gaining in Germany
As in the U.K. and elsewhere in Europe the people are turning towards parties which offer hope against the Globalists who are plotting for world control.
Victory for nationalists in Germany
18th September 2006
NPD shocks liberal elite in German elections
Nationalists in
Germany
have upset the German establishment by taking 6 seats in a regional parliament (Landtag).
The National Democratic Party saw its share of the vote rise from less than 1%
in the previous election to take 7.3% in yesterday’s elections. Under the system
of proportional representation this gives them 6 seats in the State Parliament
of Mecklenberg-Western Pomerania.
This is a tremendous victory for those nationalist
parties across Europe
who are undergoing modernisation and mainstreaming and who are seeing a rise in
support as voters witness and experience at first hand the social and economic
failures of multiculturalism and globalism and lay the blame fairly and firmly
at the feet of the old parties.
Failures
The old forces of reactionary conservatism and socialism are failing millions of
ordinary Europeans forced to compete with legions of cheap migrant workers in
their own countries and globally with sweatshop labour in China and India. It
was no coincidence that the voters turned to the NPD in a State where
unemployment is a staggering 18.2%.
As the fundamental laws of economics are applied in their stark brutality a
hemorrhage of manufacturing jobs to the Third World is matched by domestic
unemployment. The great white hope of call centres and information industries
have failed in Europe and the UK as global corporations switch their operations
to India.
Depressing for opposition
The globalists are in despair in Germany today. "That's the most depressing
result," said Erwin Sellering, deputy leader in Mecklenburg of the Social
Democratic Party, which lost ground in the vote. "Depressing for us all because
it was our common goal to prevent it."
In the same manner of desperation which BNP candidates have seen here,
mainstream parties had called on voters to cast their ballot for anyone except
the National Democratic Party. This is a clear sign of weakness not lost on
voters who increasingly regard the old parties as one and the same.
Udo Pastoers, one of six NPD members elected to the state parliament in Schwerin,
promised to wage "really tough opposition."
"We will expose the red-red catastrophe that has driven people to the brink of
despair," Pastoers said on German television, referring to the Social Democrat
and Left Party colors.
Modernisers
“Whatever their individual flaws a victory for genuine nationalists anywhere in
Europe should be welcomed as it comes at the expense of the old parties owned by
the liberal-globalist elite who are destroying the freedoms, cultures and
identities of all the nations of Europe.
“It is also a victory for the modernisers of the nationalist movement who are
now addressing the current concerns of voters in the language of the times
rather than having a fixation on the past.”
The NPD also fared well in local elections in Berlin, NPD leader Udo Voigt was
elected to one of the councils in the German capital Berlin.