The right-wing populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) has been humiliated on Facebook in the run-up to this month's national election thanks to a prank pulled by the satirical political party Die Partei (The Party).

The Party's satirists say they spent 11 months using fake accounts to infiltrate various private AfD Facebook groups with names like "My Fatherland" and "The Truth about the Antifa." The pranksters worked their way up to admin status before kicking the current admins out, making the content public, and changing the names of the groups, which had a combined membership of over 180,000 people.

Read more: AfD seeks to reboot migrant fears

Now the group "The Truth about the Antifa" is called "I <3 Antifa", "Love your Homeland" has become "Love your Hummus" and "Sharia - more and more in Germany?" has turned into "Shakira - when is she coming back to Germany?"

On Sunday, Die Partei posted a video entitled "The Coup" to all the groups' pages, in which a satirist explained to the followers that their groups were now being led by the political party.

AfD leaders and their most offensive remarks Alexander Gauland Co-chairman Alexander Gauland said the German national soccer team's defender Jerome Boateng might be appreciated for his performance on the pitch - but people would not want "someone like Boateng as a neighbor." He also argued Germany should close its borders and said of an image showing a drowned refugee child: "We can't be blackmailed by children's eyes."

AfD leaders and their most offensive remarks Alice Weidel Alice Weidel generally plays the role of "voice of reason" for the far-right populists, but she, too, is hardly immune to verbal miscues. Welt newspaper, for instance, published a 2013 memo allegedly from Weidel in which she called German politicians "pigs" and "puppets of the victorious powers in World War II. Weidel initially claimed the mail was fake, but now admits its authenticity.

AfD leaders and their most offensive remarks Frauke Petry German border police should shoot at refugees entering the country illegally, the former co-chair of the AfD told a regional newspaper in 2016. Officers must "use firearms if necessary" to "prevent illegal border crossings." Communist East German leader Erich Honecker was the last German politician who condoned shooting at the border.

AfD leaders and their most offensive remarks Björn Höcke The head of the AfD in the state of Thuringia made headlines for referring to Berlin's Holocaust memorial as a "monument of shame" and calling on the country to stop atoning for its Nazi past. The comments came just as Germany enters an important election year - leading AfD members moved to expel Höcke for his remarks.

AfD leaders and their most offensive remarks Beatrix von Storch Initially, the AfD campaigned against the euro and bailouts - but that quickly turned into anti-immigrant rhetoric. "People who won't accept STOP at our borders are attackers," the European lawmaker said. "And we have to defend ourselves against attackers."

AfD leaders and their most offensive remarks Marcus Pretzell Pretzell, former chairman of the AfD in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia and husband to Frauke Petry, wrote "These are Merkel's dead," shortly after news broke of the deadly attack on the Berlin Christmas market in December 2016.

AfD leaders and their most offensive remarks Andre Wendt The member of parliament in Germany's eastern state of Saxony made waves in early 2016 with an inquiry into how far the state covers the cost of sterilizing unaccompanied refugee minors. Thousands of unaccompanied minors have sought asylum in Germany, according to the Federal Association for Unaccompanied Minor Refugees (BumF) — the vast majority of them young men.

AfD leaders and their most offensive remarks Andre Poggenburg Poggenburg, head of the AfD in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt, has also raised eyebrows with extreme remarks. In February 2017, he urged other lawmakers in the state parliament to join measures against the extreme left-wing in order to "get rid of, once and for all, this rank growth on the German racial corpus" — the latter term clearly derived from Nazi terminology.

AfD leaders and their most offensive remarks Alexander Gauland - again ... During a campaign speech in Eichsfeld in August 2017, AfD election co-candidate Alexander Gauland said that Social Democrat parliamentarian Aydan Özoguz should be "disposed of" back to Anatolia. The German term, "entsorgen," raised obvious parallels to the imprisonment and killings of Jews and prisoners of war under the Nazis.

AfD leaders and their most offensive remarks ... and again Gauland was roundly criticized for a speech he made to the AfD's youth wing in June 2018. Acknowledging Germany's responsibility for the crimes of the Nazi era, he went on to say Germany had a "glorious history and one that lasted a lot longer than those damned 12 years. Hitler and the Nazis are just a speck of bird shit in over 1,000 years of successful German history."

AfD leaders and their most offensive remarks Andreas Kalbitz The Brandenburg state AfD chief admitted in 2019 to attending a 2007 rally in Greece by the ultranationalist Golden Dawn party at which a swastika flag was raised. "Der Spiegel" had published a leaked report by the German embassy in Athens naming him as one of "14 neo-Nazis" who arrived from Germany for the far-right rally. Kalbitz released a statement saying he took part out of "curiosity." Author: Dagmar Breitenbach



Followers now "fooled by real people"

Shahak Shapira ("Don't worry, it's an old Prussian name," the Israeli-born comedian deadpans) told the followers that while the groups were often proliferated and administered by online bots, "you are now being fooled by real people."

He also said that he was imposing new rules on the groups, including that "hate speech towards Islam is now to be done facing Mecca," that all groups must have a "minimum refugee quota" of 18 percent, and that Israeli secret service Mossad would from now on have the right to activate their webcams at any time.

"That means me. I am from Mossad," said Shapira, possibly joking.

Shapira has pulled a few outrageous stunts before. Most famously, he stenciled text from racist tweets outside the German offices of Twitter in Hamburg to draw attention to the social media site's failure to clamp down on racist comments. He also created the #Yolocaust project, which showed visitors to Berlin's Holocaust memorial engaging in questionable behavior and sharing their photos via social media. Shapira took, for example, a photo of a person doing yoga poses on the memorial and superimposed it on a background photo of Holocaust victims' corpses.

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AfD not amused

AfD spokesman Christian Lüth dismissed the prank as a "stupid joke that is supposed to annoy the voters and us." "Apparently this party has no interest in doing its own, serious election campaign, but would rather occupy itself with damaging other competitors in an illegal way," he said in a statement to DW, before adding that the groups "had not shared any particularly secret content."

Other AfD politicians have also made vague threats of legal action, with Thomas Rudy of the AfD's Thuringia branch talking of "illegal machinations."

Read more: AfD's unlikely duo: Alexander Gauland and Alice Weidel

Not just a joke

Speaking to the Hamburger Abendblatt newspaper, Shapira said much about the prank was "not that funny if you consider the dimensions of it," not least because some fairly high members of the AfD were active in the groups.

He added that the whole project had taught him a lesson in bots and confirmation bias clouds on social media. "I was added to the groups with a fake profile and saw how you get dragged into a whirlpool of hate and fake news through friend requests from apparent bot accounts from the AfD," he said. "A digital election campaign is being fought that only serves to manipulate people."

Shapira also said he hoped Die Partei's operation would "set something off" in a few of the group members. "Opinions and attitudes can't be changed, but maybe it will get people to start thinking about things," he said.

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Bot power

Shapira's experience chimes in with research published by the FAZ newspaper in February, which found that the AfD was making much more use of social media bots than other German parties. These programmed algorithms post and share content on Twitter and Facebook and add friends to groups automatically. Bots allow political messages to be distributed much more quickly and can create the illusion that parties or politicians have many more followers than they really do.

One of the AfD's leading election candidates, Alice Weidel, has previously denied that her party would use bots during the election campaign. She told Reuters news agency in February that though the party would use "analysis or help programs that make day-to-day work easier," the AfD would draw the line at "social bots that post on other people's pages automatically in the name of the AfD."

But FAZ research in February and Shapira's actions suggest that AfD memes and articles are being shared from automated accounts - if not by the party itself, then by its supporters. On Facebook, such bots are often recognizable by certain characteristics: they post frequently, share content without commenting on it, and don't have photos of actual people in their profile pictures. Bots also often share each other's posts.

Shapira claims that many of the groups taken over by Die Partei were administered by bots - something that the FAZ research from February corroborated.