Germany: Greens Political Party Leads Merz Conservatives in Election

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Germany’s environmental Greens are set to win a state election in the southern region of Baden-Wuerttemberg, leaving them poised to continue a ​coalition with Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s conservatives, initial forecasts showed after polls ‌closed on Sunday.

The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, which has made strong gains in recent years, came third, confirming its position as Germany’s main opposition party, even outside its heartland in ​the former communist eastern states.

The first forecasts on public broadcaster ARD showed ​the Greens in first place with 32% of the vote, followed ⁠by Merz’s Christian Democrats (CDU) on 29% and the AfD on 17.5%.

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Merz’s coalition partners ​in Berlin, the centre-left Social Democrats were on course for just 5.5% of ​the vote, confirming the precipitous drop in support seen in recent years but just scraping past the minimum threshold to enter state parliament.

Baden-Wuerttemberg, home to Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, Bosch and one of the ​traditional strongholds of the German car industry, is one of Germany’s most prosperous ​regions.

But its auto sector and wider economy have been hit hard by increasing competition from ‌China’s surging ⁠electric vehicle makers.

After a decade of Green-CDU coalition government in Baden-Wurttemberg, the moderate Green candidate for state premier, Cem Ozdemir is unlikely to make life difficult for Merz in the Bundesrat, the upper house of parliament that represents the states ​in Germany’s federal system.

But ​the result underlines ⁠Merz’s struggles to cut through with voters, as promised reforms have stalled and a sluggish economy comes back slowly from ​two years in recession.

Initially trailing in the race, the Greens ​overtook the ⁠Christian Democrats as the ballot approached and the result is likely to fuel discontent among conservatives already alarmed at the record low approval levels for Merz’s government in ⁠Berlin.

The Baden-Wuerttemberg ​election was the first of five state elections ​this year, with voters in neighbouring Rhineland-Palatinate due to go to the polls on March 22, followed ​by Berlin, Saxony-Anhalt and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in September.

 

Reuters

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