The German organisation,
Exit Deutschland, was co-founded by former Neo-Nazi
Ingo Hasselbach, and former police detective
Bernd Wagner. Since 2004, the organization has been one of three pillars of the
Democratic Culture Centre. According to
Monika Lazar, spokeswoman for the
Alliance 90/The Greens parliamentary group on strategies to combat the far-right, the strategies of Exit Deutschland have been rewarded by nearly 300 former neo-Nazis leaving Neo-Nazi groups by 2008. It is funded primarily by donations from
Amadeu Antonio Foundation and
Freudenberg Foundation. It is also supported through programs of the federal government, such as "Working and Living in Diversity", Xenos and "Youth for diversity, tolerance and democracy - against right-wing extremism, xenophobia and antisemitism," and by projects of the federal states of
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and
Brandenburg. It was also a recipient in the years 2001 to 2005 of
Stern's "Fighting right-wing violence support" initiative with donations. In August 2011, Exit Deutschland prepared a trojan marketing campaign at Rock für Deutschland in
Thuringia, a rock concert organized by the
National Democratic Party where the organization handed out Neo-Nazi-themed free T-shirts to 250 out of 600 concertgoers. However, the T-shirts, when washed, contained a message which exhorted the recipients to break from Neo-Nazi groups and provided contact information about Exit Deutschland. In 2020, Exit Deutschland celebrated its 20th anniversary. Bernd Wagner has criticized minister
Franziska Giffey (SPD) for stopping to finance organizations such as Exit. He has opined that democracy has been moving away from real working people, and people do not feel represented by politicians. The so called "hygiene-demonstrations" might aid right wing extremists. ==First Swedish group==