Odd Andersen / AFP / Getty Images Richard Grenell (left), the US ambassador to Germany, and German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier during an accreditation ceremony for new ambassadors in Berlin.

The German foreign ministry has asked the new US ambassador to Germany to clarify comments he made during an interview with Breitbart over the weekend in which he said he wanted to “empower” right-wing antiestablishment parties in Europe.

Ambassador Richard Grenell told the far-right news outlet: “There are a lot of conservatives throughout Europe who have contacted me to say they are feeling there is a resurgence going on.” “I absolutely want to empower other conservatives throughout Europe, other leaders. I think there is a groundswell of conservative policies that are taking hold because of the failed policies of the left,” he said.

Sylvain Gaboury / Patrick McMullan via Getty Image Donald Trump Jr. at a party for Grenell in New York earlier this month.

The remarks have been criticized in Germany and the US and have led to the suggestion that the ambassador could endorse political parties and candidates across Europe, which would represent a major breach of diplomatic protocol.

Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy called the Breitbart interview "awful."

When I raised concerns to Grenell about politicizing this post, he personally assured me that once he became Ambassador he would stay out of politics. This interview is awful - Ambassadors aren't supposed to "empower" any political party overseas. https://t.co/i8oOhqEk5k

Thorsten Schäfer-Gümbel, a lawmaker with the Social Democratic Party (SPD), the junior coalition partner in Germany, tweeted: "European citizens don't need a Trump vassal to tell them who to vote for. A US ambassador who meddles in the democratic process to such a degree is simply misplaced."

Lars Klingbeil, also of the SPD, noted that interfering in the politics of a guest country was not part of an ambassador's job description.



I know you are still quite new at your post, but it is not part of the job description of an ambassador to interfere in the politics of his guest country, Mr @RichardGrenell #thankyou https://t.co/Wi5uF9WjCO

During a press briefing on Monday, a German foreign ministry spokesperson said that Berlin had "asked the US side for clarification" and that the Federal Foreign Office's state secretary, Andreas Michaelis, would pick up the issue at a previously arranged meeting with Grenell taking place later this week.

Meanwhile, Grenell described any suggestion that he’d endorse specific candidates and parties as “ridiculous.”

Absurd. I condemn those comments completely. Don’t put words in my mouth. The idea that I’d endorse candidates/parties is ridiculous. I stand by my comments that we are experiencing an awakening from the silent majority - those who reject the elites & their bubble. Led by Trump. https://t.co/DjSX4SL3bf

It isn’t the first time that Grenell, who has been in his post for less than a month, has raised eyebrows in Berlin. On his first day in the new job, Trump pulled out of the Iran deal, and Grenell tweeted that “German companies doing business in Iran should wind down operations immediately.”

The warning prompted Wolfgang Ischinger, Germany’s former ambassador to the US, to tweet back some advice:

@RichardGrenell @TeraEuro @realDonaldTrump Ric: my advice, after a long ambassadorial career: explain your own country’s policies, and lobby the host country - but never tell the host country what to do, if you want to stay out of trouble. Germans are eager to listen, but they will resent instructions.

In the Breitbart interview, Grenell did not explicitly voice support for any particular German party. He did, however, describe Austria’s conservative chancellor, Sebastian Kurz, who governs in coalition with the far right, as a “rock star.” “I’m a big fan,” he said. Grenell also repeated calls for Germany to increase its spending on defense to bring it in line with NATO commitments, a long-standing US request that has become more aggressive in tone under Trump.

The controversy comes as tension between the US and Europe continues to mount: Trump’s decisions to pull out of the Paris climate accord and the Iran nuclear deal have now been followed by the imposition of tariffs on EU steel and aluminum, which has prompted fears of escalating into a trade war between the US and its closest allies.

