It marked the third attack in as many months. An Afghan migrant killed two in a Aschaffenburg knife attack in January, and a car-ramming at a Christmas market in Magdeburg killed six last year.

The spate of attacks has catapulted the issue of migration to the fore.

The AfD’s response has been to call for “remigration”: The mass return of migrants.

The term has Nazi connotations. Engelhardt called it a “scientific term” and says the deportation of people is not what they are calling for but rather, they want a tighter migration policy more generally.

AfD leader Alice Weidel, however, told CNN in January she would immediately start “sending out all the illegals” should she win the election.

Regardless of the designations, connections to extremist individuals and reforming of his political association, Engelhardt remains certain that Germany’s future lies in the hands of the young.

He said “something has changed” in young German voters.

“The fact many young people want to vote for the AfD means that we also have a future.”