Tino Chrupalla

Politician

Birthday April 14, 1975

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Weißwasser, East Germany

Age 48 years old

Nationality Germany

#10403 Most Popular

1945

Chrupalla compared the alleged policies of the Western Allies after 1945 with Nazi Propaganda.

When the Russian invasion of Ukraine happened one and a half a year later, he said "This war also has several fathers. ... Of course, the role of NATO and the role of the federal government of Germany must also be discussed here."

In December 2021, Chrupalla expressed opposition to mandatory Covid vaccinations during a debate on the show ZDF-Morgenmagazin, but argued vaccination would make sense for the elderly and those who were previously ill.

When the moderator Andreas Wunn stated ICU doctors confirmed that 80 to 90 percent of Covid patients in intensive care units were unvaccinated, Chrupalla claimed the numbers were unconfirmed and blamed budget cuts and downsizing of medical departments as the problem for overloaded ICUs.

Chrupalla has voiced opposition against restrictions on Chinese technology and backed Chinese foreign minister Qin Gang on his peace-brokering efforts for Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

In November 2023, Chrupalla with fellow AfD MdB Petr Bystron met with Serbian far-right party Oathkeepers leader Milica Đurđević Stamenkovski, who at the invitation of AfD visited the Bundestag in Berlin and described the party as "leading sovereignist and state-building option in Germany".

AfD is opposed to Germany's recognition of Kosovo.

1975

Tino Chrupalla (born 14 April 1975) is a German politician of the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, and Member of the Bundestag since 2017.

Chrupalla was born on 14 April 1975 in Weißwasser, then East Germany.

1990

In the 1990s, Tino Chrupalla joined the Christian Democratic Youth, linked to the CDU.

2003

In 2003 he qualified via profession education exams as house painter and varnisher master.

He later went on to become the owner of a construction company.

Chrupalla is married with two children.

2015

Chrupalla entered the AfD in 2015 and in 2016 was elected to its district committee for Görlitz.

2017

At the 2017 German federal election, he defeated Michael Kretschmer, later Minister-President of Saxony, in the electoral district of Görlitz.

Chrupalla is one of five deputy chief whips of the AfD federal parliamentary group.

Ahead of the 2021 German federal election, Chrupalla was the AfD's leading candidate for the Bundestag alongside Alice Weidel.

Together with Weidel, he was elected group leader of the AfD parliamentary group in the Bundestag on 30 September 2021, replacing Alexander Gauland, who remained as honorary chairman as part of the redefinition of the office.

German newspaper Zeit has characterized Chrupalla as one of the more relatively moderate members of the AfD parliamentary faction.

Ahead of the 2021 German federal election, Chrupalla cited border security as his main concern and called for Germany to reinstate border controls to "curb border crime".

As federal spokesman, Chrupalla repeatedly called on the AfD to unite and "stop thinking in camps".

2019

In November 2019, he was nominated by Alexander Gauland to replace him as co-chairman and later elected to the position.

Since 2019, Chrupalla has served as chairman and lead spokesman for the AfD.

In a Bundestag debate on 8 November 2019 on the subject of 30 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall, Chrupalla caused a stir when he accused the Chancellor Angela Merkel of having learned from the Free German Youth in East Germany on how to keep a people in check with Propaganda and agitation, based on "strategies of domination and disintegration."

At the invitation of the Russian Defense Ministry in Summer 2021, Chrupalla gave a speech at a conference in which he spoke of Allied "psychological warfare" after World War II, whose re-education allegedly had a lasting impact on German national identity.

2020

In March 2020, two arsonists set fire to Chrupalla's car and he suffered mild injuries putting the blaze out.

He condemned the attack as a direct attack on his family that went beyond all conceivable boundaries of political debate.

In October 2023, Chrupalla was hospitalised following a suspected syringe attack which occurred shortly before he was due to speak at an election rally.

The incident came just days after co-leader Alice Weidel cancelled a public rally due to growing indications that her family would be attacked.

Also a witness told the local daily Donaukurier that the AfD leader had taken a few selfies and then collapsed before being transported to the hospital.

A local AfD representative told Deutsche Presse-Agentur that Chrupalla had been scheduled to speak at the event but that he had gotten caught up in a crowd melee.

Later Wednesday, Andreas Aichele, a spokesman for the Upper Bavarian Police Department, said it remained unclear whether the politician had been attacked, fallen, or simply wasn't feeling well.

Aichele said authorities were not ruling anything out and that an investigation was ongoing.

On October 4, 2023, Chrupalla was at an election campaign appearance in Ingolstadt.

Before his speech he collapsed and came to the intensive care unit of a local hospital.

What exactly led to the hospitalization is unclear.

According to Welt columnist Gunnar Schupelius, an unknown substance was injected with a syringe, the injection marks were reported in a medical report of the emergency doctors.