Sellner, he is busy setting up an “Institute for Remigration”. “We can
change the public debate, and in the end we will change all politics,” he says.
Many people in Europe who might not count as natives fear he is right. ■
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