BERLIN (AP) — Alternative for Germany was founded four years ago at the height of the eurozone crisis, when opposition to a German bailout of other countries using the common currency was strong. The party narrowly failed to pass the 5-percent threshold to enter parliament in 2013 on a euroskeptic platform, a hurdle it handily took this time around following a campaign focused heavily on Chancellor Angela Merkel's refugee policy. Known by its German acronym AfD, the party is projected to take about 13 percent of the vote in Sunday's election, giving it the third-largest caucus in Parliament behind Merkel's bloc and the Social Democrats.