Germany Steps into The Past

Recently Germany held it selections and there is a trend in Europe for Far Right parties to gain support and Germany was no different.

Conservative and right-wing parties emerged on top. The mainstream conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), along with its partner, the Christian Social Union (CSU), finished first with 28.6 percent of the vote, while the far-right, anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) surged into second with 20.8 percent, according to provisional results announced by election authorities.

Germany voters made a change at the top on Sunday, delivering a victory to centrist conservatives in the parliamentary elections and giving the far right its best result since World War II. Friedrich Merz, who’s now in position to become the nation’s chancellor, declared victory minutes after the first projection based on exit polls was released, Politico Europe reports. “We must now quickly regain our ability to act so that we can do the right thing at home, so that we are once again present in Europe,” Merz said, “so that the world can see that Germany is being governed reliably again.” Chancellor Olaf Scholz denounced the support for Alternative for Germany, and President Trump celebrated the election results.

Exit polls—which have been historically accurate in Germany—had Merz’s Union bloc running at about 29% and Alternative for Germany around 20%, which is double the anti-immigrant party’s showing in 2021. Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats polled about 16%, per the AP, and the Green Party 13.5%. Scholz conceded Sunday, telling supporters “this is a bitter election result.” And he decried the fact that “an extreme right-wing party like the AfD is getting such election results. That must never be something that we will accept. I will not accept it and never will.” On social media, Trump proclaimed it a “great day for Germany.”

Merz’s Christian Democrats will need to partner with at least one party to form a governing coalition. He could end up partnering with small parties, per the New York Times.
Merz had said he’d refuse to work with AfD, as had Scholz and other party leaders. Parts of the AfD’s organization are considered extremist by German intelligence agencies. The party’s second-place finish will shake the continent, at least, per Politico; Germany is the most powerful nation in Europe. Despite Merz’s position, Alice Weidel, the AfD’s candidate for chancellor whose supporters include Elon Musk, said she would consider forming a coalition with the winning party. “We will hound the others to make sensible policies for our country,” she said.

Merz has to build a coalition to govern and that may not be as easy as it sounds.

Reuters reports that Merz will face “complex and lengthy coalition negotiations” to form a government. His bloc took around 29% of the vote. AfD doubled its share of the vote, coming second with around 20.5%, but other parties generally refuse to work with AfD as part of a longstanding “firewall” against the far right, meaning Merz may have to govern as part of a three-party coalition. The center-left Social Democratic Party is considered the most likely coalition partner, CNBC reports.

Is the past bleeding into Germany’s future?

This sounds very familiar to anyone that has a grasp on history.

He is not a big fan of Trump and he is worried about the future of NATO….

Later this year, a NATO summit will be held — but he suggested Europe may need to devise a new defense structure to replace it.

“I am very curious to see how we are heading toward the NATO summit at the end of June,” he said. “Whether we will still be talking about NATO in its current form or whether we will have to establish an independent European defense capability much more quickly.”

(politico.eu)

 

6 thoughts on “Germany Steps into The Past

  1. Merz is a good man to have at the helm if he can find the correct coalition partners and avoid having to give anything to the AfD. My worry is his choice of words ‘independent European defense capability’ which would seem to rule out UK involvement. NATO must not break up, the defence of it’s own member Countries currently must be paramount in the wake of US determination to unite with Russia and throw Democracy to the wind. Hugs

  2. What has happened in Germany ilustrates the flaws of the ‘Proportional Representation’ voting system they use. As with Italy and some other European countries, the winning party is constantly having to make alliances with other parties to get policies through parliament. The large increase in the Far Right vote is inline with similar increases in other countries here in Europe.
    Best wishes, Pete.

  3. History always repeats itself because succeeding generations lose memory of things that have gone before and they become blinded by their own urgent prioritization and this become subject to historical blindness that is pervasive and that leads often to catastrophic repeats of past historical horrors.

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