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Fearing far-right surge, Merkel urges Germans to vote on Sunday


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Fearing far-right surge, Merkel urges Germans to vote on Sunday

By Madeline Chambers

 

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel, a top candidate of the Christian Democratic Union Party (CDU) for the upcoming general elections, speaks during an election rally in Fritzlar, Germany September 21, 2017. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
 

 

BERLIN (Reuters) - Fears that apathy could boost the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) in an election on Sunday have driven Chancellor Angela Merkel and her main rival to urge their backers to go out and vote.

 

With many voters viewing a fourth term for Merkel as almost inevitable and put off by a turgid campaign - occasionally punctured by heckling and tomato hurling in protest at Merkel's refugee policy - pollsters say turnout may be low.

 

A GMS poll on Thursday said 34 percent were not planning to vote or were undecided, higher than the 29 percent who did not cast ballots in the last election in 2013.

 

"My request to everyone is that they vote, and vote for those parties that adhere 100 percent to our constitution," Merkel told MDR radio on Thursday, pointing to the AfD.

 

The party has been running at between nine and 12 percent in surveys. The GMS poll and one other also published on Thursday showed it chalking up gains that look set to make it the third largest bloc in parliament.

 

Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel and some commentators have likened the AfD to Hitler's Nazis. The AfD dismisses such comparisons.

 

Some of its members have called for Germans to rewrite the history books on the Nazi era and the party has been dogged by rows over Holocaust denial, a crime in Germany.

 

Polls show conservative Merkel, trusted by stability-loving Germans to stand up to unpredictable leaders in the likes of the United States, Russia and Turkey, is on track to win.

 

But the shape of her coalition is wide open.

 

Most pollsters say a low turnout could boost the AfD, which has gained popularity by focussing on migration and security.

 

While mainstream parties have ruled out including the AfD in any governing coalition, it is poised to be the first far-right party to enter Germany's parliament in over half a century.

 

Gabriel told Russian broadcaster RT this week that not all AfD members or voters were Nazis, but the party has "people at the helm of the AfD that are inciting people to hatred, that are trading in Nazi propaganda."

 

Comments by some of the party's top members have caused outrage, including one leader who this month said Germany should be proud of its soldiers' achievements in World War Two.

 

'WILLINGNESS TO VOTE'

 

Allensbach pollster Renate Koecher told Die Zeit weekly that much depended on turnout. "Willingness to vote" was strongest among conservative and AfD supporters, she said. Most undecideds were FDP, Green and Left voters, indicating that a higher turnout would help the smaller parties on the left, she said.

 

The two biggest blocs have dipped slightly in most polls in the last month or so while some of the smaller parties have inched up.

 

In the GMS survey, the AfD was up two points at 10 percent and in a Forschungsgruppe Wahlen (FGW) poll up one point at 11 percent.

 

AfD top candidate Alexander Gauland said on a debate on German broadcaster ZDF on Thursday that an influx of more than a million migrants over the last two years had left people worried about losing what they had worked for.

 

Merkel's conservative bloc slipped one percentage point in the GMS poll to 37 percent and her main opponents, the Social Democrats (SPD), were unchanged on 22 percent.

 

Conversely, the FGW survey showed the conservatives holding steady on 36 percent while the SPD fell 1.5 points to 21.5 percent.

 

SPD leader Martin Schulz has urged his supporters to vote, saying "everything is still possible".

 

In a highly unusual intervention this week, Merkel's right-hand man Peter Altmaier, head of the chancellor's office, stirred controversy by suggesting it would be better for Germans not to vote at all rather than vote for the AfD.

 

Schulz told broadcaster N24 it was not sensible to encourage people not to vote, adding: "I urge AfD voters to consider the following: Whoever wants social justice, respect in our society and above all for Angela Merkel to be replaced must make the SPD strong."

 

SPD Justice Minister Heiko Maas accused Altmaier of helping the AfD. "Telling people not to vote is ...exactly what they want," he said.

 

Latest surveys suggest coalition options are limited to another grand coalition of Merkel's conservatives with the SPD, or a three-way "Jamaica" alliance of the conservatives, FDP and Greens which could limit Merkel's room for manoeuvre on euro zone reform.

 

Both the Greens and FDP - who are at opposite ends of the political spectrum - have played down the likelihood of joining forces, fearing it would put off their voters. But on Thursday, FDP leader Christian Lindner struck a more positive note.

 

"The FDP is enthusiastic about going into government. But only if it can implement good things. If not, then we won't," he told Die Welt.

 

(Additional reporting by Thomas Escritt and Michelle Martin; Editing by Toby Chopra and John Stonestreet)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-09-22
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3 hours ago, phantomfiddler said:

Get rid of this woman before she destroys the European civilized way of life !

 

If only they would! But when push comes to shove, the Germans, I expect, will go for conservatism and stick with what's proven rather than take any chances.

 

Juncker would crap himself if his matron wasn't their to run the show!

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"My request to everyone is that they vote, and vote for those parties that adhere 100 percent to our constitution," Merkel told MDR radio on Thursday, pointing to the AfD.

Did she just tell voters to stay away from her CDU? I do remember a good couple of issues here, opening the borders in 2015 was the most massive, social-media anti-hate-speech campaign and law come up second.

 

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18 hours ago, Baerboxer said:

 

If only they would! But when push comes to shove, the Germans, I expect, will go for conservatism and stick with what's proven rather than take any chances.

Certainly true. Plus, there's, sadly, no alternative to her. Whom would Germans vote for; that joker Martin Schulz and the Social Democrats? They 'finished themselves off'  about 15 years ago, when they took away social benefits from Germans, which Merkel is now freely redistributing to Arabs and Africans, some of whom are criminals.

 

Hope, the AfD gets 30 per cent in this, or one of the next elections, so that some people in the CSU and CDU finally 'wake up' and ditch Merkel!

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13 hours ago, Saradoc1972 said:

Did she just tell voters to stay away from her CDU? I do remember a good couple of issues here, opening the borders in 2015 was the most massive, social-media anti-hate-speech campaign and law come up second.

Maybe she wants her CDU/CSU to achieve the same number of votes as the SPD. :smile:

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20 hours ago, Baerboxer said:

 

If only they would! But when push comes to shove, the Germans, I expect, will go for conservatism and stick with what's proven rather than take any chances.

 

Juncker would crap himself if his matron wasn't their to run the show!

Yeah, you two brainiacs!

Let's instead go with the guys, who suggest, Germans should be proud of the achievements of German soldiers in both World Wars!

Because that is , what the world needs!

:coffee1:

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7 hours ago, DM07 said:

Yeah, you two brainiacs!

Let's instead go with the guys, who suggest, Germans should be proud of the achievements of German soldiers in both World Wars!

Because that is , what the world needs!

:coffee1:

Don't take them that serious, they need to provoke from time to time or they don't get enough coverage by the press. This is everyday banter, like Altmeier wanting voters to express their protest by abstaining. They do have their fair share of nutters, which is normal when your party goes from zero to hero within 2.5 years. Or unavoidable, as obviously the guys in the constituencies who then move up straight to parliament haven't come to know each other for a decade or two, as with the other parties. 

I don't regard them as a danger, rather a chance to set things right. They will be opposition for the next 4 years. But as such they can liven things up and speak about issues otherwise hushed up. Bit like the left, just their issues are not the other half of the populace's cup of tea.

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