Protests have erupted across Germany in the wake of two contentious parliamentary votes on immigration, with marchers venting anger at the conservative bloc for breaking the taboo on collaborating with the far-right AfD.
This was such a dumb move from Merz. He would have easily been voted in as chancellor, if he had done nothing. Instead, he initiates these racist policies, collabs with Nazis to try to make them happen and then even blames the other parties for 'forcing' him to work with the Nazis, because they wouldn't agree on his racist policies.
Now there's massive protests throughout the country and while it's still too soon to tell, I also imagine that his party's ratings will plummet.
I don't think they will plummet. While he's doing obvious nazi shit, the actual nazi party is assumed to be right behind him in terms of projected votes.
These protests are great, but they are by no means big enough, I fear.
I'd guess that over 95% of those at the protests will also vote. The issue is that even if there are 1 million protesters, there 82 million non-protesters in Germany.
I do think the non-radical voters switching away from the CDU will largely move to the SPD.
The SPD is disappointing, especially under Scholz (who's our current chancellor and their candidate for the election), because they don't do anything. We have a massive gap between rich and poor, which is a big reason why the Nazis are seeing support in the first place. This should be a core topic of the SPD, given they're literally the socialist party. Instead, they have done a whole lot of nothing, for as long as I can remember.
But CDU voters are used to Merkel, who had perfected doing nothing. That Scholz has proven to also be doing nothing is probably their wet dream.
If the Dutch election was any indication, it will long-term benefit the AfD and hurt the CDU.
When the VVD, frontrunner at the time, suggested they could work with the PVV, a lot of right-wing voters shifted from the VVD to the PVV. Suddenly the PVV became the largest party, doubling their seats, whilst the VVD lost a third.
They won't. Conservative voters think his racist bullshit is the right thing to do, it's just a bit unsavory that he tried to pull it off with the Nazis. His blaming SPD and Greens for that (because they didn't want to agree to his proposals)? They'll gobble that shit right up.
While Merz’s move might not have any immediate impact on the polls - since the CDU is currently leading - it will soon create a much bigger problem: no party across the democratic spectrum will be willing to form a coalition with him.
He may win over some radicals and see a temporary boost (or no negative impact) in the polls, which will likely lead him to believe he’s on the right track. But in the long run, he’s undermining his own trustworthiness.
Imagine being in a coalition with him, and then he starts pushing radical policies that have no support from his partners or the democratic parties. He’ll likely work with the far righters of AfD.
That’s a person you simply can’t trust or work with. The CDU may still win the election, but Merz has effectively destroyed his chances of becoming Chancellor.
His only remaining path to power would be through a power-hungry, partisan approach that prioritizes politics over the country’s well-being and democracy - ultimately paving the way for working with the AfD, which would be disastrous for Germany’s democratic foundations.
At this point, he became Germany’s version of Trump.
If we are lucky WE might get a coalition with the left, the greens and the social democrats. Last time I checked they were at about 43% vs 45% for CDU and AfD. It is not completely unlikely.
Wait you guys are fighting back against your Far Right instead of just "debating them in the Free Market of Ideas" and "Respecting their right to Free Speech"
It's like you actually care about your sense of self-preservation or something.