Anton Maegerle


Anton Maegerle is the nom de plume a German journalist. He is also the author of books about far-right politics, right-wing radicalism, the New Right, and right-wing policy in general.

Personal life

Only very few personal details of his life and career are known to the public. He was allegedly 40 years old in 2002, and lives in a village in Southern Germany, where he always lived except when he was studying social science. During the time of his studies, the German right-wing party The Republicans was founded. He describes this occasion as the “priming” for his activism. He himself is a member of the Social Democratic Party of Germany. After finishing his studies he moved home and started to make his inquiries. His neighbors deemed him to be unemployed because they never saw him working, until he was visited by the police because he had received several threats. His articles and books are published under his pseudonym.
Maegerle does not publish any personal data because he is exposed to hostility and threats, as well as threats of murder from neo-Nazis due to his professional activity. At times he was dependent on state personal protection. Therefore, he chose a pseudonym under which his articles, book and TV contributions appear.

Work

Maegerle started collecting information on the right-wing party The Republicans in 1983, and observes right-wing extremists as well as right-wing conservative circles in Germany and abroad. Maegerle's database contains some 550,000 items and data on ca. 17,000 individuals, and is said to be one of the largest of its kind, providing information to journalists and governments agencies including the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution. In 2001, he published a book against right-wing extremism in Baden-Württemberg together with the president of the Landesamt für Verfassungsschutz Helmut Rannacher. Maegerle also collects information on right-wing extremist, xenophobic and anti-semitic acts of violence, regularly publishing chronicles of such events.
In the past he has worked for the public broadcasting ARD TV shows Panorama and Report Mainz; the Berliner Zeitung ; the Federal Agency for Civic Education ; the news magazine Stern ; and Die Welt . He is a regular contributor to the controversial government-funded Internet newsletter Blick nach Rechts and wrote for the Informationsdienst gegen Rechtsextremismus until it was closed down in 2006. As a result of his feature in Report Mainz in 2000 several banks cancelled the bank accounts of right-wing extremists.
Maegerle belongs to the critics of the Ingolstadt Research Institute for Contemporary Historical Research, a portrayal of which published he published in 1996 in the View to the Right.

Honors

On 16 November 2007 Netzwerk Recherche awarded Maegerle, Andrea Röpke and Thomas Kuban its "Lighttower Award".

Reaction

Some Conservatives accuse Maegerle's work of containing a leftist bias because he makes nearly no distinction between Conservatives and Nazis, and criticize that he receives public money for this. For example, Maegerle defends the use of political correctness, and published an article in the left-wing newspaper Jungle World during the 2002 German federal election in which he, as a SPD member, accused CDU chancellor candidate Edmund Stoiber of having "best ties to the twillight zone of right-wing extremism". The extremism researcher Eckhard Jesse has criticized Maegerle for "scent in the well-known Antifa manner almost everywhere right-wing extremists."
In 1996, Maegerle's real name was exposed by "nationalist-pacifist", Neue Rechte politician Alfred Mechtersheimer.
The Holocaust denier Germar Rudolf published under the name Anton Mägerle in order to discredit the journalist's research on Holocaust denial.
In 2007, Felix Krautkrämer, an editor of Junge Freiheit claimed repeated, Maegerle is a far left extremist and he publishes in multiple far left media. Maegerle filed a lawsuit against the claim that he is still publishing in four of the far left media mentioned by name. Krautkrämer, as well as Focus' Michael Klonovsky, were later ordered by a court not to repeat this claim.

Publications

;together with Martin Dietzsch:
;together with Friedrich Paul Heller: