BERLIN, Nov. 18 (Xinhua) -- A member of German federal parliament from the right-wing Alternative fuer Deutschland (AfD) has told Xinhua that other parties are like kindergartens in isolating AfD, adding AfD is willing to cooperate with other parties in Bundestag.
"Playing alone is not our style, and the current isolated situation we are facing is not what we want," said Robby Schlund, AfD vice spokesperson of Thuringia and member of the Bundestag.
The anti-immigration and anti-European Integration AfD won almost 13 percent of votes in German federal elections on Sept. 24, becoming the third largest party in the country just after German Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party and the Social Democratic Party (SPD) led by Martin Schulz.
However, the established parties in the Bundestag, including the CDU, SPD, the Free Democratic Party (FDP), the Greens and the Left, have ruled out possibility of cooperation with the AfD.
Schlund said AfD's isolation is one of the major difficulties the party is now facing, adding that the party will resort to the public in a bid to press other parties to give up their policies of isolating AfD.
Due to unbridgeable differences in refugee policies, the climate change issues and others, the CDU, FDP and the Greens on Friday failed to reach a consensus on the exploratory talks to establish a coalition for the new government. They decided to further negotiate until Sunday evening.
"We have some similar policies with the Left Party in policies concerning health, labor and employment. Our policies are also correlated to SPD and the Union in some economic issues. AfD is willing to cooperate with them if they want too," said Schlund.
"Otherwise, AfD may reveal more details of policy discussion in the Bundestag to the public in a bid to let more people join political discussions.