• Thursday, 08 August 2024
logo

German state elections: Success for right-wing AfD, losses for Merkel's CDU

Gulan Media March 13, 2016 News
German state elections: Success for right-wing AfD, losses for Merkel's CDU
The right-leaning AfD managed to enter all three state parliaments, winning double-digit percentage results in Baden-Württemberg, Rhineland-Palatinate and Saxony-Anhalt.
More than 12 million Germans were eligible to vote in the polls to elect new regional parliaments in the three states.
Saxony-Anhalt
According to exit polls the AfD won 23 percent in the eastern German state of Saxony-Anhalt, making it the second largest party after the ruling CDU, which managed to win 29 percent. The SPD meanwhile seems to have been dwarfed to around eleven percent, behind the Left Party which is estimated to have won around 17 per cent.

The current prime minister of Saxony-Anhalt, Reiner Haseloff, said that the results showed a clear mandate for his CDU party to lead a coalition. government
"We are going to build a strong, center government in Saxony-Anhalt," he said. "We need to deal with the issue as mainstream parties and find a solution."
The current coalition of CDU and SPD, however, can not not continue, as the two parties together will not manage to get a majority of the seats in the state parliament.
At the same time, the state leader of the Left, Birke Bull, described the projected results for her party as "bitter."
"We have failed to convince the electorate," she said.

Rhineland-Palatinate
In the western state of Rhineland-Palatinate the ruling SPD looks set to remain in power, with exit polls putting them at 37.5 per cent. The conservative CDU, led by Julia Klöckner, has lost around three percent, and was reported to stand at 32.5 per cent. The Greens reportedly barely managed to cross the five percent threshhold needed for representation in parliament. Meanwhile, the AfD managed to win around eleven percent.

The SPD-frontrunner Malu Drayer refused to answer a question on the issue of post electoral coalitions.
"I am not going to lean towards anything today - today, I am going to celebrate," she said.
DW's Kate Brady reported celebration from the scene at the SPD headquarters.

Baden-Württemberg
According to early figures in Baden-Württemberg the ruling Green Party gained a substantial 32 percent, while the CDU, which ruled the state for almost six decades until 2011, lost a dramatic 11 percent bringing it out to 27.5 percent. The AfD also managed to win 13.1 percent in this state putting in third place before the SPD, currently the junior coalition partner in government, which fell to 13 percent (from 23) in 2011.
Prime Minister of Baden-Württemberg Winfried Kretschmann described the results as a historic victory for the Green Party.
"I see this plebiscite as an assignment to once more establish the state government and provide the premier," he said.
Because of the SPD's losses it will not be possible for the current coalition to continue.
The so-called "Super Sunday" is largely billed as a referendum on Merkel's open door policy towards refugees, which saw more than a million people arrive in Germany last year.
The policy has proven divisive, both among the German public and within Merkel's CDU. The chancellor has rejected measures such as imposing a cap on new arrivals, favoring instead a plan to distribute refugees across the 28 European Union member states.

CDU in trouble?
Pre-election surveys had suggested the CDU and its coalition partner, the SPD, could take a hit across the board, while the right-wing populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) was expected to win seats in all three states.
In its traditional support base, the southwestern state of Baden-Württemberg, the CDU appeared set to lose to the Greens, with support for the party dropping by around 10 points to 29 percent. Meanwhile, the AfD had an 11 percent approval rating.
Guido Wolf, the CDU's leading candidate in the southwest, said this year's election campaign was the "most difficult" the party has had to run.
AfD surge in support
The AfD still leader Frauke Petry told German public radio that her party is not expecting to enter government in any of the three states.
"We have been set to work from the opposition since long before this election," she said, adding that this position was quite normal for a young party.
"This election shows that numerous voters are turning their backs on well-established parties," she said.

The populist right-wing AfD campaigned on an anti-immigration platform, and has sought to scoop support from voters disillusioned with the Merkel government's stance on refugees. In comments that provoked an international outcry, the party's leader Frauke Petry suggested earlier this year that police should fire at refugees "as a last resort," to prevent unregistered asylum seekers entering the country.
Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere meanwhile had cautioned voters against backing the AfD, saying its call to close the borders "harms our country."
"The AfD has no political concept and no competence in terms of finding solutions" to Germany's problems, he told "Die Welt" newspaper.

rg,dj/rc (dpa, AP, Reuters, AFP)
Top