- China to boost credit for property market, renovate 1 mn homes
- New York fight back to take 2-1 lead over Lynx in WNBA Finals
- Family feud reignites over Singapore ex-PM's historic home
- ECB set to cut rates again as inflation cools
- Malinin, Sakamoto headline pre-Winter Olympics figure skating season
- Prospective Paris FC takeover could transform French football landscape
- Asian markets rally, with eyes on China housing briefing
- China's underground lab seeks answer to deep scientific riddle
- China toughens Taiwan stance over president's sovereignty defence
- BTS member J-hope discharged from South Korean military
- How Indigenous guards saved a Colombian lake from overtourism
- Despite threats, Florida abortion advocate fights on
- Garcia Luna: Mexico's 'supercop' turned cartel abettor
- North Korea says constitution now defines South as 'hostile' state
- Vietnam death row tycoon faces verdict in new trial
- Menendez brothers' family call for release as US prosecutors review evidence
- Fiery Harris vows break from Biden in testy Fox interview
- Fiery Harris claims break from Biden in testy Fox interview
- Raytheon to pay $950 mn over fraud, bribery schemes: US
- Fiery Harris uses testy Fox interview to claim break from Biden
- Water crisis threatening world food production: report
- Mexico's ex-security chief sentenced to over 38 years in US prison
- One Direction's Liam Payne falls to death at Argentina hotel
- Climate change worsened deadly Nepal floods, scientists say
- Alcaraz will face 'difficult' clash with 'idol' Nadal
- US says India has removed alleged agent in assassination plot
- Barca hit nine in Women's Champions League, Bayern overcome Juve
- Harris courts Trump-skeptic Republicans with Fox interview
- Global stock markets diverge as investors focus on earnings
- Worms and snails handle the pressure 2,500m below the Pacific surface
- Serena Williams has grapefruit-sized cyst removed from neck
- Lavreysen wins record-equalling 14th world cycling track title
- School's out! Argentina students study in the street to protest budget cuts
- Lower rates, surging stock market fail to ignite US IPO market
- Pogba 'willing to give up money' to stay at Juve
- Few countries have drawn up nature protection plans: UN
- Biden to make farewell trip to Germany as Ukraine war rages
- EU announces 30 mn euros to stem Senegal irregular migration
- Italy extends surrogacy ban to couples seeking it abroad
- Panama Canal crossings down 29 percent due to drought
- 'Clear indications' India violated Canada's sovereignty: Trudeau
- World champion Springboks to host Italy in 2025, Moerat to miss November tour
- Trump claims to be 'father of IVF' at all-female campaign stop
- WHO demands space to finish Gaza polio vaccination
- Mitchell left out of England squad for Autumn internationals
- Real Madrid back Mbappe amid Swedish rape investigation reports
- Middle East crisis top-of-mind at first EU-Gulf summit
- Israeli minister criticises Macron over France defence show ban
- Global stock markets diverge as markets focus on earmings
- Who said what on Tuchel's appointment as England manager
Germany's far-right AfD cast out by EU partners
Germany's AfD party was expelled Thursday from its far-right group within the European Parliament after a series of scandals involving a high-profile lawmaker, in the closing stretch of an EU election race in which the radical right is riding high.
France's National Rally (RN) and Italy's League -- both partners to the Alternative for Germany (AfD) within the parliament's hard-right Identity and Democracy (ID) group -- have been scrambling to distance themselves from the party and its embattled lawmaker, Maximilian Krah.
The AfD's top candidate in the June 6-9 polls, Krah is being investigated for suspicious links to Russia and China -- and after he made comments minimising the crimes of the Nazis' feared SS, the RN decided to draw a line.
Marine Le Pen's party announced Tuesday it would no longer sit with the AfD in Brussels. Two days later ID voted to expel the German party and its nine EU lawmakers.
"The ID Group no longer wants to be associated with the incidents involving Maximilian Krah," it said in a statement.
"The Bureau of the Identity and Democracy Group in the European Parliament has decided today to exclude the German delegation, AfD, with immediate effect."
Nicolai von Ondarza, at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, saw the swiftness of ID's move as a way of "signalling in their election campaign that Le Pen and Co. want to present themselves as the more moderate".
"This really is the end of the road of a journey of radicalisation for the AfD, which has become too radical to stomach even for that most far-right fringe of the European political spectrum," he wrote on the platform X.
But EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen poured scorn on the notion the German party was fundamentally in a different class to other European far-right movements -- RN included.
"We must be clear-eyed," she wrote on X. "Different names -- but all the same."
"They are Putin's puppets and proxies and they are trampling on our values," she said, referring to Russia's long-serving leader.
- Clean break -
Reading the writing on the wall, the AfD had already moved to ban Krah from EU election campaign events -- though it was electorally too late to remove the 47-year-old lawyer from the top of its list for the poll.
But the RN said it was too little too late.
RN lawmaker Jean-Paul Garraud, who sits in ID's leadership bureau, confirmed the French party was behind the initiative to expel its German partner.
He told AFP that Krah's AfD as a whole carried responsibility for his "inadmissible" comments made as lead candidate.
AfD said in response it had "taken note of the ID Group's decision" but insisted it remained optimistic for the upcoming elections.
The party said it would "continue to have reliable partners at our side in the new legislative period".
Krah has been at the centre of a deepening crisis after one of his aides in the EU parliament was arrested on suspicion of spying for China.
He and another key AfD candidate, Petr Bystron, have also been forced to deny allegations they accepted money to spread pro-Russian positions on a Moscow-financed news website.
RN leader Jordan Bardella declared Krah had finally crossed a "red line" after he told an Italian newspaper that not every member of Germany's SS was "automatically a criminal".
The ID grouping is the sixth largest in the European Parliament, and the smaller of two far-right groups, behind the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) which includes Giorgia Meloni's Brothers of Italy.
Key issues are seen as dividing the two far-right factions.
Most notably, ID is sceptical of continued EU support for Ukraine against Russia's invading army, while the ECR backs Kyiv in its fight.
And a third hard-right force sits in the EU parliament in the form of Fidesz, the unaffiliated party of Hungary's Kremlin-friendly Prime Minister Viktor Orban.
O.M.Souza--AMWN