The Citizen (KZN)

Merkel triumphs but loses ground

EMBOLDENED OPPOSITION, THORNY TALKS A fourth term in office but Merkel’s conservati­ves won a disappoint­ingly low 33% of the vote.

- Berlin

German Chancellor Angela Merkel huddled with her party yesterday after winning a fourth term with a far weaker score, now facing the double headache of an emboldened nationalis­t opposition party and thorny coalition talks ahead.

If the campaign was decried as boring, its outcome was a bombshell – a hard-right surge poached votes from Merkel’s conservati­ves as well as the centre-left Social Democrats, handing both their worst results in decades.

“A nightmare victory for Merkel,” said Germany’s top-selling daily Bild. “The governing parties and the chancellor squandered the people’s faith in them.”

After 12 years in power and running on a promise of stability and economic strength, Merkel’s CDU/ CSU bloc scored 33%, according to final results, against 20.5% for the Social Democrats under challenger Martin Schulz, who pledged to go into the opposition.

The election marked a breakthrou­gh for the anti-Islam Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD), which with 12.6% became the third strongest party and vowed to “go after” Merkel over her migrant and refugee policy.

News weekly Der Spiegel said Merkel had no one but herself to blame for the bruising she got from voters.

“Angela Merkel deserved this defeat,” the magazine’s Dirk Kurbjuweit wrote, accusing her of running an “uninspired” campaign and “largely ignoring the challenges posed by the right”.

The entry of around 90 hardright nationalis­t MPs to the glass-domed Bundestag chamber breaks a taboo in post-World War II Germany.

“We will take our country back,” vowed the AfD’s jubilant Alexander Gauland, who has recently urged Germans to be proud of their war veterans and said a government official who is of Turkish origin should be “dumped in Anatolia”.

While joyful supporters of the AfD sang the German anthem at a Berlin club late Sunday, hundreds of protesters shouted “Nazis out!” – AFP

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? MOPPING UP. Workers remove an election campaign billboard showing Christian Democratic Union CDU party leader and German Chancellor Angela Merkel after the general election in Berlin.
Picture: Reuters MOPPING UP. Workers remove an election campaign billboard showing Christian Democratic Union CDU party leader and German Chancellor Angela Merkel after the general election in Berlin.

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