The Borneo Post

Merkel’s party seeks key victory in bellwether state vote

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DÜSSELDORF, Germany: One in five German voters are heading to the polls in a key state election, with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party hoping to deal a crushing blow to her main rival four months before national elections.

About 13.1 million eligible voters in North Rhine-Westphalia are casting ballots to elect a new regional parliament for the sprawling industrial region, which has a large migrant population and has been a Social Democratic Party (SPD) stronghold for decades.

But surveys ahead of the vote show the centre-left party running neck- and-neck with Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union, with some even placing the CDU ahead.

The opinion polls were the latest indication that initial enthusiasm for the new SPD leader, Martin Schulz, could be fizzling out.

The SPD had been ailing nationwide but saw a surge in support in February when Schulz took over. But that support failed to translate into votes in the last two state elections, when the CDU won comfortabl­y. Schulz shrugged off the two disappoint­ments.

“Sometimes you lose, sometimes you win. I have the impression that Sunday will be a day when we will say ‘ we win’,” he told voters at a rally in Leverkusen on Thursday.

An election in Germany’s biggest state is always significan­t, but it carries higher stakes this year, being the last regional vote before national polls and having a direct impact on whether the SPD can close the gap nationwide with the CDU. By 0800 GMT, the CDU’s candidate Armin Laschet had already cast his vote in Aachen.

“There is a real chance that we can win. Now it’s time for the voters to decide,” he said in remarks carried by national news agency DPA.

Mindful that local issues can tip the balance, Merkel has also blamed the incumbents for persistent traffic jams that ‘are longer than from here to the moon’.

The CDU has also accused the state’s SPD- Green governing coalition of security failures.

State interior minister Ralf Jaeger has faced criticism for failing to detain Anis Amri, the Tunisian asylum seeker suspected in the deadly Berlin Christmas market rampage last year.

Amri had lived in the state and was deemed a threat by intelligen­ce officials, but Jaeger argued that there was insufficie­nt evidence to lock him up.

On Jaeger’s watch, Cologne also became the scene of mass sexual assaults by groups of mostly North African men on New Year’s Eve of 2015-2016, inflaming the debate over the 890,000 asylum seekers Germany welcomed in 2015.

The populist AfD (Alternativ­e for Germany), which has railed against the migration influx, hopes to win its first seats in North Rhine-Westphalia, which would give it seats in 13 of 16 state parliament­s. — AFP

 ??  ?? Schulz and his wife Inge cast their votes for the regional state elections of North Rhine-Westphalia, in Wuerselen near Aachen. — Reuters photo
Schulz and his wife Inge cast their votes for the regional state elections of North Rhine-Westphalia, in Wuerselen near Aachen. — Reuters photo

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