The Jerusalem Post

German regional poll a test for Merkel’s party

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yemach shmo’s

RABBI SHOLOM GOLD Har Nof, Ramat Beit Shemesh

BERLIN (Reuters) – German voters looked set to punish the ruling Christian Democrats in two regional elections on Sunday for a long coronaviru­s lockdown and face mask procuremen­t scandal, denting their prospects of retaining power later this year.

Chancellor Angela Merkel, in power since 2005, is not seeking re-election in September and her Christian Democratic Union (CDU) is already missing the “Merkel bonus” she has brought them with four consecutiv­e national election victories.

The CDU went into Sunday’s polling in the southweste­rn auto hub of Baden-Wuerttembe­rg and the neighborin­g wine-growing region of Rhineland-Palatinate with its poll numbers sliding, exacerbate­d by the face mask corruption scandal.

Support for the CDU at the national level slid to 31% this week, its lowest for almost a year, according to an opinion poll conducted by Kantar for the Bild am Sonntag newspaper, although the next strongest party, the Greens, was stuck on 19%.

While Merkel’s government won plaudits last year for initially getting

the coronaviru­s under control, it has faced mounting criticism due to the slow pace of vaccinatio­ns and a long lockdown as a third wave of infections now gathers pace.

About a thousand opponents of the lockdown protested outside the health ministry in Berlin on Saturday while dozens of cars drove in

convoy through the city to demand a lifting of restrictio­ns, plastered with slogans like “Fear is contagious.”

In the once-safe CDU region of Baden-Wuerttembe­rg, the party risks being replaced as junior coalition partner to the Greens by the Social Democrats (SPD) and liberal Free Democrats.

In Rhineland-Palatinate, where such a “traffic light” coalition of party colors already governs, the CDU was leading in opinion polls as recently as late February but has now slipped behind the left-leaning SPD.

CDU leaders fear that if a traffic light alliance ousts them from government in Baden-Wuerttembe­rg, then such a tie-up could gain credibilit­y at September’s federal vote and could leave the party in opposition at national level.

Its image has been tarnished by the face mask scandal, which has seen conservati­ve lawmakers quit over allegation­s they received payments for arranging procuremen­t deals.

Sunday’s elections will also have ramificati­ons within the conservati­ve bloc of the CDU and its Bavaria sister party, which together run the federal government in coalition with the SPD.

While new CDU leader Armin Laschet is in pole position to succeed Merkel, defeat in Baden-Wuerttembe­rg could help his Bavarian rival Markus Soeder in his bid to become the conservati­ve candidate for chancellor in September.

 ?? (Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters) ?? WINFRIED KRETSCHMAN­N, Baden-Wuerttembe­rg state prime minister and Greens top candidate, casts his vote for the federal state election in Sigmaringe­n, Germany yesterday.
(Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters) WINFRIED KRETSCHMAN­N, Baden-Wuerttembe­rg state prime minister and Greens top candidate, casts his vote for the federal state election in Sigmaringe­n, Germany yesterday.

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