Germany's far right set to gain in eastern regional vote
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Right-wing Alternative for Germany top candidate Joerg Urban reacts after first exit polls in the Saxony state election on Sept 1.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
BERLIN - The Alternative for Germany (AfD) was on track on Sept 1 to become the first far-right party to win a regional election in Germany since World War Two, projections showed, but was almost certain to be excluded from power by rival parties.
The AfD was set to win 33.1 per cent of the vote in the state of Thuringia, comfortably ahead of the conservatives' 24.3 per cent, broadcaster ZDF's projection showed. In the neighbouring state of Saxony, the conservatives led on 31.9 per cent, around half a percentage point ahead of the AfD.
With a year to go until Germany's national election, the results look punishing for Social Democrat Chancellor Olaf Scholz's coalition. All three parties lost votes, with junior partners, the Greens and Free Democrats, on the cusp of missing the 5 per cent threshold needed to stay in parliament.
The campaign's final week was overshadowed by the killing of three people at a festival in the city of Solingen
"This is a requiem for the coalition," said the AfD's joint leader Alice Weidel. "The coalition should ask itself whether it can continue to govern at all."
The left populist Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW), which like the AfD wants less immigration and an end to arming Ukraine, came third in both states just eight months after its founding.
"That has never happened before in German history," said Wagenknecht, a former Communist after whom the party is named.
With all parties having ruled out working with the AfD, the BSW could be crucial to forming a stable government in the two states, which lag western Germany economically more than three decades after reunification.
The disastrous result for Scholz's coalition could further stoke conflict within an already fractious coalition in Berlin as all three parties seek to assert their identity ahead of next year's national election.
For Weidel, her party's strong performance in both states was evidence that it was no longer possible to keep her party out of power.
"The voters want the AfD in government", she said. "Without us, a stable government is not possible."
Bodo Ramelow, the premier of Thuringia, whose Left party was battered despite his personal popularity, said all democratic parties now had to work together.
"I am not fighting the conservatives. I am not fighting the BSW. I am fighting the normalisation of fascism," he said. REUTERS

