Anonymous ID: 49f578 Sept. 3, 2025, 9:54 a.m. No.23543581   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3603 >>3697 >>3759

Six Far-Right German AfD Candidates Die Days Before Election

Six candidates in Germany's far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party died within two weeks of each other just before state-level local elections this month.

 

North Rhine-Westphalia municipalities have had to reprint ballots and, in some cases, require postal voters to cast new ballots for elections on September 14.

 

Four candidates running for local office in the northwest German state, local authorities reported last month. The deaths all took place within 13 days of each other, according to the European Conservative.

 

This week, AfD state deputy leader Kay Gottschalk said two reserve candidates also died, in an interview with Politico's Berlin Playbook Podcast.

 

Investigations are ongoing, but police said there is no evidence of foul play, with most of the deaths involving pre-existing health conditions and natural causes, a North Rhine-Westphalia AfD spokesperson told Politico, according to the German daily newspaper Die Welt's translation of the podcast episode.

 

Newsweek has contacted the AfD, North Rhine-Westphalia's Interior Ministry and Germany's Interior Ministry via email for comment.

 

The cluster of deaths prompted administrative disruption in affected districts and revived online speculation about their cause. Police and election authorities said there was no evidence of criminal activity.

 

The City of Rheinberg announced Seitz's death on August 21, before the City of Schwerte said on August 26 that Klinger had died "unexpectedly" on August 19. The next day, the City of Blomberg announced "the unfortunate death" of Lange on August 27 and, on August 28, the City of Bad Lippspringe said Berendes "died unexpectedly."

 

On Tuesday, Gottschalk named René Herford and Patrick Tietze as the reserve candidates who died.

 

Newsweek has contacted each of these local authorities to ask for more details on specific dates and causes of deaths.

 

Even though police have said that they do not suspect foul play, the deaths have fueled speculation online, including from professor Stefan Homburg, a retired Germany economist who was the director of the Institute of Public Finance at Leibniz University Hannover until 2021.

 

He was commenting on the initial four who died when he said in a post on X on August 29 that the cluster of deaths is "statistically almost impossible."

 

AfD co-leader Alice Weidel reposted the message with the caption: "Four AfD candidates have died."

 

But Gottschalk, the state's AfD deputy leader, said there is no reason not to call the deaths a coincidence.

 

"What I have in front of me—but that's just partial information—that doesn't back up these suspicions at the moment," he told Politico's Berlin Playbook Podcast, adding that he wants investigations to take place "without immediately getting into conspiracy-theory territory," according to Die Welt's translation.

 

https://www.newsweek.com/far-right-german-afd-candidates-die-before-election-north-rhine-westphalia-2123763