Germany’s Ruling SPD Holds Off AfD in Tight State Election
Olaf Scholz’s party secured 30.9 percent in the local Brandenburg elections, while the growing right-wing populist force gained 29.2 percent.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democratic Party (SPD) narrowly defeated the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) in a closely contested election in the east German state of Brandenburg.
The center-left SPD, which has been in power in Brandenburg since the fall of the Berlin Wall, won the election with 30.9 percent of the vote, while the AfD received 29.2 percent of the votes, according to provisional official results by the State Electoral Commissioner.
Polling just before Brandenburg’s 2.1 million voters went to the ballot box showed both parties were neck and neck.
The left-wing nationalist, populist, Eurosceptic, and socially conservative Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance party came third, winning 12 percent of the vote.
Three-quarters of those who voted for the SPD did so to prevent the AfD from winning, according to the exit poll published by broadcaster ARD, in an election with a record turnout of 72.9 percent.
AfD failed to replicate its recent historic win in neighboring Thuringia but demonstrated popular support for its hardline immigration policies, net zero pushback, and opposition to the Ukraine war and lockdown policies. According to pollsters Europe Elects, 32 percent of 16- to 24-year-olds in Brandenburg voted for the AfD.
Growing Political Force
With Brandenburg being Scholz’s home state, a loss would also have personally weakened the chancellor, who is presiding over a coalition in federal government that includes the Greens and Free Democratic Party.
Although AfD did not win, the number of votes it received indicates that it is a growing political force, especially in the east, where national political trends often emerge.
On Sept. 1, the AfD won the state election in Thuringia. In neighboring Saxony, it lost by a small margin but still secured more votes than any three parties in the federal government.
Speaking to The Epoch Times before the results, Richard Schenk, a research fellow at the think tank MCC Brussels, said an SPD loss would have had “huge ramifications.”
“This would mean that the federal government’s negative reputation is so profound now that even a popular candidate in a heartland cannot win an election,” he said.
Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance
Schenk said that while people are generally content with the state government, the federal government is seen as highly unpopular.
“Only 14 percent of people in all of Germany say that the government is doing its job well,” Schenk said.
He said that energy issues and immigration concerns resonate with Brandenburg’s rural population.
“Brandenburg used to have the biggest oil refinery for Russian oil in Germany, and the federal government stopped importing Russian oil,” Schenk said, adding that the AfD has been the only party to really capitalize on discontent over the proliferation of wind farms in the state.
“During the past three elections, [the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance] were the biggest election kingmakers in two states. And this is very likely to be again the case in Brandenburg,” said Schenk.
On Monday, German newspaper Leipziger Volkszeitung reported that the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance entered talks with the SDP and the centre-right Christian Democratic Union to discuss its calls for a parliamentary inquiry into the handling of the COVID-19 pandemic as well as a diplomatic solution to the Russia–Ukraine war.
AfD
AfD leaders have called for strict border controls and a reduction in illegal immigrants. The party has also pushed for preserving what it sees as traditional German culture and says that “Islam does not belong to Germany.”
The policies also include opposition to climate action agendas and critiques of EU integration.
While immigration control is largely under federal jurisdiction, local governments and police can still influence migration through measures such as targeted controls and reduced assistance to asylum seekers.
Under the German electoral and political system, absolute majorities are less common, meaning coalition governments are often formed as a result.
In response to AfD’s earlier success in Thuringia—where it gained a relative but not absolute majority—Scholz urged other parties to block the AfD from governing. The party has since been unable to form a coalition.
Domestic security services have treated the main AfD as a potentially extremist party since 2021, granting security services the right to keep it under surveillance. However, the party denies that it is extremist.
Reuters contributed to this report.