After
World War II, the
German far-right primarily consisted of the
Socialist Reich Party (SRP), lead by
Otto Ernst Remer, which directly attempted to revive the just defeated
Nazism. The SRP was however later brought under the influence of
Francis Parker Yockey who had, in his book
Imperium, developed more unorthodox ideas for the Nazi movement such as an alliance with the
Soviet Union,
pan-European nationalism, and a spiritual, rather than biological, racism influenced by
Julius Evola. The
German Social Movement (DSB) of
Karl-Heinz Priester was a non-Nazi neo-fascist movement in West Germany that was founded as the German chapter of the Third Positionist
European Social Movement (ESM) also included parties like
Oswald Mosley's
Union Movement, the
Italian Social Movement, and the
New Swedish Movement of
Per Engdahl. Both the ESM as a whole and its German chapter specifically advocated a pan-European fascism. Like other Third Positionist movements at the time, the DSB of Priester supported national liberation projects abroad, particularly the
Algerian National Liberation Front, while also pushing for European–African cooperation via the
Eurafrica concept.
Otto Strasser, upon return from exile to
West Germany in 1955, founded the
German Social Union (DSU), a political party that espoused Otto Strasser's version of explicitly anti-Hitler
Strasserism that would form the basis of various Third Positionist movements, particularly in economic policy and in its advocacy for a European Confederation as a third force on the world stage. With the formation of the (ANR), a splinter of the
National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD), in 1972, the
German New Right was born, a movement that explicitly distanced itself from historical
Nazism (as opposed to the so-called 'Old Right') and took major inspiration from the French
Nouvelle Droite. The early German New Right that had emerged from the ANR of
Henning Eichberg was closely linked with the Third Positionist movement, similarly advocating for a
European nationalism and socialism in the
Strasserist spirit which attracted orthodox followers of
Otto Strasser such as the
Independent Workers' Party (German Socialists) to the nascent movement. Yet this movement also pioneered modern New Right ideas such as
ethnopluralism, a term that likely originated from a 1973 essay by
Eichberg. After the dissolution of the ANR in 1974, the German New Right became dispersed and as a result grew more diverse, taking on stronger influences from the
Revolutionary Conservative Movement of the Weimar Republic as well as the French
Nouvelle Droite, citing Marxist thinkers like
Antonio Gramsci but also neo-fascists like
Julius Evola. Especially since the 2000s, the German New Right has moderated and claims adherence to
Germany's constitution. This moderate version of the German New Right would later go on to influence parts of the
Alternative for Germany. The
Third Path, a German political party founded in 2013, is named after the Third Position and likewise views itself as a third alternative to both liberal
capitalism and the now-obsolete
Soviet communism. Although espousing German Socialism, based on
Strasserism, the party is primarily made up of more traditional
neo-Nazis. It advocates for a European Confederation, a
pan-European nationalist model also espoused by Strasser, and views the
Ukrainian resistance against the
2022 Russian invasion as an
anti-imperialist fight, supporting the Ukrainians and being a member of the pro-Ukrainian Third Positionist group
Nation Europa since its foundation in 2024. == France ==