Bernd Lucke Explained

Bernd Lucke
Honorific-Suffix:MEP a. D.
Office:Leader of the Alternative for Germany
Alongside:Frauke Petry, Konrad Adam
Term Start:14 April 2013
Term End:5 July 2015
Predecessor:Position established
Successor:Jörg Meuthen
Office1:Leader of the Liberal Conservative Reformers
Term Start1:10 November 2018
Term End1:28 September 2019
Predecessor1:Stephanie Tsomakaeva
Successor1:Jürgen Joost
Term Start2:19 July 2015
Term End2:4 June 2016
Predecessor2:Position established
Successor2:Ulrike Trebesius
Office3:Member of the European Parliament
Term Start3:1 July 2014
Term End3:2 July 2019
Constituency3:Germany
Predecessor3:multi-member district
Successor3:multi-member district
Birth Name:Bernd Lucke
Birth Date:19 August 1962
Residence:Winsen (Luhe)
Spouse:Dorothea Lucke
Children:5
Signature:Bernd Lucke signature.png

Bernd Lucke (born 19 August 1962) is a German economist, professor, author and former politician. He was a co-founder of the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) in 2013 and served as the party's federal chairman. He was elected a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for AfD in 2014.

Lucke is a professor of economics at the University of Hamburg before helping to found Wahlalternative 2013 ("Electoral Alternative 2013") which would become the AfD. Lucke served as the party's spokesman until he lost a leadership election to Frauke Petry in July 2015. Petry's election was considered a shift of the party to extremist positions; Lucke subsequently left the party. In July 2015 he and other former AfD members founded the political party Liberal-Konservative Reformer[1] [2] [3] (formerly Allianz für Fortschritt und Aufbruch,[4] "Alliance for progress and renewal", abbreviated ALFA). He failed to win reelection in 2019 and has since returned to an academic career.[5]

Biography

Early life and professional career

Lucke was born in West Berlin in 1962. His father was an engineer and his mother a school teacher. In 1969 he moved to Haan in North Rhine-Westphalia.[6]

From 1982 to 1984, Lucke studied economics, history, and philosophy at the University of Bonn; he undertook graduate studies in economics at the University of Bonn and UC Berkeley from 1984 to 1987. He completed his doctorate in 1991 with a dissertation on price stabilization in world agricultural markets under Jürgen Wolters at Free University of Berlin. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, he worked in the Council of Economic Experts of the East German Government and, after the German reunification, as an assistant to the Senate of Berlin. Lucke's research interests include sovereign default, news-driven business cycles, growth in developing countries, dynamic CGE models, and applied econometrics.[7]

Lucke has been an advisor to the World Bank and a visiting scholar at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.[8] He is a frequent guest on political talk shows in Germany. He is married and has five children.[8] [9] [10]

Political career and AfD

Lucke joined the Junge Union, the youth wing of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany as a teenager in response to the conditions of his relatives living in East Germany under communism. He was a member of the CDU for thirty years until 2011 when he cancelled his membership in opposition to the party's eurozone rescue policies.[11] He first contested an election as a member of the Free Voters in the 2013 Lower Saxony state election but was not elected.[12]

In 2013, he founded Wahlalternative 2013 ("Electoral Alternative 2013") with Alexander Gauland, Frauke Petry and Konrad Adam to oppose the German government's handling of the eurozone crisis. The group was later founded as Alternative for Germany in April 2013 with Lucke as one of the party's three spokespeople. During his speech at the party's founding rally, he described the Euro currency as a "historic mistake."[13]

During a campaign speech in Bremen on 24 August 2013, Lucke was attacked with pepper spray by two members of Anti-fascist Action. Several people in the audience were treated for irritation of the eyes and throat.[14]

During the 2013 German federal election, Lucke stood as the AfD's top list candidate in Lower Saxony and for the directly elected seat of Harburg but was not elected to either.[15] During the 2014 European parliament election, Lucke was elected as an MEP and negotiated for the AfD to join the European Conservatives and Reformists. Lucke stated that the AfD's preferred partners in the European Parliament would be the British Conservative Party and that they would not team up with "xenophobic" parties.[16]

Following the rise of the Pegida protests in Germany which were welcomed by some AfD state branches, Lucke stated that most of the arguments voiced by Pegida were legitimate and that the movement was a sign that politicians had not listened to concerns felt by ordinary people.[17] [18]

On 4 July 2015, Lucke was displaced as leader of the party Alternative for Germany (AfD) by his former deputy, Frauke Petry in a leadership election after several months of infighting.[19] On 9 July 2015, Lucke left the Alternative for Germany, saying that the party had "fallen irretrievably into the wrong hands" after Petry's election and moved too far to the right by adopting what he termed as anti-foreigner positions. On 19 July, he and other former members of the AfD founded a new party, the Alliance for Progress and Renewal (ALFA).[20] ALFA has since been renamed Liberal-Konservative Reformer ("Liberal-conservative reformers," LKR) and later Wir Bürger ("Us Citizens").

In 2015, Lucke was announced as the LKR's top candidate for the Bundestag ahead of the 2017 German federal election, however the LKR decided not to contest the election. The party stood in the 2019 European parliament elections but all of its MEPs including Lucke lost their seats.

Post-AfD leadership

Lucke continued to work as a public commentator on economic and political affairs after his career as an MEP. In 2017, he argued that the German media should not "demonize" the AfD, arguing that voters for the party were concerned about legitimate issues but that the leadership of the AfD had become too extreme.[21] However, in 2019 Lucke supported a proposal by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution to monitor the AfD and claimed the party now contained right-wing extremist elements that went against the German constitution.[22]

In October 2019, Lucke left politics and returned to academic work at the University of Hamburg as an economics teacher. He was unable to deliver two lectures after being assaulted by an Antifa activist. At the same time, the student union AStA called for Lucke's removal from the university due to his past association with the AfD and for what they argued was his role in helping the rise of the far-right in Germany.[23] Lucke also turned down an offer by the university to host online classes and later that month was able to resume lectures under police protection. Lucke has also worked as an opinion columnist for Welt am Sonntag since 2019.[24]

Selected publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ex-chief of German anti-euro party starts new eurosceptic group. 19 July 2015. Yahoo News.
  2. Web site: Germany's ex-AfD leader sets up new eurosceptic party. https://archive.today/20150821174225/http://uk.reuters.com/article/2015/07/19/uk-germany-eurosceptic-idUKKCN0PT0QQ20150719. dead. 21 August 2015. Reuters UK.
  3. Web site: ALFA: AfD-Gründer Bernd Lucke gründet neue Partei. ((SPIEGEL ONLINE, Hamburg, Germany)). 19 July 2015. SPIEGEL ONLINE.
  4. News: GmbH . Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung . Partei um Bernd Lucke: Alfa findet einen neuen Namen . FAZ.NET . 13 November 2016 . de . 13 November 2016.
  5. Web site: Europawahl 2019: Vorläufiges amtliches Ergebnis – der Bundeswahlleiter.
  6. Web site: 2013-12-25. Hendrik Ankenbrand. 2013-12-25. Bernd Lucke. Der Protestant. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
  7. http://www.wiso.uni-hamburg.de/en/professuren/wachstum-und-konjunktur/team/prof-dr-bernd-lucke/cv/ Curriculum Vitae
  8. (de) von Petersdorff, Winand, "Wer ist der Anti-Euro-Professor Bernd Lucke?", Frankfurter Allgemeine, 24 March 2013.
  9. Vasagar, Jeevan, and Harriet Alexander, "Bernd Lucke: Merkel's new rival and Germany's first serious Euroskeptic", London Daily Telegraph via Ottawa Citizen, 11 April 2013. Similar, earlier story also: Alexander, Harriet, and Jeevan Vasagar in Berlin, "Bernd Lucke interview: 'Why Germany has had enough of the euro'", The Telegraph, 7 April 2013.
  10. http://www.hna.de/nachrichten/politik/interview-volkswirtschaftler-bernd-lucke-ueber-konservative-wahlalternative-2013-2532737.html Interview: Volkswirtschaftler über die konservative „Wahlalternative 2013"
  11. Web site: Bernd Lucke. The Protestant . 2024-01-22.
  12. Web site: Torsten Jung Spitzenkandidat der FREIEN WÄHLER Niedersachsen . 2024-01-22.
  13. Web site: Neue Partei "AfD" will raus aus dem Euro . 2024-01-22.
  14. News: Angriff im Wahlkampf gegen Bernd Lucke . Tagesspiegel . 24 August 2013 .
  15. Web site: Lower Saxony direct candidates for the German Bundestag. 2024-01-22.
  16. Web site: German anti-euro party says won't team up with xenophobes. 2024-01-22.
  17. News: Hugglet . Justin . German Eurosceptics embrace anti-Islam protests . 16 December 2014 . . 10 December 2014 .
  18. Web site: Anti-Islam 'Pegida' march in German city of Dresden. 2024-01-22.
  19. Web site: AfD ditches Lucke as party swings to right. 5 July 2015.
  20. Web site: AfD founder resigns over 'xenophobic' power grab. 9 July 2015.
  21. Web site: 'It's wrong to demonize the AfD'. 2024-01-22.
  22. Web site: Party founder Lucke advocates monitoring the AfD.. 2024-01-22.
  23. Web site: Tumults in front of the lecture hall - Bernd Lucke's lecture canceled again. 2024-01-22.
  24. Web site: Third attempt: Lecture by Bernd Lucke at the University of Hamburg - Police secure building. 2024-01-22.