Hamburg list for foreigners stop

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The Hamburg List for Stopping Foreigners ( HLA ) was a right-wing extremist micro - party active in Hamburg . From 1982 to 1991, when it was founded, it took part in the elections for the Hamburg parliament , but was unable to win a seat. In 1998 it lost its party status.

program

The HLA addressed alleged social problems that would arise from immigrants in Germany, such as "foreign infiltration" and crime against Germans. It was the first party with an anti-immigrant program to run in a West German state election. In the 1980s, party members distributed large quantities of leaflets with xenophobic or xenophobic content. Most recently, the HLA opposed voting rights for foreigners and dual citizenship .

history

The HLA was formed on April 4, 1982 to participate in the June 1982 general election. Former members and Hamburg officials of the National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD) were behind the establishment . Independent from an organizational point of view, as there were personal overlaps between the two parties, the state chairman of the Hamburg NPD, Ulrich Harder , was chairman of the HLA for many years. After the founding of the HLA, the NPD no longer ran for the Hamburg state election.

The HLA achieved the following results in the mayor elections:

  • June 1982 : 6221 votes (0.7 percent)
  • December 1982 : 2804 votes (0.3 percent)
  • 1986 : 6585 votes (0.7 percent)
  • 1987 : 3826 votes (0.4 percent)
  • 1991 : 5857 votes (0.7 percent)

According to its own information, the HLA had 68 members at the end of 1992. The party organ "HLANachrichten" appeared until 1997. In 1998, the HLA lost its legal status as a party within the meaning of the Political Parties Act because it had not participated in an election for six years. According to the Hamburg State Office for the Protection of the Constitution, the organization was completely inactive in 2001.

People (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Foreigners: "The people are fed up with it". in Der Spiegel , May 3, 1982
  2. a b Right-wing extremism in brief. Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, Ministry of the Interior, State Office for the Protection of the Constitution, Lütcke & Wulff, 2001, p. 60.
  3. ^ Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg Landesstimmen