“Shaping, not just managing” read his posters. When Robert Sesselmann was elected Germany’s first AfD district administrator on a hot, humid day in June 2023, Björn Höcke spoke of a “political flash of lightning.” Today, the Thuringian AfD leader says, “He’s settled in well.” The initial fervor seems to have faded. Thuringian district administrators are elected for six years—it’s now the halfway point in the Sonneberg district.
For the AfD, Sesselmann’s election as district administrator of Germany’s second-smallest district was a massive success at the time. He also won the election on platform demands he’ll never be able to implement as district administrator—such as leaving the eurozone or abolishing the broadcasting license fee. In Höcke’s AfD, some dreamed of a hardline approach toward refugees, of deportations and isolationism. Pure AfD.