BERLIN, Germany
Friedrich Merz's conservatives have won Germany's election, well ahead of rival parties but short of the 30% vote-share they had expected.
"Let's celebrate tonight
and in the morning we'll get to work," he told cheering supporters. He
said he was "aware of the responsibility that now lies ahead" of him.
The other winner was the
far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), who are celebrating a record
second-place result of 20.8%.
The AfD's candidate for
chancellor, Alice Weidel, did a victory lap of her supporters, but even her
party had hoped for a greater result and the mood at AfD HQ was subdued.
As results came in during the
early hours of Monday, it became clear the AfD was far ahead of the other
parties in the east, with a projected 34% according to a survey for public
broadcaster ZDF.
"Germans have voted for
change," said Alice Weidel. She said Friedrich Merz's attempt to forge a
coalition would ultimately end in failure: "We'll have fresh elections - I
don't think we'll have to wait another four years."
But just as the election map
turned light blue in the east, much of the rest of Germany turned black - the
colour of the CDU.
After the collapse of Olaf
Scholz's three-party coalition late last year, Merz had asked the electorate
for a strong mandate to form a clear-cut coalition with one other party.
That would enable him to solve
as many of Germany's problems as he could in four years, he said, from a
stagnant economy to closing its borders to irregular migrants.
German voters had other ideas.
They came out in big numbers, with a 83% turnout not seen since before
reunification in 1990, but Merz's Christian Democrats had been looking for more
than the 28.6% of the vote they and their Bavarian sister party received.
Merz has ruled out working
with the AfD. There is a taboo or "firewall" preventing mainstream
parties in Germany from operating with the far right.
But his most likely partner,
the Social Democrats, have suffered their worst ever result with 16.4%.
Their leader, outgoing
Chancellor Olaf Scholz, said the election results were a bitter defeat for the
party, and he would not be taking part in negotiations for a coalition.
Because of the CDU's
relatively lacklustre performance, there was initially some doubt that two
parties would be enough for a coalition.
Germany has just been through
four years of a three-party coalition and the only other realistic partner was
the Greens, whose leader, Robert Habeck, Merz had ridiculed as a
"representative for heat pumps" on the eve of the vote.
Merz, 69, has never held a
ministerial job, but he has promised if he becomes the next German chancellor
to show leadership in Europe and beef up support for Ukraine.
Most Germans have been shocked
by the open backing that billionaire Elon Musk and US Vice-President JD Vance
gave Alternative for Germany in the election. Vance was accused of meddling in
the vote during a visit to Munich, while Elon Musk made repeated remarks on his
X platform.
It did Alice Weidel and her
party no harm at all, as the AfD enjoyed a 10-point increase in support on four
years ago. But she also benefited from a successful TikTok campaign, that drew
in big numbers of young voters.
No comments:
Post a Comment