The Phnom Penh Post

Merkel’s CDU ‘doesn’t rule out’ coalition with far-right

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UNTIL now, a possible tie-up between any of Germany’s mainstream parties and the rising far-right AfD movement has always been strictly seen as a political taboo.

But what was previously unthinkabl­e could become a reality as Angela Merkel’s embattled centre-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party feels compelled to consider other power-sharing options.

One possibilit­y is an alliance with the fiercely anti-migrant Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD), at least at a regional level.

Local elections in three states in the east of the country where polls suggest that the AfD could become the strongest political force – Saxony, Brandenbur­g and Thuringia – are forcing the CDU to rethink its stance.

“We should not rule out a coalition” with the AfD, Ulrich Thomas, one of the regional leaders of the CDU in the central state of Saxony-Anhalt, told local daily Mitteldeut­sche Zeitung.

For the time being, the CDU’s central leadership rules out any suggestion­s the party could join forces with the AfD, especially in the wake of the murder of local politician Walter Luebcke earlier this month, allegedly by a right-wing extremist.

In a sign of the prevailing nervousnes­s, Merkel’s favoured successor, CDU chief Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r, said she would like to ban any attempt to cooperate with the AfD.

“I’m going to ask the party leadership for permission … to look at all the means to really prevent any rapprochem­ent or cooperatio­n with the AfD,” Kramp-Karrenbaue­r, or“AKK” as she is dubbed in Germany, said on the ARD television channel.

Signs of weakening

Saxony-Anhalt will elect a new regional parliament in 2021 and another local CDU leader, LarsJoern Zimmer, pointed out that voters of his party and the AfD often held similar views and felt themselves to be part of Germany’s “conservati­ve majority”.

Recently, Germany’s former domestic spy chief and a member of the CDU’s right-wing, Hans-Georg Maassen, also refused to rule out an alliance at national level.

On Sunday, the deputy chief of the AfD, Georg Pazderski, suggested that “the united front [against his party] is beginning to crumble”.

“In particular, the CDU base – which has been massively disappoint­ed by its own leaders – cannot be told that the party should be closer to the left than to AfD,” he told the Sunday edition of Welt newspaper.

There is media speculatio­n that the CDU might team up with the environmen­talist Greens party, which made significan­t gains in the recent European elections, in a powershari­ng coalition.

But at the head of the CDU, general secretary Paul Ziemiak, 33, has tried to shut down any debate about an alliance with the far-right.

“Just to make it clear to everyone: the CDU strictly rejects any coalition or cooperatio­n with AfD,” tweeted Ziemiak on Thursday.

Under pressure

Neverthele­ss, Merkel’s party is under pressure and, after a disappoint­ing victory in the 2017 elections, is continuing to struggle at the polls.

A survey by broadcaste­r RTL published on Saturday puts the CDU only second with the Greens top and AfD third.

September could prove to be a turbulent month for Merkel’s CDU in the regional elections in Saxony and Brandenbur­g, the AfD’s heartland.

The Greens insist any local alliances between the CDU and the far-right would be an obstacle to a possible CDU-Green coalition at national level.

“It would suddenly increase the distance between us,” a d mit t e d Gre e n s l e a d e r Michael Kellner on Friday.

More worrying for both the CDU and Merkel is the pressure being piled on Kramp-Karrenbaue­r, who is facing increasing challenges within the party.

Kramp-Karrenbaue­r came under heavy fire among younger voters last month when she called for limits to free speech around elections.

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