The Manila Times

Merkel coalition loses in Bavaria polls

HALLOWEEN

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Divers Sophie Costa (left) and Allison Candelmo (right) display their completed entry in the Underwater Pumpkin Carving Contest on October 14, 2018, in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary off Key Largo, Florida. MUNICH, Germany: German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ve CSU allies suffered historic losses in Bavaria state elections Sunday, dealing a blow to her fragile three-party coalition government.

The Christian Social Union (CSU) scored 37 percent, a steep 10-point drop from four years ago in the wealthy Alpine state it has ruled almost single-handedly since the 1960s.

As a result, it loses its absolute majority and must scramble for coalition allies — likely the conservati­ve Free Voters, who won 11 percent.

Merkel’s other national governing partner, the over 150-year-old Social Democrats (SPD), halved their ballot box support to 9.6 percent, ceding the position of Bavaria’s second biggest political force to the Greens.

“Debacle for CSU and SPD,” ran the online headline of Bild daily, while Der Spiegel called it a “bitter defeat” for Bavaria’s traditiona­l ruling party.

State premier Markus Soeder, 51, conceded the result was “painful,” while CSU party chief and national Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said “it was not a nice day for us”.

The anti-immigratio­n Alternativ­e for Germany ( AfD), which rails against Muslims and demands that “Merkel must go,” won 11 percent and entered the 15th of Germany’s 16 state assemblies.

The head of Italy’s far- right League, deputy prime minister Matteo Salvini, hailed the rise of the AfD at the expense of the older and bigger parties, saying that “in Bavaria, change has won” and adding an “arrivederc­i” (goodbye) to Merkel.

For Merkel, in power for 13 years, the Bavaria election spells a new headache just over half a year since she managed to forge a fragile “grand coalition” with the CSU and a reluctant SPD.

The “bitter” losses in Bavaria reflect voter dismay over recent

- ceded the CDU’s general secretary Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r.

She said this “must serve as a warning for the German CDU” ahead of another dangerous state election, in Hesse state, two weeks from now.

SPD leader Andrea Nahles conceded a “bad result for the SPD ... and for all mainstream parties” that she attributed partially to “the bad performanc­e of the grand coalition in Berlin.”

The AfD’s Alice Weidel, meanwhile, jubilantly declared that Merkel’s government “is not a grand coalition but a mini-coalition” and demanded she “clear the way for new elections.”

The Bavaria poll result shattered old certaintie­s for the CSU, which had long dominated politics in the state known for its fairytale castles,

- room walls.

Since Germany’s mass migrant in-

its folksy brand of beerhall politics with increasing­ly aggressive antiimmigr­ation and law- and- order positions.

At the national level, Seehofer became Merkel’s harshest internal critic, echoing the AfD’s rhetoric about the more than one million refugee and migrant arrivals.

The poll result Sunday showed that Seehofer’s brinkmansh­ip in Berlin

- migration defected to the AfD, while those turned off by the harsh new tone drifted to the Greens.

“If you copy the far right, you lose,” gloated the Greens’ national co-leader Annalena Baerbock.

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AFP PHOTO

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