Shropshire Star

German governing parties punished in state election

Angela Merkel’s conservatives are heading for a lacklustre win in the poll for the Hesse region’s state legislature.

Published
German election

Germany’s governing parties have lost significant support in a state election marked by discontent with infighting in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s national government.

Projections showed Mrs Merkel’s conservatives heading for an extremely lacklustre win in the vote for the central Hesse region’s state legislature.

Her centre-left governing partners were on course for a dismal result, running neck-and-neck with the Greens for second place.

The result has prompted calls for the chancellor’s administration to get its act together quickly.

Mrs Merkel’s conservative Christian Democratic Union was defending its 19-year hold on Hesse, previously a stronghold of the centre-left Social Democrats, the chancellor’s federal coalition partners in Berlin.

There was widespread pre-election speculation that a disastrous result for either or both parties could further destabilise the national government, prompting calls for the Social Democrats to walk out and possibly endangering Mrs Merkel’s own position.

Andrea Nahles, the Social Democrats’ leader, said that “the state of the government is unacceptable”.

Andrea Nahles
Andrea Nahles (AP)

She said her party would insist on Mrs Merkel’s governing coalition agreeing on “a clear, binding timetable” for implementing projects, and that how that is implemented ahead of an already-agreed midterm review next autumn will show “whether we are still in the right place in this government”.

Hesse’s conservative governor, Volker Bouffier, told supporters that “the message this evening to the parties in the government in Berlin is clear: people want less argument, more objectivity, more solutions”.

Mrs Merkel’s chief of staff, Helge Braun, said that the national government must now pull together and “show we are solving the problems that really move people”.

Projections for ARD and ZDF public television, based on exit polls and partial counting, gave the CDU 27-28% support and the centre-left Social Democrats about 20%.

When Hesse last elected its state legislature in 2013 – on the same day that Mrs Merkel was triumphantly elected to a third term as chancellor – they won 38.3% and 30.7%, respectively. That would be the worst result in the region for the Social Democrats since the Second World War.

There were gains for the Greens, who were roughly level with Social Democrats at nearly 20% – compared with 11.1% five years ago. And the far-right Alternative for Germany was on course to enter the last of Germany’s 16 state parliaments with more than 12%.

The pro-business Free Democrats were seen winning above 7% and the Left Party around 6.5%.

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