Germany's political parties receive public funding, membership fees and donations from corporations and individuals. DW examines how German parties get their money.
This is a collection of photos chosen by AP photo editors. It’s “a picture of presidential subservience the likes of which we ...
ROTT AM INN, Germany - Outside a disused lamp factory in the southeastern German village of Rott am Inn, four mannequins, ...
We are a film festival. But Berlinale is also a community of people coming together with a desire to create an inclusive, open environment around cinema.” ...
To fully understand what Musk is seeing and sharing, it helps to focus on the accounts he has interacted with. Some of the ...
Christine Buchholz from the group Initiative Sozialismus von Unte spoke about the new movement to confront fascists in ...
As the two frontrunners in Germany’s general election prepare to go head to head in the first televised debate, the former chancellor’s intervention is a sign of the concern within the political ...
The German Green Party's candidate for chancellor, Robert Habeck, is among the voters who have already cast their ballots ...
German security forces believe a series of acts of vandalism against cars across the country could be linked to Russia, ...
The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has been embroiled in controversy after distributing campaign flyers that ...
Many AfD members have in the past called for an end to Germany’s “cult of guilt” over the Holocaust. And Weidel herself, ...