AfD Eyes Victory in Brandenburg Regional Election Amid Political Tensions
Germans in Brandenburg are voting in a regional election with the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) expected to finish first. Despite potential success, the AfD is unlikely to join a coalition government. This election poses significant questions for Chancellor Olaf Scholz and the Social Democrats (SPD).
Germans in the state of Brandenburg were voting in a regional election on Sunday with the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) expected to finish first, built on successes in other eastern states and beating Chancellor Olaf Scholz's Social Democrats in one of their traditional strongholds. The AfD became the first far-right party to win a state election in Germany since World War Two, in Thuringia, on Sept. 1 and just missed first place in Saxony on the same day.
However, other parties refuse to work with the AfD in coalition governments, and given it did not win a majority in Thuringia or Saxony, and is unlikely to do so in Brandenburg, the party is not set to be part of a regional government. The AfD is one of several far-right groups in Europe capitalizing on worries over an economic slowdown, immigration, and the Ukraine war—concerns that are particularly strong in formerly Communist eastern Germany. It is also seeking to gain from discontent over infighting in Scholz's three-party federal coalition.
Polls closed in Brandenburg at 6 p.m. (1600 GMT) and the first exit polls and preliminary projections will be announced as soon as voting ends. Brandenburg's popular SPD premier, Dietmar Woidke, on Sunday cast his ballot in Forst near the Polish border and said he was optimistic about the outcome.
"We were more or less told the situation is hopeless. But I believe that, on the whole, we have shown that we as the Brandenburg SPD have our own strength," Woidke told journalists. Hans-Christoph Berndt, the AfD candidate for Brandenburg state premier, said he was also optimistic about his party's prospects compared to the last state election in 2019.
"If we continue to receive the same level of support we've seen in recent weeks and months, things in Germany will start to improve," Berndt said, adding that while the election was important, Brandenburg's future wouldn't be decided solely by Sunday's outcome. An AfD victory in the state election would be a particular embarrassment for the Social Democrats (SPD), which has won elections in Brandenburg and governed the state of 2.5 million people since East and West Germany were reunified in 1990.
It would also raise further questions about the suitability of Scholz, the least popular German chancellor on record, to lead the party into next year's federal election. Woidke has mostly shunned campaigning with Scholz, who lives in the state's capital, Potsdam, and has also criticized the ruling coalition's behavior and policies.
Instead, he has sought to highlight economic successes during the five years since the last state election, such as the opening of a Tesla factory and Brandenburg airport—now Germany's third most important aviation hub. NARROW THE GAP
In recent weeks, opinion polls have shown the SPD narrowing the gap with the AfD. A poll published by pollster Forschungsgruppe Wahlen on Thursday put the AfD on 28% in Brandenburg, with the SPD on 27%, followed by the conservatives on 14% and the new leftist Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) on 13%.
"My greatest challenge in this legislative period ... is to not allow right-wing extremists to have anything to say in this country ever again," Woidke said at a campaign event on Tuesday. He has threatened to resign if his party comes in behind the AfD. AfD national party leader Tino Chrupalla said Scholz should do the same.
"It is high time this government suffer the consequences after this state election," Chrupalla said. Both of Scholz's junior coalition partners, the Free Democrats and the Greens, look set to struggle to win the 5% needed to enter the state parliament, polls show.
At a national level, the three parties in Scholz's coalition are now collectively polling less than the opposition conservatives although political analysts say much could change before the federal election due in September 2025.
(With inputs from agencies.)
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