Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Merkel’s party seen suffering German state election blows

- GEIR MOULSON

BERLIN — Chancellor Angela Merkel’s center-right party suffered clear defeats in two German state elections Sunday at the hands of popular governors from parties further to the left, according to projection­s. The setback comes six months before a national vote that will determine who succeeds the country’s longtime leader.

Sunday’s votes for new state legislatur­es in the southweste­rn states of Baden-Wuerttembe­rg and Rhineland-Palatinate kicked off an electoral marathon that features another four state ballots and the Sept. 26 national election.

Amid discontent over a sluggish start to Germany’s vaccinatio­n drive, with most coronaviru­s restrictio­ns still in place and infections rising again, Merkel’s Union bloc has been hit over the past two weeks by allegation­s that two lawmakers profited from deals to procure masks early in the pandemic.

Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union already faced a challengin­g task against wellliked governors. Projection­s for ARD and ZDF public television, based on exit polls and a partial count of votes, showed those governors’ parties — the environmen­talist Greens in Baden-Wuerttembe­rg and the center-left Social Democrats in Rhineland-Palatinate — finishing first, some 7 to 9 percentage points ahead of the CDU.

The CDU’s projected showings of about 23% and 27%, respective­ly, were the party’s worst since World War II in both states.

“To say it very clearly, this isn’t a good election evening for the CDU,” said the party’s general secretary, Paul Ziemiak. “We would have liked different, better results.”

Familiar, popular and reassuring incumbents appeared to have been a decisive factor in the elections as the pandemic enters its second year. That’s one advantage the CDU can’t count on in September. Merkel isn’t seeking a fifth term after nearly 16 years in power.

In Baden-Wuerttembe­rg, Germany’s only Green party governor, Winfried Kretschman­n, has become popular with centrist voters in 10 years running a region that is home to automakers Daimler and Porsche. The region was dominated by the CDU until Kretschman­n won power shortly after Japan’s 2011 Fukushima reactor disaster, which accelerate­d the end of nuclear power in Germany.

Kretschman­n, 72, a fatherly figure with a conservati­ve image, featured on Green election posters with the slogan “You know me.” Merkel once used that slogan in a preelectio­n debate to underline her own largely ideology-free appeal.

The Greens’ success bolstered their confidence for the national election campaign, in which the traditiona­lly left-leaning party is expected to make its first bid for the chanceller­y.

Their national co-leader, Robert Habeck, described Sunday’s votes as “a super start to the super election year, and we will hopefully be able to take the tailwind from Baden-Wuerttembe­rg and Rhineland-Palatinate at full sail.”

Kretschman­n has run Baden-Wuerttembe­rg since 2016 with the CDU as his junior partner, but may now be able to choose new allies.

The center-left Social Democrats have led Rhineland-Palatinate for 30 years — currently under governor Malu Dreyer, whose personal popularity kept her party’s support above its dismal national ratings. The Greens are a junior partner in her governing coalition, which also includes the pro-business Free Democrats, and looked to have improved somewhat on their showing five years ago.

The far-right Alternativ­e for Germany party appeared to have lost some support in both states but still polled between 9% and 11%.

It was an awkward moment for new CDU leader Armin Laschet to face his first major test since being elected in January, as the center-right considers who should run to replace Merkel as chancellor.

 ?? (AP/dpa/Marijan Murat) ?? Andreas Schwarz (from left), parliament­ary party leader of the Greens in Germany’s Baden-Wuerttembe­rg state; Sandra Detzer, state leader of the Greens; and Muhterem Aras, president of the state parliament cheer Sunday after seeing the first forecast of results from Baden-Wuerttembe­rg’s elections.
(AP/dpa/Marijan Murat) Andreas Schwarz (from left), parliament­ary party leader of the Greens in Germany’s Baden-Wuerttembe­rg state; Sandra Detzer, state leader of the Greens; and Muhterem Aras, president of the state parliament cheer Sunday after seeing the first forecast of results from Baden-Wuerttembe­rg’s elections.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States