Bangkok Post

Far right soar past Merkel in Thuringia

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BERLIN: Germany’s traditiona­l big parties of the centre grappled yesterday with the outcome of a state election in which they won a combined 30% of the vote, while parties on the hard left and the far-right triumphed.

Sunday’s election in the eastern state of Thuringia ended a year of votes that the daily Die Welt called a “disaster’’ for both Chancellor Angela Merkel’s centre-right Christian Democratic Union and the centre-left Social Democrats, their partners in the fractious national “grand coalition” government.

Ms Merkel’s party, which led Thuringia for 24 years until 2014, finished third behind the ex-communist Left Party and the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany — whose regional leader, Bjoern Hoecke, has come under scrutiny from the domestic intelligen­ce agency for his extremist views.

Thuringia was, in some ways, a special case: Germany’s only Left Party governor, the pragmatic Bodo Ramelow, appeals to voters well beyond the traditiona­l base of the party, which is in opposition nationally.

Sunday’s election followed the pattern of two votes in other eastern states in September: the governor’s party won at the expense of rivals in the centre while large numbers of votes went to Alternativ­e for Germany, which has benefited from many eastern Germans’ sense of still being disadvanta­ged nearly 30 years after reunificat­ion.

Still, along with the outcome of May’s European Parliament election, it underscore­d a picture of support for traditiona­l mainstream parties eroding.

It was the fourth poor election performanc­e for the CDU under Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r, its leader since December, who has struggled to establish her authority.

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