Skip to main content

Final push for votes as German frontrunner vows to lead in Europe

 


Germany's rival political leaders will take their fight for votes right to the last minute in a push that reflects the pivotal nature of Sunday's election, not just for their country but for Europe as a whole.

Conservative frontrunner Friedrich Merz told supporters that under his leadership, Germany would take responsibility in Europe, and that the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) would be consigned to the political margins once more.

He will end his Christian Democrat party's campaign with a rally in Munich, while his rivals will make a final appeal in a TV "speed-dating" programme with voters.

For months German politics has been paralysed by the collapse of the previous government

Now, hopes have been raised across Europe that this vote will bring some certainty to the EU's biggest democracy and its biggest economy, which has struggled to escape from lingering recession.

Nothing will change overnight. No party can govern without forming a coalition, and that will take weeks.

Reviving the economy has been one of the two big issues of the campaign; the other has been migration and security, thrust on Germany's politicians by a series of deadly attacks since May 2024.

The cities of Mannheim, Solingen, Magdeburg, Aschaffenburg and Munich have all suffered grievous attacks. A Spanish tourist was stabbed at the Holocaust memorial in the centre of Berlin on Friday night, although his wounds are not considered life-threatening.

All the alleged attackers were immigrants, and the AfD under Alice Weidel has advanced to about 20% in the polls with its nationalist, anti-immigration message.

She has appealed to younger voters on social media, and is far ahead in the race on TikTok, with 870,000 followers. She has also been buoyed by support from both billionaire Elon Musk and US Vice-President JD Vance, who has been accused of meddling in the German campaign.

The AfD talks of securing Germany's borders and deporting migrants who came illegally and committed crimes. But she uses the word "remigration" which has also been linked to mass deportations.

In Solingen, where a Syrian was accused of stabbing to death three people last August, hundreds of people turned out on Friday night to speak out against the rise of the far right.

"We have a lot of friends who grew up in Germany whose parents did not," said one woman called Natalie, 35. "We don't want anybody to kick them out and we don't want our borders closed."

One man called Jochen held up a sign that read "Never Again is Now!"

There was a large police presence at the protest, and Friday night's stabbing in Berlin which police say was motivated by antisemitism has heightened security fears.

A police union spokesman has warned of a risk of attacks aimed at destabilising democracy.

All the mainstream parties have ruled out working with the AfD in government, but if it polls higher than 20% it could double its number of seats to 150 in the 630-seat parliament.

Merz's most likely partner is Chancellor Olaf Scholz's Social Democrats, although probably without Scholz himself. The message from his centre-left SPD as the final day of campaigning began was that every vote counts, and if Germans wanted a strong government they needed a strong SPD.

The Social Democrats are languishing in third in the polls, but Scholz is pinning his hopes on an estimated one in five undecided voters who could make a big difference.


Friedrich Merz was in a relaxed and confident mood when he appeared on stage this week in front of 1,200 supporters in the tech-hub city of Darmstadt near Frankfurt. But his message was stark as he turned his thoughts to Donald Trump's presidency.

One hand in his pocket and the other holding the microphone, he spoke of unprecedented times and a "tectonic shift in the world's centres of power".

"A political order is now crumbling. What we have become used to for decades is breaking down." He was not even sure if the US would join Germany in celebrating the 70th year of its accession to Nato in the summer.

He castigated the outgoing government for failing to take a leading role on the international stage.

"The German government and chancellor must finally take on a leading role in Europe again. If I'm elected I will spend a significant part of my time keeping this European Union together

Germans have had almost nightly opportunities to see their political leaders thrash out the big issues in TV debates, and Alice Weidel has been in the thick of them, sharing the stage with both Merz and Scholz.

In the run-up to the vote she met Vice-President JD Vance, who castigated German politicians for raising a "firewall" against the far right and of ignoring "the will of the voters".

That firewall - brandmauer in German - has held strong since the end of the war, although Merz himself was accused of breaking it when he relied on the support of the AfD last month in a motion on migration.

He has faced demonstrations ever since, and there was a noisy protest when he visited Darmstadt

PhD student Annika, 29, held a Herz statt Merz banner - love instead of Merz. "He says he won't do something with the far-right AfD, but his actions contradict what he says. I don't trust him at all."

Merz appears to have been stung by the outcry and has sought to reassure voters there will be "no tolerance, no minority government [with the AfD], nothing at all


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Syrian security forces accused of executing dozens of Alawites

  Syrian security forces are alleged to have executed 52 people belonging to the Alawite minority in the coastal province of Latakia, according to one war monitoring group. Footage seen by the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights shows dozens of bodies in civilian clothing piled up in the garden of a house in Latakia. An interior ministry source told the country's official news agency Sana said that "individual violations" had occurred on the coast and pledged to put a stop to them. BBC News has not been able to verify claims that the killings were committed by the forces of Syria's new rulers. This followed clashes   between government forces and fighters loyal to the deposed President Bashar al-Assad , which left more than 70 dead. A curfew has been imposed in the cities of Homs, Latakia and Tartous, where the fighting has broken out. Earlier, BBC Verify confirmed two videos that showed a body being dragged behind a car in Latakia. The United Nation...

Wike not right for unity, Atiku defends Okowa’s choice

  The 2023 Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Atiku Abubakar has clarified that he rejected former Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike as his running mate in the election because Wike was not suitable for a ticket intended to promote unity rather than division. In a statement released by his media office on Saturday, Atiku explained that he chose former Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa as his running mate in 2023 due to a combination of intellect, composure, and statesmanship. Atiku in a recent interview stated that he did not regret rejecting Wike as his running mate in the 2023 presidential election. The former Vice President revealed that a committee had presented him with three potential candidates: former Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa, Wike, and ex-Akwa Ibom Governor Udom Emmanuel. He announced that Okowa was selected as the running mate because he scored the highest. In response, Wike, through his media aide Lere Olayinka, dismissed Atiku’s comments,...

Save me from the burden that isn’t mine” – Jumoke Odetola cries out to God

  Actress and producer Jumoke Odetola has lamented over the current state of social media, criticizing the prevalence of “clout chasing” and a lack of emotional intelligence, self-awareness, and common sense among users. In an Instagram post, Odetola described how interacting with people who lack these qualities can be mentally draining.  She also expressed her exhaustion with feeling secondhand embarrassment from individuals she neither knows nor engages with. Turning to faith, she prayed for strength to ignore negativity, remain unbothered, and avoid wasting time on issues that do not concern her. She wrote: “In this age and time where clout chasing is the new currency and lots of people do not even know where and when to draw the line. “If you still have common sense, emotional intelligence, social awareness, and self-awareness. I bet you don’t realize how blessed you are. The irony is it’s a blessing wrapped in thorns, those who lack these basic qualities can be incredibly...