AfD's Saxony-Anhalt Platform Revives Russian Language Teaching — and a Debate Germany Has Tried to Close

When Alternative für Deutschland published its education programme for Saxony-Anhalt ahead of the state election due later this year, one proposal stood out from the party's usual platform of immigration restriction and economic nationalism: a commitment to restore Russian language teaching in state schools and re-establish pupil-exchange programmes with Russian institutions.
The policy is specific in a way that political pledges rarely are. It names the subject, the institutional vehicle, and the bilateral dimension — school corridors rather than missile cabinets. It is also, in the context of post-2022 European politics, a deliberate provocation.
The language question in eastern Germany
Russian was a mandatory foreign language in East German schools for four decades under socialist governance. After reunification in 1990, English steadily displaced it across most of the former GDR; by the 2010s, French and Spanish had largely filled the remaining slots. Today, Russian is offered as an optional subject in only a fraction of German schools, and mandatory instruction in the language is effectively a historical artefact.
AfD's proposal would not simply offer Russian as an option — it would restore it as a preferred second foreign language in Saxony-Anhalt's state curriculum, alongside English. The exchange programmes, as described in the party's framing, would link German schools directly with Russian counterparts, funded through the state education budget. The initiative targets a population that grew up inside the Soviet sphere and retains, in many cases, a residual familiarity with the language — as well as a generational memory that does not map neatly onto the post-2022 consensus about Moscow.
This is not accidental. AfD has made inroads in Saxony-Anhalt by winning over voters who are older, more working-class, and less likely to have strong English — a constituency whose horizon and whose children's career prospects the party frames as having been abandoned by a reunification elite that chose English and European integration simultaneously.
Security fault lines
The proposal lands in a context where Germany's domestic intelligence services classify AfD itself as a case of "proven far-right extremism" in some regional assessments. The party's parliamentary group in Saxony-Anhalt has been under formal observation by the Verfassungsschutz — the federal domestic intelligence agency — since 2022. German security officials have long argued that Moscow maintains active relationships with far-right parties across Europe, and that cultural-exchange programmes offer vectors for influence that are harder to classify as espionage than a diplomatic meeting but serve a similar function.
The post-2022 rupture in German–Russian cultural ties has been nearly total. The Goethe-Institut suspended operations in Russia in early 2022. University exchange programmes run by the DAAD, Germany's academic exchange service, have been suspended. The school-exchange infrastructure that once channelled tens of thousands of pupils between the two countries in both directions has not been rebuilt.
AfD's proposal would rebuild precisely this architecture — on German public money, under German state supervision, but with Russian institutions as the counterpart. The party's critics argue that this is exactly the problem: any state-to-state exchange framework, however legitimate in principle, becomes a vehicle for Moscow's soft-power operations the moment it is negotiated with a party whose policy programme the German domestic intelligence service has flagged as extremism-adjacent.
A debate that runs deeper than language
The contest over which language Germany teaches its children is never only about communication skills. In the eastern states, it is entangled with questions about economic futures, with the particular geography of German–Russian trade corridors that once ran through the former GDR — chemicals, heavy manufacturing, energy — and with a resentiment that AfD has successfully reframed as common sense rather than nostalgia.
Germany's broader foreign policy establishment has spent the three years since the full-scale invasion trying to decouple the country from Russian dependency in energy, finance, and industrial supply chains. The education programme AfD is proposing sits in a different register — it is not about gas pipelines or trade volumes, but about which cultural horizon a generation of eastern German children is offered as normal. If Russia is a language they can speak, a place their school sends them, an exchange partner their government funds, then Moscow's influence over how that country is understood in eastern German classrooms does not have to run through a disinformation campaign. It runs through a curriculum.
What comes next in Saxony-Anhalt
The state election in Saxony-Anhalt is scheduled for later this year, and AfD enters the campaign cycle with polling that puts it in a position to either win outright or become the largest single party in the Landtag — a threshold that would force the mainstream parties into a decision about whether to treat it as a coalition partner or to attempt the kind of firewall that Germany's other major parties have historically maintained.
The education plank is not the whole of AfD's programme, but it is one of its most legible. It gives the party a cultural argument — rooted in language, in exchange, in a kind of East German normalcy — that is harder to dismiss as extremist rhetoric than its positions on migration or security. Whether that argument wins votes or whether it accelerates the process by which Germany's intelligence community and its mainstream political class treat the party's state-level ambitions as a national security question in their own right will be among the defining contests of eastern German politics this year.
This desk covers German and European cultural policy for Monexus; the article was filed from Berlin.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://x.com/brianmcdonaldie/status/1924107228518916281