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Moderate Elected to Ndp

November 23, 1971
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Martin Mussgnug, a 35-year-old member of the Baden-Wuerttemberg State Parliament, was elected last night to succeed Adolf Von Thadden as president of the ultra right-wing National Democratic Party. Von Thadden announced his resignation from the presidency and all party committees on Saturday. Mussgnug who belongs to the more “moderate” wing of the party, won election by a vote of 259-189 at the NPD party congress in Holzminden, Bavaria. A protege of Von Thadden, he is said to represent party members who want to erase the neo-Nazi image that has long been attached to the NPD.

Mussgnug takes over at a time when the NPD is at its lowest ebb after threatening to become a serious factor in West German politics four years ago. At that time it held seats in seven slate parliaments and was bidding for representation in the Bundestag. The party denied that it was neo-Nazi but the rhetoric of Von Thadden and other NPD spokesmen clearly reflected Hitlerite tenets. The Nazi image was believed to have caused large scale defections from the NPD. In elections since 1968. It lost seats in all state legislatures except Baden-Wuerttemberg. In the last national elections the NPD failed to poll sufficient votes for a single seat in the Bundestag.

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