Dresden
Walking through Dresden this weekend, I was bombarded with political messaging. Posters on every lamppost promise anything from “top education” to “law and order” — whatever it takes to draw voters back from the political fringes ahead of regional elections.
The three German states of Brandenburg, Saxony and Thuringia will elect new parliaments in September, and in all three polling suggests that up to half of voters might opt either for the Right-wing Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) or the Left-wing populists of the Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht (BSW).
Since all three elections are held in the former East Germany, commentators have been quick to suggest that populism may be in the political DNA of those who once lived under socialism. Really, though, what’s happening in the East is happening all over Germany and Europe. Centrists close their eyes to this at their peril.
The biggest concern for Germany’s political establishment is the AfD, which may win all three states with anything between a quarter and a third of the vote. While other issues play a role, immigration is key. Here in Saxony, where the domestic intelligence service classified the local AfD chapter as “Right-wing extremist”, the party’s election posters advocate “remigration” and border controls to neighbouring EU countries.
While immigration has long been seen as a particular issue in the East, a major survey showed that West Germans have similar concerns — be that regarding the increased costs for the welfare state (an issue to 77% in the West and 82% in the East) or conflicts between immigrants and local communities (a worry to 71% of West Germans and 82% of East Germans).
The AfD also came second in Hesse and third in Bavaria last year — both in the former West. In Bavaria, the Free Voters came second with a Right-wing agenda and the centre-right Christian Social Union won. Together they gained over two-thirds of votes for parties that want to reduce immigration.
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