Germany Heading ForPolitical Instability After European Assembly Elections?

Mainstream media’s reaction to the European election results in Germany for the EU elections rejoiced in the poor showing of the Eurosceptic, anti – immigration AfD but chose to ignore the far more significant trends that are emerging in German politics, trends that threaten the political and by extension economic stability of the EU’s most powerful nation.

The media trumpeted the regression of the right. Alternative for Germany’s (AfD)  finishing with 11% of votes cast after after polling at a high of 18% in 2018 was spun as proof Chancellor Merkel had turned back the tide of nationalism and put Germany back on its integrationist, globalist path.

But while it may be premature to write off the AfD because it is entirely possible their supporters suffered a bout of apathy with regard to the European Parliament, being aware the European Commission will not allow any nationalist grouping to gain influence in the parliament, the Left made some astonishing gains at the expence of Merkel’s CDU and its coalition partners the CSU and SDP. The always fragile coalition is now in even more trouble, combining votes for coalition members gives them only only 45% of votes cast with the collapse of the once invincible Social Democrats (SPD) continuing as they gained just 15.6 % of the vote. The conservatives of the CDU / CSU alliance gained a combined 28.7%

The result in Bremen gave a powerful illustration of how Germans have abandoned the centre left. The city has voted solid SPD for 73 years, but last month lost to the Merkel’s CDU in both European and regional elections. This was not a tial success for the CDU however, they simply haemorrhaged votes to the AfD nationalists and the classical liberals of the Free Democrats Party at a lower rate that SDP voters deserted the party for the far – left Greens and the Marxist Left Party.

With Merkel allegedly disavowing her promise to retire as head of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and SDP leader Andrea Nehles  resigning as a consequence of the party’s disastrous deecline, his has now thrown the survival of the current Grand Coalition into doubt. The question now is whether it can survive until the next election in 2021 although some political commentators are saying it is unlikely to survive beyond three regional elections in German federal states where the CDU and SDP are seen as vulnerable.

Meanwhile The Greens surged to more than 20% nationally and from being traditional recipients of the protest vote on as a protest vote twenty years ago over have become serious contenders for power as voters rejected another four years of the SPD lamely rubber-stamping Merkel’s EU-first policies because they was they could keep a couple of fingers on the levers of power.

The greater significance of these statistics lies in trends outside Germany. These EU election results imply that the SPD may be, like the Tories in the U.K., in terminal decline. The Greens in Germany are of the most aggressively far left of all environmentalist paries in the EU. They are far more committed to about enacting societal change through Progressive aka Culrural Marxist policies and believe the SPD have been Merkel’s stooges as the pushed for the integration of EU member states into a single political entity for too long. Their success in the European elections will only make them more strident.

Germany’s Greens are more closely aligned with the far – left wing of the US Democrats whose rising star Alexandria Ocasio – Cortez, proposer of the notorious Green New Deal, which the Bambi – eyed, Goofy – brained Ms Cortez is not well read enough to recognise as Stalinism with an environmentalist veneer.

The rise ofThe Green Party in Germany will have knock-on effects throughout the EU as too.

As Nigel Farage said after the Brexit Party’s stunning victory in Britain’s European election, politics is changing. New parties of both left and right are gaining at the expense of the mainstream parties who have long taken for granted the votes of their core constituencies as they plotted and schemed to transfer power to unaccountable supra – national bureaucracies and global corporate cartels. The rise of left and right factions (the labels have little significance now,) indicates a desire among voters to localise power. Enough centralisation, they say. A global approach to certain problems does not need a globalist government of appointed bureaucrats.

have written,, the center isn’t holding in Europe, nor in the USA, Australia or Canada it seems. The election of Donald Trump in the USA, the UK’s vote to leave the EU, the vicory of left wing, anti – EU Syriza in Greece back in 2015, the collapse of centre right and centre left in Spain which has seen the country stumble along without an effective government since 2014, the success of anti – EU, anti – immigration League in Italy all show a swing away from the centre. Even Germany’s Greens are campaigning for more attention to be paid to Germany’s problems and less to the globalist agenda.

It adds up to the conclusion that the era of centrist consensus are over, politicians like Merkel are dinosaurs, Grand coalitions such as hers with their traditional opponents the SDP, which stand for nothing except the advancement of the European federalisation project have, from both sides of the political aisle, been the big losers in recent elections .

From now on political radicals of both left and right will have far greater influence over the course of the European Union and the democratic world. Merkel is on the way out anyway, and as the cadidates to replace her from within her own party look every bit as mediocre as the SDP hopefuls who hope to remove her from power in an election, it is posssible someone from The Green Party or Alternatif fur Deutschland could become Chancellor.

The problem for Germany, however, as has occurred in Spain, Belgium and the UK is that there is now neither natural party of government as the UK’s Conservatives or germany’s SDP once were, nor a workable coalition available.

The Greens, with their extreme anti – industry agenda were the main reason Merkel had such a difficult time putting a coalition together after 2017’s election when Germany functioned without a government for six months. She will either have to move left to appease the Greens, which would drive a wedge between her party Bavaria’s Christian Social Union (CSU) or consider a coalition with AfD, which is anathema to anyone who supports the Federal Europe project. Merkel has alienated many older and more conservative CDU voters over the past eighteen months by focusing on defending her disastrous ‘open doors’ immigration policy and decrying the rise of AfD that it has now become almost certain that immigration and the federal Europe project could cause the coalition to fall apart.

This augurs ill for her party in three big state elections in eastern Germany later this year — Brandenburg, Saxony and Thuringia. All are AfD strongholds now, AfD holding power in the regional assemblies in Brandenburg and Saxony and being the main opposition in Thuringia. Should AfD recover from the European election setback the shift in the power balance will set up a strong East/West divide in Germany which Merkel’s talk of closer integration with France and her criticism of Poland’s nationalist government is doing nothing to improve.

 

Germany: Economy crisis a growth stalls – car production crashes

Germany’s federal Government today reduced its growth forecast for the EU’s largest economy today after for the second time in two months as plunging car production figures sent shockwaves through the Eurozone. The German economy, already technically in recession, has been propping up the economically stagnant EU for years. After Brexit of course, with the … Continue reading

After Triggering Mass Migration Crisis, Germany Bribing Foreigners To Leave

Angela Merkel is seen by many Germans as more committed to advancing Islam in Europe than respresenting the wished of German voters. (picture source: http://www.tapwires.com ) Though Hausfrau – Volksfuhrer Merkel only clings to power by her fingernails as the fragile coalition she leads staggers from crisis to crisis, the damaging effects of her ‘open … Continue reading

 

 

Yellow Vests Protest Merkel-Macron Plan To Integrate Defence, Foreign Policy

The left wing wankerati will not doubt be screaming about racism and xenophobia when they learn of the latest exploits of the German Yellow Vest movement who were out protesting against the latest step Hausfrau – Volksfuhrer Merkel and The Boy Macron have taken towards politically integrating Germany and France, on which Original Boggart Blog and The Daily Stirrer have been following developments …

After Triggering Mass Migration Crisis, Germany Bribing Foreigners To Leave

Angela Merkel is seen by many Germans as more committed to advancing Islam in Europe than respresenting the wished of German voters. (picture source: http://www.tapwires.com ) Though Hausfrau – Volksfuhrer Merkel only clings to power by her fingernails as the fragile coalition she leads staggers from crisis to crisis, the damaging effects of her ‘open … Continue reading

 

LITTLE ISTANBUL: Turkish Muslims have made Germans feel like foreigners in their own country
When Turks buy a building, they don’t allow any German people to move in. The next thing you know, there is a mosque and soon the whole neighborhood has become a ‘NO GO Zone’ for non-Muslims.

‘Islam Doesn’t Belong to Germany’ – New Interior Minister

While mainstream media was hailing the political mastery of Hausfrau – Volksfuhrer Merkel in negotiationg a new coalition deal to keep her in power for another four years, after Germany had been without a government for almost six months, The Daily Stirrer (and other alt_news sites to be fair) warned that the new government of Europe’s most powwerful economy was fragile and full of holes. Only days after Merkel was sworn in for a fourth term, the holes in her coalition started to appear … Continue Reading”>

After Triggering Mass Migration Crisis, Germany Bribing Foreigners To Leave

Though Angela Merkel clings to power the effects of her ‘open doors’ immigration policy damage Germany. It may amuse nationalists to observe as, with one face the pledges support for a United Nations initiative to open all national borders, while with the other she tries to persuade German voters she has listened to public opinion and understands her mass immigration policy is abhorred by a majority of voters …

 

German Election: Will Another Term For Merkel destroy German Economy
According to the latest round of opinion polling ahead of the German elections, Angela Merkel looks set to become the joint longest-serving modern German chancellor, that’s despite having been accused of “putting problems on the back burner, and staved off several attempts to indict her on treason charges for her role in the immigrant crisis. Business organisations have also raised doubts about the economic consequences of re-electing her, warning that her new term may bring “stagnation” for Germany.

Majority of Germans Favour Snap Election as Merkel Coalition Talks Stumble

There appears to be no end in sight to Germany’s crisis of democracy as the European Union’s most populous and economically powerful state continues to stumble along without an effective government. Coalition talks between Chancellor Merkel’s CDU/CSU and the left wing Greens and classical liberal Free Domocrats have stalled over irreconcilable policy demands.

Germany admits hard Brexit will cause havoc in EU financial markets – ‘Common sense MUST prevail’

Germany, the EU’s most powerful economy, has urged Prime Minister Theresa May and the EU’s chief negotiator, the pompous French clown Michel Barnier to do all in their power to avoid a hard Brexit due to risks of French instransigence disrupting the financial sector. This would be catastrophic for the EU’s financial markets, though the … Continue reading

 

Germany Sees Fourfold Rise in Terrorism-Related Cases
According to a report in the Welt am Sonntag, Germany has experienced a huge rise in the number of terror-related cases in just one year, with prosecutors having dealt with more than 900 cases so far in 2017, compared with 250 cases initiated throughout 2016. Around 700 Islamic extremists now living in Germany have been identified by the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) as posing a potential terror threat.

A Week Before Election 30% Of German Voters Still Undecided

Polling companies in Germany are indicating that support for Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democratic Party is still slipping with the election only one week away. More disturbingly perhaps for Hausfrau – Volkfuhere Merkel is the news that over a third of Germans are still unsure how they will vote. An opinion poll published today (15 September) on Friday showing the number of undecideds was not coming down fueled uncertainty about the kind of coalition that will emerge from an election on September 24.
< href=”http://www.dailystiirer.com/2017-september.shtml#170915-germany”&gt;

 

Merkel Faces Crisis As German Ruling Coalition Collapses

 

German Chancellor Angela Merkel faces a crisis in her ruling coalition after Bavarian Premier Horst Seehofer demanded she take steps to halt the tide of illegal immigrants entering the country. To have any chance of surviving, the government must present new initiatives for controlling illegal immigration, deal with the critical situation on the Austrian border …

New German Coalition in Peril as Potential Partners Clash over 200,000 Annual Migrant Limit

Reports that German Chancellor Angela Merkel has agreed a proposal from coalition partner and leader of the Christian Social Union (CSU) Horst Seehofer to limit the number of asylum seekers in Germany to 200,000 per year to secure a ruling coalition may be somewhat premature. Other coalition partners are not as positive on the policy.

Merkel Calls for Beginning of Coalition Talks With Greens, Free Democratic Party

German Chancellor Angela Merkel officially announced on Saturday for the first time that her conservative bloc of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and its Bavarian sister party Christian Social Union (CSU) will seek to form a coalition government with the centre right Free Democratic Party (FDP) and left wing loony Greens.


German Elections: Anti – EU party AfD 3rd In PollsElections take place in Germany this Sunday, September 24, for the federal assembly (Bundestag) and the presidency (Chancellor). While Angela Merkel looks set to win a fourth term as Chancellor and the most likely outcome of the election is another “Grand Coalition” between Christian Democrats and Social Democrats that coalition will be a much-weakened if late polls are to be believed.
More news from September 2017

Chechen Islamic Police Now Enforcing Sharia Law On Streets Of Berlin

A hundred Islamists are now openly enforcing Sharia law on the streets of Berlin, according to German police officers who are investigating a recent string of violent assaults in the German capital. The self-appointed religious police consist entirely of Salafists (Muslim fundamentalists) from Chechnya, a predominantly Sunni Muslim region in the Caucasus. The vigilantes are name-and-shame tactics and physical violence to intimidate Chechen migrants and dissuade them from integrating into German society;

Is USA Preparing For War Against Russia In The Baltic Region?

The US government has been making preparations for a possible war against Russia in Europe’s Baltic States, German business newspaper Deutsche Wirtschafts Nachrichten (DWN) reports (link goes to page in original German). The report claims that all the NATO war games organized in the region by Washington have been intended to prepare various military response scenarios.

 

3 thoughts on “Germany Heading ForPolitical Instability After European Assembly Elections?

Leave a comment