The German Alternative Party Für Deutschland (AFD) has been identified as a right extremist from the country's federal service to protect the Constitution.
“The concept, based on ethnicity and descent, of people, which prevails within the party, is not compatible with a free democratic order,” a statement of domestic intelligence said.
AFD was second in Federal elections in February, winning a record 152 seats in Parliament in 630 seats with 20.8% of the vote.
Parliament, or Bundestag, will vote next week to confirm conservative leader Friedrich Merz as a chancellor, heading a coalition with the left -wing left -wing.
The final AFD has already been supervised as suspect extremism in Germany, and the intelligence agency also ranks it as a right extremist in three states in the east, where its popularity is highest.
The agency, or Verfassungschutz, said specifically that AFD does not consider citizens a “migration origin of mainly Muslim countries” as equal members of the German people.
The output Minister of the Interior Nancy Fasser said the agency had made a clear and unambiguous decision without “without political influence” after a comprehensive review and a 1,100 -page report.
The internal intelligence agency in Germany is responsible for both counteracting and investigating terrorist threats.
Although its change in AFD determination is likely to be challenged in the courts, it is likely to reduce the threshold for an agency using informants and monitoring in the party monitoring.
Internal intelligence cannot insist on banning the party, but its last decision may encourage others to start the process.
Social Democrats Deputy Lider SPD, Serpil Midisels, said it was now in black and white what everyone already knew. “It is clear to me that the ban should come,” she said, according to the German DPA press agency.
Regardless of the success of the AFD election, she said that the founders of the post-war constitution of Germany have sought to ensure that the country will not be immersed in the abyss.