The Observer

Enter Sahra Wagenknech­t … potential kingmaker and staunch friend of the Kremlin

- Deborah Cole Berlin

Friedrich Merz, Germany’s mercurial conservati­ve opposition chief and a passionate hobby pilot, should be flying high these days as the country’s hotly tipped next leader. One year before the next general election, his Christian Democratic Union (CDU) has enjoyed a comfortabl­e lead for months with about 32% support, nearly double the score of its nearest competitor­s, as the fractious government led by Social Democrat Olaf Scholz plumbs new depths of disfavour.

But the chance at the chanceller­y Merz has been dreaming of since the 1990s has hit turbulence stemming from the country’s inescapabl­e 20th-century history. Whether and how he can extricate his party from the dilemma posed by last weekend’s bombshell state elections will help determine Germany’s democratic health for years to come in the battle to win back voters from the pro-Russian extremes.

In this month’s polls in two former communist states, a far-right force became the strongest party for the first time since the Nazi period in one region, Thuringia, and in the other, Saxony, it finished a very close second behind Merz’s party.

The strong showing for the antiimmigr­ation, anti-Islam Alternativ­e für Deutschlan­d (AfD) has left the mainstream conservati­ves c navigating gating a min minefield as all the democratic ocratic parties parti have committed to a ban on c cooperatio­n with the extrem extreme right. A third election, tion, in i Brandenbur­g state surro surroundin­g Berlin, looms on 22 September, with similar ilar results r expected.

Fo For the coalition arithmetic met to add up to a ma majority, the CDU must now seek the strangest of b bedfellows for a highrisk risk experiment in government. ernm Cue the dramatic retur return of another of the most fl orid political characters ters of th the post-reunificat­ion period, former fo Stalinist Sahra Wagenkn Wagenknech­t, whose Kremlin apologist party came in a pivotal third place in both states. Wagenk Wagenknech­t was known in those years for often antagonisi­ng – and peren perenniall­y outshining – the members of her party, the successors sors to the Ea East German communists nists who built bui the Berlin Wall. She fi nally broke with the far-left Die Linke last year and formed her own eponymous grouping in January.

The Sahra Wagenknech­t Alliance BSW, after its German initials) has shaken up the political landscape with stances tailored to pick up disaffecte­d voters, particular­ly in the east, who are still angry about government restrictio­ns during the Covid pandemic, dislike Germany’s arms shipments to Ukraine and are deeply anxious about immigratio­n.

Wagenknech­t, a bestsellin­g author from the east who has never held government office, boasted to reporters on the day after the state elections that her young party had “become a power factor in Germany”. Polling at about 8% nationally, it now has every incentive to exact the highest price from Merz’s CDU during the state coalition talks, suggesting it will set an ultimatum on ending Berlin’s support for Kyiv and try to block plans to station medium-range US missiles on German soil.

After the state elections, Merz, a westerner and former BlackRock executive, warned that the BSW was “rightwing extremist on some issues and leftwing extremist on others” – a “black box” with uncertain and potentiall­y explosive contents.

He neverthele­ss gave each regional CDU chapter the green light to enter into coalition negotiatio­ns with the party, as there is no viable alternativ­e. That decision, however, has now sparked a rebellion within the CDU just when the party hoped to be closing ranks around a flag bearer to lead it into the September 2025 national election.

“Wagenknech­t contradict­s everything the [centre-right] parties have stood for since the founding of the Federal Republic of Germany: clear allegiance to the west, a united Europe and Nato membership as history’s greatest project for peace,” Christian Democrat Frank Sarfeld, who says he represents about 100 party dissidents, told the daily Tagesspieg­el.

“Cooperatio­n with the Kremlin offshoot is unthinkabl­e,” added CDU lawmaker Roderich Kiesewette­r, accusing both the Wagenknech­t alliance and AfD of trying to “destroy” the CDU as a big-tent party.

Merz, whose impulsive nature sparks flashes of temper that concern even his allies, could now be looking more vulnerable with the revolt in his own ranks. The Munich broadsheet Süddeutsch­e Zeitung dubbed his predicamen­t “Russian Roulette” as potential rivals line up.

“What will remain of Friedrich Merz when Sahra Wagenknech­t is finished with him?” asked Die Zeit . “The electoral successes could plunge [his party] into crisis and cost him the chancellor candidacy.”

One key area where Merz and Wagenknech­t overlap, however, is a hard line on migration – an issue that also plays to the strengths of the far right. Since 2015, when Angela Merkel allowed more than one million people fleeing war and turmoil to enter Germany, immigratio­n has become one of the country’s most divisive political issues.

It prompted the rightward lurch in the AfD – then primarily a euroscepti­c grouping – and opened up a civil war in Merkel’s Christian Union bloc, which led most of the West German and united German government­s in the postwar period. Merz, a longtime rival of Merkel’s who angrily resented several moves she made to consolidat­e power at his expense, has spearheade­d an unyielding stance since she left the stage in 2021, which now appears to be gaining the upper hand in the country. But many observers say that the AfD, from the sidelines, is calling the tune. That issue, combined with a sense of martyrdom among far-right supporters because their party has been blocked from formal power, could prove to be explosive, said Ursula Münch, director of the Academy for Political Education thinktank in Bavaria.

“AfD supporters call it undemocrat­ic that the party’s successes don’t result in it joining government­s – they consciousl­y overlook that you can vote for an extremist party but can’t expect that it will find coalition partners,” she said.

“However, not including the AfD will improve its prospects for the next election. That’s the big dilemma for the other parties.”

Political scientist Oliver Lembcke of Ruhr University Bochum said the state elections’ results leading to the upcoming coalition talks between Merz and Wagenknech­t’s forces showed that the AfD boycott had at least, in part, backfired.

“The strategy of the firewall was to marginalis­e the AfD in the east by excluding it while pointing up the democratic parties’ steadfast principles,” he said. “That has clearly failed.”

With a ban on cooperatio­n with the extreme right, the CDU may seek Wagenknech­t as a political bedfellow

 ?? ?? BELOW Friedrich Merz has hit political turbulence.
BELOW Friedrich Merz has hit political turbulence.
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