German CDU’s Laschet admits ‘painful losses’ in federal election, insists on coalition talks

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Germany’s Christian Democrats (CDU) expressed concern on Monday at the scale of the party’s defeat in the former Communist East in Sunday’s federal election that marks the end of the rule of Angela Merkel, who grew up in the region.

The CDU had been the dominant political force in the former east for three decades since the party’s long-serving leader Helmut Kohl championed reunification in 1990 and promised voters in the deprived region “flourishing landscapes”.

The party’s popularity in the east continued after Merkel took over as chancellor in 2005, but had been waning since she opened the door to more than a million refugees in 2015, fueling the rise of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD).

Support for the CDU and its leader Armin Laschet, premier of the western region of North Rhine-Westphalia, collapsed further in Sunday’s election, with the party falling behind the Social Democrats in most eastern states.

The AfD is now the biggest party in the eastern regions of Saxony and Thueringen and the second-biggest in Brandenburg and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

“The losses have been particulaly drastic in the east,” Laschet told a news conference on Monday.

Paul Ziemiak, the party’s general secretary, was even more candid: “If I think about the east, I am floored by it.” Nationwide, the Social Democrats (SPD) narrowly won Sunday’s election and its candidate for chancellor, Olaf Scholz, said on Monday he hoped to build a three-way coalition with the Greens and liberal Free Democrats by Christmas to replace the outgoing conservative-led government of Merkel.

Norbert Röttgen, a member of the CDU and chair of the Bundestag’s Committee on Foreign Affairs, echoed these sentiments, saying that his party shares similar views with the FDP and Greens on global challenges. The CDU is looking to possibly form a coalition government with those two parties.

“There is a high consensus between the CDU, the Liberals and the Greens, particularly when it comes to how to deal with Russia, how to deal with China, that we have to shift to the new role China is practicing in international relations, the bullying policy in the region,” he argued “So a more robust foreign policy against the authoritarian regimes and countries in Russia, in China and elsewhere.”

He claimed there was a “significant difference” with the SPD, which had “without any doubt turned to the left wing of foreign policy and security policy.”

via Reuters/DW

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