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Germany: Merkel party holds on as strongest in local vote 


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Germany: Merkel party holds on as strongest in local vote 

 

BERLIN (AP) — Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives held on as the strongest party in municipal elections in a western German state despite a dip in support, while an upstart nationalist party fell short of 10 percent of the vote, according to results released Monday.

 

Merkel's Christian Democrats won 34.4 percent support overall in Sunday's elections for councils in Lower Saxony, in Germany's northwest, down 2.6 points from five years ago. Their center-left rivals, the Social Democrats, slipped 3.7 points to 31.2 percent.

 

The nationalist Alternative for Germany, or AfD, finished in fourth place with 7.8 percent. It had hoped for more than 10 percent.

 

The local voting in Lower Saxony was sandwiched between two state elections, a more important test of sentiment. The eastern state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania voted Sept. 4 and Berlin votes Sept. 18.

 

In Mecklenburg, where Merkel has her parliamentary constituency, AfD won more than 20 percent of the vote to finish ahead of the Christian Democrats, tapping into discontent over the chancellor's migrant policy. Polls in Berlin put its support there at up to 15 percent.

 

AfD is strongest in the formerly communist east, and Lower Saxony wasn't expected to be fertile ground for the party. Its showing Sunday was well below the 11.9 percent it won in municipal elections in March in Hesse, a neighboring western state.

 

Lower Saxony's state government is a coalition of the Social Democrats and Greens, who finished third on Sunday, with Merkel's party leading the regional opposition. The two governing parties lost their majority on the council in Hannover, the state capital, for the first time since 1989.

 
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-- © Associated Press 2016-09-12
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This is local stuff where you vote for faces rather than parties. It's not like the communities have any say in asylum matters and are bust as bust can be anyway. It's hardly politics there, it's rather administrating insolvency. So, apart from the 15 big cities (minus Berlin, Bremen and Hamburg, which are countries without communal elections) where local politics have some ramifications due to scale, none of this matters.

 

So this is not about Merkel's CDU hanging on. On the upside, a lot of Greens got washed out of the city halls, so more responsible politics my lie ahead.

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1 hour ago, Saradoc1972 said:

This is local stuff where you vote for faces rather than parties. It's not like the communities have any say in asylum matters and are bust as bust can be anyway. It's hardly politics there, it's rather administrating insolvency. So, apart from the 15 big cities (minus Berlin, Bremen and Hamburg, which are countries without communal elections) where local politics have some ramifications due to scale, none of this matters.

 

So this is not about Merkel's CDU hanging on. On the upside, a lot of Greens got washed out of the city halls, so more responsible politics my lie ahead.

Funny, how it always IS about her and her asylum-policy, when it fits the narrative! 

So here, both "big" parties hold way over 60% of the vote ( adding the Libs and the Greens in there and it might well be up to 80%) and the AfD- faschos get 8%...and suddenly, this has nothing to do with Merckel!

I see!

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