Missing Merkel already: German CDU loses
chancellor’s voter base
Women and elderly voters who backed veteran leader are
deserting party as election nears.
BY EMILY
SCHULTHEIS AND CORNELIUS HIRSCH
September
21, 2021 4:32 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/germany-election-2021-polls-angela-merkel-armin-laschet-cdu/
BERLIN — Trailing
in the polls less than a week before Germany’s general election, the governing
Christian Democrats are learning the hard way just how much they depended on
Angela Merkel.
Survey data
shows that during her 16 years in office, Merkel’s pragmatic, centrist approach
and unflappable manner helped her center-right CDU party build a coalition of
voters consisting not only of traditional conservatives, but also of people who
just liked the chancellor. That was especially true of women, older voters, and
some centrists, according to the data.
“Merkel’s
biggest asset is probably that people who wouldn’t otherwise support the CDU
are totally comfortable supporting her,” said Marcel Dirsus, a political
scientist and nonresident fellow at the University of Kiel. “She is in many
ways the perfect centrist,” he added. “She really very rarely offends anyone,
and it’s so difficult to dislike her personally.”
The share
of voters who have deserted the CDU in recent weeks ahead of Sunday’s general
election suggests that about one in every three people who backed the party
four years ago did so because of Merkel, pollsters say.
With Merkel
stepping down — and the CDU’s candidate to succeed her, Armin Laschet, proving
deeply unpopular — many of these voters are defecting to the center-left Social
Democrats (SPD) and other parties. The as-yet unanswered question for CDU
leaders is whether they’ll be able to win those voters back — either before or
after polling day.
The Merkel
coalition
Merkel
became Germany’s first female chancellor in 2005 and has frequently been
described as the most powerful woman in the world. So it’s perhaps no surprise
that her party received higher-than-usual support from women.
In fact,
during the Merkel years, a shift in support for the CDU was most striking among
women.
In recent
federal elections, the CDU has had the widest advantage with women of any
political party. The last time Germany held a federal election, in 2017, the
party won 29.8 percent of votes cast by women and 23.5 percent of those cast by
men, a gender gap of 6.3 percentage points.
Merkel also
helped the party do well among older voters generally, but especially among
older women. Older female voters provided the strongest base of support for the
CDU. Among women aged 70 and older at the 2017 election, 40 percent voted for
the CDU, compared to the party’s overall result of 27 percent. Among the other
parties that tend to do well among older voters is the CDU’s Bavarian sister
party, the Christian Social Union (CSU).
Figures
from the Federal Returning Officer, the national election authority, confirm
that German elections are won or lost with older voters.
The
majority of Germany’s electorate is over 50, and almost 23 million voters — or
38 percent of the electorate — are over 60. Looking at the breakdown by gender
of those over 60, women make up a clear majority.
These older
voters are also more likely to show up at the polls. In 2017, 60 to 69-year-olds
had the highest turnout rate, with over 80 percent showing up; by contrast, the
lowest turnout was among 18 to 29-year-olds.
In Germany’s election, the fate of the EU is at
stake
Timothy
Garton Ash
After Merkel, the incoming coalition will have to
prove that democracy can meet Europe’s great challenges
Wed 15 Sep
2021 15.20 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/sep/15/eu-germany-election-eu-merkel-democracy-europe
In Brussels
last week, I found everyone waiting for Berlin. In Berlin, I found everyone
electrified by an unexpectedly wide-open election. One thing, however, is
clear: the new German government will be a coalition, and almost certainly of
three, rather than two, parties.
That points
to the deepest question underlying this pivotal European event: can democracy
deliver? More precisely: can the European model of change through democratic
consensus, of which Germany is a prime example, produce the actions Europe
badly needs if it is to hold its own in the 21st century?
The
European Union is like a giant slot machine. The more pineapples, or oranges,
line up on the screen, the better the results. The German election will account
for about four fruits in a row; France’s presidential election next spring will
spin another three. Italy and Spain contribute perhaps two each, with the rest
being generated by other European countries and the European institutions.
Whatever
the EU’s own treaties say, in practice the alignment of national governments
remains the key to any major initiative it takes. My friends in Brussels
constantly talk about “the Germans” pushing this or “the French” pushing that.
Most European commissioners retain a national tint. Even the big
transcontinental party groupings in the European parliament are significantly
influenced by national parties from the largest member states. To make the
union work well requires a coalition of coalitions made up of coalitions.
Critics
constantly talk about a “democratic deficit” within the EU but in reality
almost the opposite is true. The system is so complicated and slow-moving
precisely because it requires the consent of 26 democratically elected
governments plus Hungary, as well as a democratically elected European
parliament and sometimes also sub-national states and regions. The EU is a
permanent negotiation. The wonder is not that it moves slowly but that it moves
at all.
A crisis
can help. Without the Covid pandemic, we would not have the €750bn (£640bn) of
grants and loans, drawing on shared European debt, in the recovery fund known
as Next Generation EU. A giant poster on the side of the European Commission’s
Berlaymont building in Brussels shows a joyfully leaping young European, with
the words Next Gen EU splashed across one shin; but really a spiky virus should
be up there in lights as well. An optimist would say that floods in
north-western Europe and forest fires in Greece have made Europe wake up to the
climate crisis. Yet it’s an odd polity that relies on successive crises for its
survival.
In the
capital of Germany, Europe’s central power, the talk is all about the different
possible coalitions that might emerge from what will probably be months of
talks between parties following the federal election on 26 September. Wits
remark that, long after all the obituaries on her 16 years in power have been
published, (acting) chancellor Angela Merkel may yet deliver the 2022 New
Year’s address, wearing another of her colourful jackets.
Talking of
colours, the two most likely coalitions are described as “Jamaica” (the colours
of the island’s flag: black for Christian Democrats, yellow for Free Democrats,
and the Greens) or “traffic light” (substitute Social Democrats’ red for
Christian Democrats’ black). Both coalitions would be firmly pro-European. An
analysis of party manifestos shows that the Greens and Free Democrats have the
most pro-integration, federalist visions for Europe, although with important
differences between them. Armin Laschet, the Christian Democrat candidate for
chancellor, is a classic West German West European, with a statue of
Charlemagne in his office. (His brother claims the family is actually descended
from Charlemagne.) There is no doubting his personal European commitment.
On balance,
though, it seems to me that the traffic-light coalition would be the one most
likely to produce the green light for Europe. Last Sunday’s television debate
between the candidates for chancellor apparently reinforced the view of a
plurality of Germans that the Social Democrats’ Olaf Scholz – the solid, steady
and experienced finance minister and deputy chancellor – is the one best
qualified to succeed Merkel. I tend to agree with them.
All the
parties in the two likeliest coalitions seem finally to have grasped the
urgency of addressing climate change and, in their different ways, are
determined to work with the mighty German business sector to organise the
necessary economic transformation. The devil is in the detail, but this will
undoubtedly reinforce the EU’s own green initiatives, led by commission
vice-president Frans Timmermans.
Where the
traffic-light coalition scores over Jamaica is on the eurozone. Either of these
three-party coalitions would almost certainly have a hardline German finance
minister in Christian Lindner of the Free Democrats. (He once told me “there is
only one ministry in Berlin”, meaning the finance ministry.) But a Chancellor
Scholz would be more likely than the fiscally conservative Christian Democrats
to show the pragmatic flexibility that will be needed not merely to prevent the
eurozone from collapsing – any likely German government would do that – but to
make it work better for the long-suffering economies of southern Europe.
Nonetheless,
difficult coalition negotiations between three parties will necessarily produce
complex compromises and therefore a less clear, forceful impulse to Brussels.
And Germany is still only four pineapples. Assuming that French president
Emmanuel Macron ends up fighting the final round of next spring’s presidential
election against the nationalist populist Marine Le Pen, the hope must be that
he will prevail. But having spent some time in France recently, I feel a
nagging unease. The populist witches’ brew that combines the themes of
immigration, Islam, terrorism and crime into a single fear-inducing narrative
is very powerful in France. An unforeseen event, such as a terrorist attack on
the eve of the run-off, could just make the unthinkable happen.
Europe also
needs Italy’s “Super Mario” Draghi to remain as prime minister, rather than
switching over to being the country’s president, possibly triggering an
election in which nationalist populists could also do well. And it needs a
sensible government to remain in power in Spain. Then and only then would you
have, by the middle of next year, the necessary alignment for a post-Covid
period of dynamic European reform.
All this is
possible, but very far from certain. The government that emerges in Berlin is
the first, but only the first, test of whether the European model of change
through democratic consensus can deliver the goods. If democracy does not
deliver, then young Europeans will look for alternative models. In an EU-wide opinion
poll conducted last year for my research team in Oxford, 53% of young Europeans
said they think authoritarian states are better equipped than democracies to
tackle global heating. Europe’s challenge is to prove the opposite – and not
just for the climate crisis.
Timothy
Garton Ash is a Guardian columnist and edited the recent report Young Europeans
Speak to EU



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