The Sentinel-Record

Merkel wins fourth term, but nationalis­ts surge in German vote

- GEIR MOULSON AND DAVID RISING

BERLIN — German Chancellor Angela Merkel won a fourth term Sunday, but now faces the tricky prospect of forming a coalition with two disparate new partners after voters weakened her conservati­ves and a nationalis­t, anti-migrant party surged into parliament.

Merkel’s center-left challenger, Martin Schulz, conceded that his Social Democrats had suffered a “crushing election defeat,” with projection­s showing the party’s worst performanc­e in post-World War II Germany.

He vowed to take his party, the junior partner in Merkel’s outgoing “grand coalition” of Germany’s traditiona­lly dominant parties, into opposition.

“We have a mandate to form a new government, and no government can be formed against us,” Merkel told cheering supporters. She added that it wasn’t a “matter of course” to finish first after 12 years in power, and that the past four years were “extremely challengin­g.”

Stressing that “we live in stormy times” internatio­nally, she declared: “I have the intention of achieving a stable government in Germany.”

The biggest winner was the four-yearold Alternativ­e for Germany, or AfD. It finished third after a campaign that centered on shrill criticism of Merkel and her decision in 2015 to allow large numbers of migrants into Germany, but also harnessed wider discontent with establishe­d politician­s.

One of AfD’s leaders, Alice Weidel, said it will provide “constructi­ve opposition.” But co-leader Alexander Gauland struck a harsher tone, vowing that “we will take our country back” and promising to “chase” Merkel.

Projection­s for ARD and ZDF public television, based on exit polls and partial counting, showed Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union and their Bavaria-only allies, the Christian Social Union, winning around 33 percent of the vote — down from 41.5 percent four years ago. It was one of their weakest post-war showings.

Schulz’s Social Democrats were trailing far behind, with just under 21 percent support, down from 25.7 percent in 2013 and undercutti­ng their previous post-war low of 23 percent eight years ago.

AfD won just over 13 percent of the vote, according to the projection­s. It was followed by the election’s other big winner — the pro-business Free Democratic Party, which returned to parliament after a fouryear break with about 10.5 percent.

The Free Democrats were Merkel’s coalition partners in her second-term government from 2009-2013, but lost all their seats four years ago.

“In a country that is big on schadenfre­ude, our comeback is an encouragin­g message — after failure, a new beginning is possible,” party leader Christian Lindner told supporters.

The Left Party and the traditiona­lly left-leaning Greens won about 9 percent support each, completing a parliament that now has six caucuses rather than the previous four.

All mainstream parties have ruled out working with AfD and Merkel’s conservati­ves won’t form a coalition with the Left Party.

That means two politicall­y plausible government­s are mathematic­ally feasible: continuing the “grand coalition” or a combinatio­n of Merkel’s Union bloc, the Free Democrats and Greens.

That alliance is known as a “Jamaica” coalition because the parties’ colors match those of the Caribbean nation’s flag. It has been tried, with mixed results, in state government­s but never in a national government.

The Social Democrats were adamant Sunday night that they wouldn’t continue to serve under Merkel.

“It is completely clear that the role the voters have given us is as the opposition,” Schulz said.

Referring to AfD’s third-place finish, he said “there cannot be a far-right party leading the opposition in Germany.”

Cobbling together a “Jamaica” coalition is likely to be time-consuming. The Free Democrats and Greens are traditiona­l rivals. Four years ago, Merkel’s conservati­ves and the Greens held explorator­y talks on a two-party coalition but they came to nothing.

The underwhelm­ing result also looks set to re-ignite pressure within Merkel’s bloc for a tougher conservati­ve image. Bavarian Governor Horst Seehofer, who feuded with Merkel over the migrant influx before putting aside their difference­s this year, said the outcome showed that the conservati­ves need to close “an open flank to the right.”

“We can’t just ignore these 13 percent or more for AfD in a national parliament with internatio­nal significan­ce,” said Reiner Haseloff, the conservati­ve governor of eastern Saxony-Anhalt state, where AfD is strong.

“We need an answer — there must be no democratic alternativ­e to our right,” he added. “As long as it is there, we haven’t completely done our homework.”

AfD is the first party to the right of the conservati­ves to enter parliament in

60 years.

Merkel pledged a “thorough analysis, because we want to win back AfD voters by solving problems, by taking account of their concerns and fears, and above all with good policies.”

Outside AfD’s election party in Berlin after the results were announced, at least

500 protesters shouted “all Berlin hates the AfD,” ”Nazi pigs,” and other slogans, while several protesters threw bottles as police kept them away from the building.

Similar protests broke out in Cologne, Hamburg and Frankfurt but police said they were mostly peaceful.

Major Jewish groups expressed dismay at the AfD’s showing, with the World Jewish Congress calling the party “a disgracefu­l reactionar­y movement which recalls the worst of Germany’s past.”

Mainstream parties’ leaders vowed a robust response to AfD’s entry into parliament. Greens co-leader Katrin Goering-Eckardt told supporters: “there will again be Nazis sitting in parliament.”

“We will not let one single attack on German democracy stand,” she said, to applause.

AfD leaders dismissed such talk. Asked by The Associated Press what signal the vote sends internatio­nally, chairman Joerg Meuthen said: “That there is conservati­ve politics in Germany again. And that there are patriots in the German parliament again.”

“I want to emphasize that there is absolutely no risk of extreme right politics in the German parliament,” he said.

Fellow European right-wing populists hailed AfD’s performanc­e. The Netherland­s’ Geert Wilders wrote on Twitter: “The message is clear. We are no Islamic nations.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States