Far-Right surges in German
election poll
A woman cycles past an election campaign poster of Germany's far-right AfD in Lampertswalde |
Official results show that Germany's far-right Alternative
for Germany has surged in elections in two eastern states, but not enough to
oust the ruling coalitions there. The outcome has raised concerns, but it
averted another crisis for the ruling coalition of Chancellor Angela Merkel.
By Stefan J. Bos
Despite surging support for the far-right, German Chancellor
Angela Merkel's conservatives and her Social Democrat (SPD) coalition partners
managed to remain the most significant political forces in two critical states
in eastern Germany.
Official results of Sunday's regional ballot gave the
center-right Christian Democrats of Chancellor Merkel some 32 percent of the
votes in Saxony.
That was less than in previous elections but still ahead of
the 27.5 percent for the far-right Alternative for Germany party, the AfD.
In Brandenburg, the state surrounding Berlin, the
center-left SPD won with just over 26 percent, slightly more than the AfD's
23.5 percent.
Observers expect that in both states the parties will now
discuss forming new coalitions - perhaps including the Greens - but without the
AfD.
However, critics of the government point out that the
far-right AfD took around a quarter of the vote between the two states. That
makes
the AfD a major political force — particularly in the
ex-communist east —. "This is the best outcome in the history of the
AFD," said AFD co-chair Alice Weidel. "We became in Saxony and
Brandenburg the people's Party. You cannot diminish that outcome," she
added.
Migration tensions
The AFD success in the states was linked to the massive
migration in 2015 when Germany took in more than a million people fleeing war,
persecution, and poverty.
But the AfD fell short of beating the traditional parties
that have governed those regions since German reunification in 1990.
The outcome was good news for Chancellor Merkel's struggling
coalition government in Berlin.
But commentators say it remains uncertain whether her
alliance will survive until the next national election, due in 2021, amid
ongoing tensions over policy decisions and future strategies.
The future of the government is expected to become more
apparent in December when the center-left coalition partner SPD finish choosing
a
new leadership from a 17-candidate field and decide on the
alliance's future.
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