Submit your comments on this article |
-Election 2012 |
Merkel's party routed in German state election |
2012-05-14 |
![]() She remains popular in Germany for her steady handling of the euro zone debt crisis, but the sheer scale of her party's defeat leaves her vulnerable at a time when a backlash against her insistence on fiscal discipline is building across Europe. According to first projections, the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) won 38.8 percent of the vote and will have enough to form a stable majority with the Greens, who scored 12.2 percent. The two left-leaning parties had run a fragile minority government for the past two years under popular SPD leader Hannelore Kraft, whose decisive victory on Sunday could propel her to national prominence. Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU) saw their support plunge to just 25.8 percent, down from nearly 35 percent in 2010, and the worst result in the state since World War Two. "This is not a good evening for Merkel," said Gero Neugebauer, a political scientist at Berlin's Free University. "The SPD is strengthened by this election, which will stir things up in Berlin." The chancellor needs the support of her rivals to pass a new "fiscal compact" that is meant to anchor budget discipline across the EU. The SPD is already pressing her to delay a parliamentary vote on the pact, keen for her to commit to new growth measures beforehand. Many in her party will blame the result on regional leader Norbert Roettgen, Merkel's environment minister in Berlin, who bungled his campaign early on by refusing to commit to staying in the state in the event of a loss. Roettgen ran on a platform of budget consolidation in a state that, with 180 billion euros in debt, is Germany's most indebted. Kraft, on the other hand, advocated a go-slowly approach to debt reduction, emphasizing the need to invest in cities, education and childcare. In that sense, the result will be seen by some as a double defeat for Merkel. Voters in NRW not only rejected her party but also the austerity measures that she has forced on struggling southern states like Greece, Spain and Portugal. The Free Democrats (FDP), a pro-business party that rules in coalition with Merkel's conservatives at the federal level, scored 8.6 percent to make it back into the state assembly. The party hailed the result as proof of a comeback after a collapse in support over the last three years. The upstart Pirates, a new party that campaigns for internet freedom, continued their strong run at regional level, making it into their fourth straight state parliament, winning 7.6 percent of the vote. NRW, a diverse state with struggling cities in the rust-belt Ruhr region and home to one third of Germany's blue-chip companies, has a history of influencing national politics. Seven years ago, a humiliating loss for then-Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's SPD in the state prompted him to call early elections, which he subsequently lost to Merkel. |
Posted by:Steve White |
#6 Sad really. Glad I kept my 35mm negatives so my children may one day see Europe. |
Posted by: swksvolFF 2012-05-14 10:59 |
#5 "This is not a good evening for Merkel," said Gero Neugebauer Not a good evening for Europe either. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2012-05-14 07:38 |
#4 "Austerity" as defined by the media is bad, since anything that even suggests a hint of a reduction in state control is obviously a bad idea. |
Posted by: Bobby 2012-05-14 06:10 |
#3 The word "austerity" should be replaced with "responsibility". In most cases no real "austerity" is being called for. Is it considered "austere" to retire at 63 instead of 60 in the case of France or 60 instead of 50 in the case of Greece? |
Posted by: crosspatch 2012-05-14 01:57 |
#2 European Popular Rejection of Austerity Is Exciting! |
Posted by: newc 2012-05-14 00:58 |
#1 This is just sad because the CDU was never really given a chance. They didn't really have enough of an advantage over the SPD to actually put their plans into full force. If Germany swings back to the SPD, they are toast. |
Posted by: crosspatch 2012-05-14 00:43 |