Lucreta Network Uses Feminist Rhetoric to Push ‘Remigration’

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Lucreta markets itself as an independent women’s initiative focused on lifestyle, fashion and “women’s safety.” Intelligence agencies classify the group as a suspected right‑wing extremist organization that serves as a “front” to give right‑wing extremism a female face. Founder Reinhild Bosdorf works as an assistant to an AfD MEP, and her mother Emhild Bosdorf is an AfD MEP, linking the network directly to the party.

Ideological Contradictions

Lucreta promotes a “right‑wing feminism” that urges women to be “incredibly conservative” and to take a “back seat.” The group highlights violence against women only when the perpetrator is a migrant, while internal reports describe the objectification and degradation of women within the far‑right scene. This selective focus creates a stark clash between feminist rhetoric and traditional gender‑role advocacy.

International Expansion

Lucreta maintains close ties with the French far‑right women’s group Nemesis. Both coordinate through the Europe of Sovereign Nations (ESN) faction in the European Parliament, which also links similar groups in Spain, Italy, Belgium, Switzerland and the UK. International conferences organized by ESN feature neo‑Nazi figures such as Martin Sellner and Jared Taylor, and are funded with European taxpayer money.

Institutional Infiltration

The ESN faction has used European taxpayer funding to sponsor women’s conferences, including a June 2025 event in Vlatin, Germany. The AfD identifies housewives and mothers as a key recruitment demographic, allowing far‑right activists to gain access to mainstream political spaces and institutions.

The “Remigration” Agenda

“Remigration” is defined by these groups as the mass deportation of migrants, extending far beyond the 230,000 people legally required to leave Germany in early 2026. The concept is woven into the broader “Great Replacement” conspiracy, framing demographic change as a crime and positioning it as a central political goal.

Mechanisms of Recruitment

Lucreta’s Instagram strategy starts with harmless hashtags such as #braids and #baking to attract young women. Over time the content introduces extremist terminology like “remigration,” gradually normalizing extremist ideas. The group also co‑opts stories of sexual‑violence victims to fuel anti‑migrant sentiment, often against the wishes of the victims’ families.

  Takeaways

  • Lucreta presents itself as a lifestyle and women’s safety initiative while intelligence agencies label it a suspected right‑wing extremist front.
  • The group recruits young women on Instagram with benign hashtags before introducing extremist concepts such as “remigration.”
  • Lucreta’s “right‑wing feminism” promotes conservative gender roles and highlights violence only when migrants are perpetrators.
  • Internationally, Lucreta collaborates with France’s Nemesis and the ESN faction, organizing conferences funded by European taxpayers that feature neo‑Nazi speakers.
  • The “remigration” agenda calls for mass deportation of migrants beyond legal requirements, linking to the “Great Replacement” conspiracy and targeting housewives and mothers as a key recruitment demographic.

Frequently Asked Questions

What recruitment tactics does Lucreta use on social media?

Lucreta starts with harmless Instagram hashtags like #braids and #baking to attract young women, then gradually introduces extremist language such as “remigration,” turning a seemingly neutral feed into a pipeline for far‑right ideology.

How does the “remigration” concept relate to the Great Replacement conspiracy?

The “remigration” agenda frames mass deportation of migrants as a solution to the perceived demographic threat described by the Great Replacement conspiracy, presenting it as a necessary step to preserve a “blood and soil” nation.

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