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Germany’s CDU gets boost with surprise victory

  • June 07, 2021

The embattled Christian Democratic Union (CDU) could barely have asked for a better launchpad for September’s general election than its surprisingly resounding victory in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt on Sunday.

After opinion polls in the last few days put Angela Merkel’s center-right party in a neck-and-neck race with the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), the CDU pulled a full 16 percentage points clear on election day, according to the projected results, with 37% of the vote — 7 points more than it got in the 2016 state election. 

The AfD’s 21% was over 3 points down on its 2016 result in the state and a disappointment for a party that has positioned itself as the home of the anti-mainstream protest voter in eastern Germany.

“Of course this puts the wind in our sails for Berlin,” Ralph Brinkhaus, the CDU’s parliamentary leader, told the public broadcaster ARD. He also suggested the result was a good omen: After all, the CDU’s success in the last general election in 2017 had also been preceded by an unexpected regional victory in Saarland a few months earlier. 

State polls really a test?

But as ever with state elections, the weight of local factors casts a doubt on whether the CDU can translate the victory to the national level. For one thing, Saxony-Anhalt’s incumbent State Premier Reiner Haseloff appears to have been a major factor in the victory, with his own personal approval ratings high, and his handling of the pandemic (unlike that of the CDU-led federal government under Merkel) largely respected. 

Haseloff is also untarnished by the corruption accusations against other CDU politicians, and the doubts raised over the competence of Federal Health Minister Jens Spahn.

Project: Fear the far-right

Another factor in Sunday’s result may have been the electorate’s fear of an AfD victory, which appears to have driven many voters to turn to the only party that could beat them, the CDU.

In fact, Haseloff spent the last few days of the election campaign making exactly this point — insisting that a vote for anyone but him would only strengthen the AfD. On Sunday night, all the other parties’ candidates were quick to express relief that the AfD had been defeated, many describing the result as an important victory for democracy.

But the CDU should perhaps not read too much into this. The AfD is especially strong in Germany’s eastern states. More than 1 in 5 Saxony-Anhalt voters chose the far-right party in Saxony-Anhalt, but the AfD only polls at 12% in the whole of Germany, which means that the fear of its rise is unlikely to play a major role in September.

Meanwhile, the CDU hopes that Sunday’s success might boost their embattled top candidate Armin Laschet. Even in Saxony-Anhalt, a survey by pollster infratest dimap showed only 18% of people said they thought he would make a good chancellor, putting him behind his two main opponents in the Greens and the SPD.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Armin Laschet (CDU)

    Armin Laschet is the national party chairman of the Christian Democrats (CDU) and serves as premier of Germany’s most populous state. Conservatives routinely underestimated the jovial 60-year-old, who is famous for his belief in integration and compromise. But, recently, his liberal noninterventionist instincts have led to him eating his words more than once during the coronavirus pandemic.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Annalena Baerbock (Greens)

    At the age of 40, Annalena Baerbock has been co-chair of the Greens since 2018. A jurist with a degree in public international law from the London School of Economics, her supporters see her as a safe pair of hands with a good grasp of detail. Her opponents point to her lack of governing experience.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Olaf Scholz (SPD)

    Plumbing new depths with each election, the Social Democrats (SPD) decided to run a realist rather than a radical as their top candidate in 2021. Finance Minister Olaf Scholz, a former mayor of Hamburg, and Merkel’s deputy in the grand coalition, is seen as dry and technocratic. Many in his party say the 62-year-old is unlikely to energize party activists and win their hearts.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Christian Lindner (FDP)

    The 42-year-old media-savvy Christian Lindner joined the Free Democrats (FDP) at the age of just 16 and has headed the party since 2013. The reserve officer and son of a teacher comes from North Rhine-Westphalia and studied political science. He hopes to join a ruling coalition after the September election, and the conservative CDU/CSU is his declared preference.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Janine Wissler and Dietmar Bartsch (Left)

    The 63-year-old Dietmar Bartsch and 39-year-old Janine Wissler complement each other. Bartsch is from East Germany, a pragmatist who has led his parliamentary party since 2015. Far-left Wisseler hails from western Germany and has been the party’s co-chair since February. She represents the Left’s more radical positions, such as the immediate end to military missions abroad and all weapons exports.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla (AfD)

    Co-chair Tino Chrupalla, 46, joined the Alternative for Germany (AfD) in 2015, attracted to its anti-immigration platform. The painter and decorator from Saxony has been an MP since 2017 and backs the extreme-right wing, but urges moderate campaign language. Alice Weidel, a 42-year-old economist, is the co-head of the AfD in the Bundestag. AfD members have accused her of not pulling her weight.

    Author: Rina Goldenberg


Greens stalled

The Greens, meanwhile, lost their momentum on Sunday after spring’s election victory in the southern state of Baden-Württemberg. Some national polls have put the Greens on equal footing with the CDU, with Annalena Baerbock proving a popular chancellor candidate compared to her CDU counterpart, Laschet.

Though the Greens did increase their 2016 vote-share by a sliver — up to 6% from 5% — the environmentalist party missed their own target of scoring double-figures in the state. “We stood for stability, to maintain the democratic center,” Baerbock told ARD.

In truth, the Greens did not seem to expect to make big gains in the small state with its 2.2 million inhabitants. The region’s coal industry has lost jobs through Germany’s energy transition, which the Green party supports, and Baerbock herself hardly made any appearances in Saxony-Anhalt leading up to the election.

The Greens may also have scored an own goal in the days before the election when Baerbock proposed a plan to raise Germany’s gasoline price by €0.16 per liter ($0.19). That was, as pundits noted, unlikely to be a popular policy in a state with an extremely low population density where many people live far from urban centers.

Baerbock did not subscribe to that theory. She made the case that potential Green voters were simply more likely to vote for the incumbent CDU when there was a real threat of a far-right victory. “We have seen that in other eastern German elections,” she said.

Biggest losers: The left

The Saxony-Anhalt result looks especially painful for the two left-of-center parties — the Social Democrats (SPD), who ended on only 8.4%, and especially the Left Party, which lost fully a third of its vote share and ended the evening on its lowest score ever: 11%. 

There was good news for the pro-business FDP, who re-entered the Saxony-Anhalt parliament after a ten-year absence, and whose resurgence has been a feature of the “super election year” so far. “This is a good evening for Free Democrats in the whole of Germany,” party leader Christian Lindner told reporters. Some observers suggested that the FDP’s criticism of the coronavirus restrictions may have paid off on Sunday.

  • Germany’s colorful coalition shorthand

    Black-red coalition

    Conservative black combined with transformative red is the color code when the Christian Democrats govern in a grand coalition with the Social Democrats. This ‘grand coalition’ government has been in power for the past eight years under Chancellor Angela Merkel.

  • Germany’s colorful coalition shorthand

    ‘Pizza Connection’

    When Bonn was still Germany’s capital, individual conservatives and Greens met from 1995 in its suburban Italian Sassella restaurant. Since then, the ‘Pizza Connection’ has become code for speculation over further links. At regional level, Baden-Württemburg’s Greens-CDU coalition has governed since 2016.

  • Germany’s colorful coalition shorthand

    ‘Jamaica’ option – black, yellow and green

    A three-way deal between the conservative Christian Democrats (CDU), the Greens and the liberal Free Democrats, whose color is yellow did not come about at national level in 2017 after the FDP called off talks. It has been tested at a state level, however, where Schleswig-Holstein currently has a “Jamaica” government.

  • Germany’s colorful coalition shorthand

    Black, red, green, symbolized by Kenya’s flag

    So far, a ‘Kenyan’ coalition has only emerged at the regional state level in the East, in response to a rise of the far-right AfD taking a quarter of the votes. Brandenburg and Saxony have had such a coalition government since 2019.

  • Germany’s colorful coalition shorthand

    ‘Traffic light’ coalition

    The free-market-oriented liberal FDP, whose color is yellow, has in the past generally ruled out federal coalitions sandwiched between the Social Democrats, whose color is red, and the Greens. But a current example is Rhineland Palatinate’s three-way regional state coalition based in Mainz and headed by Social Democrat Malu Dreyer.

    Author: Ian P. Johnson


Coalition building — a model for Berlin?

Saxony Anhalt’s premier now has several relatively comfortable coalition options: At the moment, his likeliest choices are either to continue the three-way coalition with the center-left Social Democrats and the Green party, or team up with a reinvigorated Free Democratic Party (FDP) and the Greens.

The latter might be the preferred choice of Laschet, who currently leads a coalition with the FDP as state premier of North Rhine-Westphalia.

Some kind of cooperation between the CDU and the Greens in the next federal government appears inevitable. But with opinion polls indicating that this combination may not be able to secure a majority in the national parliament, the Bundestag, the next government in Berlin may well also be a three-way coalition.

In the post-Merkel era, Saxony-Anhalt’s new coalition might turn out to be a blueprint for Germany’s national government.

While you’re here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society, with an eye toward understanding this year’s elections and beyond. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing, to stay on top of developments as Germany shapes its future without Chancellor Angela Merkel.


Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/germany-s-cdu-gets-boost-with-surprise-victory/a-57795626?maca=en-rss-en-ger-1023-xml-atom

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