Anarchist Pogo Party of Germany
Political party in Germany
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Anarchist Pogo Party of Germany (German: Anarchistische Pogo Partei Deutschlands; APPD) is a German frivolous party which campaigns in support of unemployment benefits, direct democracy and the Balkanization of Germany. Established in 1981, it has run in a number of elections since it registered as a political party in 1997.
Anarchist Pogo Party of Germany Anarchistische Pogo-Partei Deutschlands | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | APPD |
| Leader | Saskia "Omma" Schwabeland |
| Founded | 1981 |
| Newspaper | Armes Deutschland |
| Youth wing | Asocial Youth |
| Ideology | |
| Colors | Black & White |
| Website | |
| www | |
History

The Anarchist Pogo Party of Germany (German: Anarchistische Pogo Partei Deutschlands; APPD) was first established in 1981,[1] by a group of punks in Hanover.[2] One of them, Moses Arndt, was later elected to the Bundestag in 2025 as a member of Die Linke.[3] It soon became a party for the emerging German punk subculture,[4] announcing itself to the public in 1984.[2] The new party sought to create a support base from "non-voters, plebs and benefit fraudsters".[5]
For most of the 1980s and 1990s, the party failed to generate substantial media attention. This changed when it began participating in elections[6] and officially registered as a political party.[7] It first ran in the 1997 Hamburg state election,[6] then in the subsequent 1998 German federal election.[8] The party ran with the promise that it would give free beer to anyone who voted for them.[9] Despite this, it won only ~0.1% of the vote.[7] In the 2011 Berlin state election, the APPD claimed to have won a plurality of the vote, as it had instructed supporters to either vote for it or to abstain; the party therefore claimed all 39.8% of eligible voters who did not turn out.[10] The party attempted to run in the 2021 German federal election under the slogan "work is shit", but their application was rejected, as it had only been submitted electronically.[9]
Proposals
The APPD programme mixes together elements of political satire and serious proposals for reform.[7] As a frivolous party, its aim is to challenge the Establishment and political correctness.[11] Unlike classical anarchism, which rejects the existence of the state, the APPD supports a limited state in which citizens participate in decision making through direct democracy and e-democracy.[7] It takes the "Groucho-Marxist" approach to anti-statism, suggesting that people wean themselves off the state.[12]

The APPD calls for the borders of Germany to be restored to those of the Holy Roman Empire, as they were in 1237 under Frederick II.[5] The party further proposes the "Balkanization" of Germany[13] by dividing the country into separate cantons for each of the so-called "pogo-races": one for the "social parasites" who live off state welfare; one for the "achievers" who pursue careers and earn money; and one for violent people such as criminals and neo-Nazis to fight each other.[7] By creating separate living spaces for different classes of people, it hopes to protect "pogo-anarchists" from normality.[10]
The party adopts an anti-work ethic, which celebrates idleness and calls for the "right to be unemployed".[14] It demands the extension of paid unemployment to all, as a human right.[5] The party also proposes the replacement of the old age pension with a "young age pension", to allow young people to spend their time enjoying themselves rather than working. As a response to the 2011 Germany E. coli O104:H4 outbreak, it suggested that people adopt an all-beer diet.[10] According to sociologist Knud Andresen, the party had something of a "cult of alcohol consumption".[15] Among its slogans are "power to the anti-socials!";[10] Another calls for the "total re-stupefication of mankind".[5]