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bj rn h cke biography in short and rare photos
Björn Uwe Höcke (also known as Bernd Höcke) (born 1 April 1972 in Lünen) is a German politician for the right-wing populist, eurosceptic party Alternative for Germany (AfD).
Contents
- bj rn h cke biography in short and rare photos
- denkmal der schande bj rn h cke afd emp rt mit hetz rede 17 01 2017 bananenrepublik
- Biography
- Political career
- European politics
- Family
- Immigration
- Abolishing 86 130 StGB
- Antisemitism
- References
denkmal der schande bj rn h cke afd emp rt mit hetz rede 17 01 2017 bananenrepublik
Biography

Höcke was born in Lünen, Westphalia. His grandparents were expelled ethnic Germans. After his Abitur at the Rhein-Wied-Gymnasium Neuwied in 1991, he served in the Bundeswehr and went to law school at the University Bonn, which he did not finish. Höcke then studied sports and historical sciences for teaching at secondary schools and completed a master's degree in school management.

After curricular activities in various schools he worked as a senior teacher at the Rhenanus School in Bad Sooden-Allendorf. In addition to the education policy, the family policy is one of his main interests.
He is married and has four children.
Political career
Höcke was member of the Junge Union.

As one of the founders of AfD Thuringia, he became Member of the Landtag of Thuringia, the state assembly of the federal state of Thuringia in Germany during the 2014 Thuringian State Elections. Höcke is the speaker of the parliamentary group of the AfD and he is the spokesman of the Thuringia Landesverband (English: regional association) of his party. He is said to be part of the "national-conservative wing" of the AfD.

He is one of the initiators of the "Erfurter Resolution", whose former leader and co-founder, Bernd Lucke, was forced to resign.
European politics

Höcke supports border control in the refugee crisis and a limit on asylum laws. He supports the return to national currencies to end the European debt crisis.
Family
Höcke is an advocate of the heterosexual elementary family, particularly a three-child-family. He demands an end of "society experiments" that undermine what he deems the "natural gender order". He encourages the extension of child tax credit.
He advocates a reduction of comprehensive schools and a specific schooling of outstanding students as well as a creation of schools that particularly support special needs children. He opposes sexual education in elementary schools and wants to "stop the dissolution of the natural polarity of the two genders".
Immigration
Höcke supports the position of Thilo Sarrazin and is viewed as controversial for his criticism of multiculturalism and Islam. His opinions have been observed by media and social scientists as right-wing populist, identitarian, nationalist.
Political scientists such as Gero Neugebauer and Hajo Funke have commented that Höckes opinions are close to the National Democratic Party of Germany and deem his speech pattern to be völkisch, racist and fascist. At a demonstration in Erfurt he said:
"Die Syrer, die zu uns kommen, haben immer noch Syrien. Wenn wir – durch die Syrer – unser Deutschland verloren haben, dann haben wir keine Heimat mehr.""The Syrians who come to us still have their Syria. But if we – through the Syrians – lose our Germany, we will not have a homeland anymore."Abolishing §§ 86 & 130 StGB
In a 2014 email to party colleagues, Höcke advocated the abolition of sections 86 and 130 of the German Criminal Code. Section 86 prohibits the spread of propaganda by unconstitutional organizations. Section 130 criminalizes 'incitement of hatred towards other groups of the population' (Volksverhetzung). 'Ethical unsound persuasions' can't be 'avoided by legal measures'.
Antisemitism
Höcke gave a speech in Dresden in January 2017, in which, referring to the Holocaust memorial in Berlin, he stated that "we Germans are the only people in the world who have planted a memorial of shame in the heart of their capital" and suggested that Germans "need to make a 180 degree change in their politics of commemoration."
The speech was widely criticized as antisemitic, among others by Jewish leaders in Germany, and he was described by his party chairwoman, Frauke Petry, in response as a "burden to the party".
As a result of his speech, the leaders of the AfD have asked in February 2017 that Björn Höcke be expelled from the party. The arbitration committee of the AfD in Thuringia is set to rule on the leaders' request.