Interior ministers from Germany's 16 regional states on Wednesday unanimously backed a bid to outlaw the neo-Nazi NPD party, despite fears the effort could backfire, AFP reported.
"The NPD prepares the ground for far-right violence and stokes xenophobia. Their ideology disregards basic human rights and is antidemocratic," said Ralf Jaeger, interior minister of North Rhine-Westphalia, according to the report.
"Therefore it is our clear goal to achieve a ban on the NPD," he added.
The issue will be discussed in cabinet early on Thursday and Chancellor Angela Merkel will also hold talks with state leaders to chart a path forward, the report indicated.
The government may decide to take the case against the NPD to the Federal Constitutional Court, which alone holds the power to strike down a political party.
The federal government, the Bundestag lower house of parliament and the Bundesrat upper house, where the 16 states are represented, are the only bodies in Germany that can apply for such a ban.
Merkel, however, is cautious about launching the procedure, according to AFP. Her deputy spokesman Georg Streiter told a regular news conference on Wednesday, "It is well known that the chancellor sees significant risks that need to be assessed."
"What matters for the chancellor is whether such an application for a ban would have a chance of success," added Streiter.
In 2003, a similar attempt spearheaded by the federal government fizzled because the tribunal found the presence of intelligence agents who had infiltrated the party's ranks muddied the case against it.
That failed bid stalks the current proceedings, which were prompted by the discovery in November 2011 that a far-right cell was likely behind a rash of killings over a seven-year period in which most of the 10 victims were immigrant shopkeepers.
Federal Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich warned that a failure at the country's top court could play into the hands of the NPD which would exploit it for propaganda purposes.
"The chances that we will win are better than the chances that we will lose, but the risks have to be assessed," Friedrich told reporters, according to AFP.
"It is important that the mistakes of 2003 are not made again," added the minister.
Founded in 1964 with the help of former Nazis, the party has never won seats in the federal parliament and in 2009 scored just 1.5 percent of the vote -- far from the five percent needed for representation. NPD currently has deputies in two regional parliaments in the former communist east.
The head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, Dieter Graumann, welcomed the recommendation on Wednesday, saying it was "high time" for a ban on the NPD.
"For any convinced democrat, it is simply unbearable that far-right extremists get taxpayers' money to disseminate their brown poison," he said, referring to the Nazi color.
"A ban on the NPD can finally end this state of affairs," added Graumann.