Los Angeles Times

German leader wins 4th term

Nationalis­t party ran on pledges to ‘take back our country.’

- By Erik Kirschbaum Kirschbaum is a special correspond­ent.

Chancellor Angela Merkel declares victory, but a far-right, anti-immigrant party surges.

BERLIN — German Chancellor Angela Merkel declared victory Sunday as her conservati­ve party clung to its place as the country’s largest political force, but the stunning rise of a farright, anti-immigrant party cast a pall over her reelection to a fourth term.

Signaling a turbulent era ahead for Europe’s largest economy, hundreds of protesters shouting “Out with the Nazis” spontaneou­sly gathered in the rain outside the Alternativ­e for Germany party celebratio­ns in central Berlin after the nationalis­t party won a remarkable 12.3% of the vote by campaignin­g against refugees, foreigners and Islam.

Breaking taboos and using language not heard in Germany since the Nazi era, the populist opposition party vowed to make life difficult for Merkel.

“We’re going to take back our country.… We’re going to be hunting Merkel wherever she goes,” said one of the party’s leaders, Alexander Gauland, who recently stirred controvers­y by saying Germans should take pride in what their soldiers achieved in World War I and World War II.

Alternativ­e for Germany was founded in 2013 as an anti-euro currency party but turned sharply to the right. Much like the Republican Party under President Trump, it won support from voters struggling to make ends meet in one of Europe’s richest countries and frustrated with mainstream parties that, they believed, ignored their concerns. It campaigned on demands that Germany close its borders to foreigners immediatel­y, raise the number of deportatio­ns of asylum seekers whose applicatio­ns have been rejected, and deny refugees from bringing their families to Germany.

Merkel seemed chastened but relieved to be able to hold power for another four-year term a year after political shocks surprised elsewhere — such as Britain’s decision to leave the European Union and Trump’s election. She has become Europe’s most important leader and a regular critic of some of Trump’s policies on internatio­nal issues such as climate change.

“There’s no point beating around the bush,” Merkel said in a speech at her election headquarte­rs in Berlin. “We were hoping for a better result, obviously, but I’m happy we achieved our goals. We’re the strongest party, and we got a mandate to form the next government. And that’s what we’re going to do.”

In power since 2005, Merkel was initially hesitant to run for a fourth term but ultimately decided she had a duty to help resolve the country’s migrant crisis, according to allies and journalist­s who have spoken to her in off-the-record briefings.

This was the first general election since she opened the borders in 2015 to more than 1 million refugees from Syria and other trouble spots, and anger over the 63year-old leader’s decision boiled over and sent Alternativ­e for Germany soaring over the 5% hurdle needed to win seats in Parliament and into a highly visible position as the third-largest party in the six-party Parliament.

With nearly 90% of voting districts reporting, Merkel’s Christian Democrats led with 33.9%, down sharply from 41.5% in the last election in 2013. Her junior coalition partners, the center-left Social Democrats, came in second at 20.8%.

“The results are very depressing,” said Volker Kauder, Merkel’s whip in Parliament. “We’ll have to analyze what went wrong.”

The Social Democrats immediatel­y ruled out a resumption of the “grand coalition” that was in power for the last four years. That would force Merkel to try to form an awkward three-way coalition with two smaller parties. Merkel and leaders of the four other parties have all ruled out any coalition with Alternativ­e for Germany, which will have 88 members in the 631-seat Bundestag, the lower house of Parliament.

“This is a watershed moment in Germany and the end of an era for the two major parties,” said Thomas Jaeger, a political scientist at Cologne University, after the two leading parties that have dominated Germany since World War II were reduced to only about half of the electorate.

 ?? Sean Gallup Getty Images ?? “I’M happy,” Chancellor Angela Merkel said.
Sean Gallup Getty Images “I’M happy,” Chancellor Angela Merkel said.

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