Scholz dismisses Musk's assertion that only a far-right party can 'save' Germany

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BERLIN (AP) — Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Friday dismissed an assertion by Elon Musk that only a far-right party can “save Germany,” but said that freedom of opinion "also goes for multibillionaires.”

Germany is expected to vote in an early election on Feb. 23 after Scholz's three-party governing coalition collapsed last month in a dispute over how to revitalize the country's stagnant economy.

Scholz is hoping to win a second term, but polls have shown the main opposition center-right Union bloc in the lead and the chancellor's center-left Social Democrats trailing well behind.

The far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD, is polling strongly, but its candidate for the top job, Alice Weidel, has no realistic chance of becoming chancellor, because other parties refuse to work with it.

In a post on his social network X early Friday, Musk wrote: “Only the AfD can save Germany.”

Weidel posted a video on X thanking Musk — an ally of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump — and declaring that her party “is indeed the one and only alternative for our country; our last option, if you ask me.”

Asked about Musk's comment at a news conference with his Estonian counterpart, Scholz replied: “We have freedom of opinion — it also goes for multibillionaires, but freedom of opinion also means that you can say things that aren't right and don't contain good political advice."

“I say emphatically that the democratic parties in Germany all see it differently," he added.

Earlier Friday, the government was asked whether Musk's comment would have any consequences for its own presence on X.

Spokesperson Christiane Hoffmann noted that the German government has expressed concern about how X, formerly Twitter, developed since Musk took over the platform, but has concluded time and again that it will stay “because it is an important medium to reach and inform people and it brings significant disadvantages if the government, or the chancellor, is not represented on relevant social media.”

Scholz lost a confidence vote on Monday, leaving the decision on whether to dissolve parliament and hold an early election with Germany's usually largely ceremonial head of state. President Frank-Walter Steinmeier's office said Friday that he would make an announcement on Dec. 27.

 

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