Far-right
AfD’s vote triples in elections in German bellwether state
Party
takes 16.5% of the vote in North Rhine-Westphalia, behind governing CDU and
Social Democrats
Kate
Connolly in Berlin
Sun 14
Sep 2025 18.32 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/sep/14/germany-north-rhine-westphalia-local-elections-vote
Germany’s
far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party has more than tripled its
support in local elections in the country’s most populous state, a poll seen as
Friedrich Merz’s first significant electoral test since he took office as
chancellor four months ago.
According
to exit poll results from North Rhine-Westphalia, Merz’s Christian Democrats
won with 34% – about the equivalent of its historically worst result in the
same poll in 2020 – while the AfD secured 16.5%.
North
Rhine-Westphalia, home to almost a quarter of Germany’s citizens and made up of
swathes of agricultural land, post-industrial towns and cities with large
multi-ethnic and student populations, is viewed as something of a bellwether
for the country as a whole.
Almost 14
million people were eligible to vote, equivalent to the size of some EU
countries, and larger than the electorate of all east German states, where the
AfD is strongest. The vote determines 20,000 seats in the councils of more than
320 towns, cities and municipalities as well as the positions of mayors and
lord mayors across the state. Voter turnover was 59%, up from 2020.
Merz’s
conservative CDU fulfilled predictions that it would retain its dominant
position in the state. The Social Democrats, its junior coalition partner in
the federal government, came in second with 22.5%, a small drop from its result
in 2020 that defied pollsters’ predictions that it was facing heavy losses. The
SPD has struggled to retain support in some areas, in particular former
coalmining regions where it was once sure of victory.
The AfD’s
strong showing lived up to pollsters’ predictions, more than tripling its
standing from five years ago when it secured 5.1%, and giving its candidates
who are running for mayoral positions a considerable chance of reaching
second-round votes in two weeks’ time.
The AfD’s
gains appear to have been made on the back of heavy losses for the Greens and
the pro-business Free Democratic party. The far-left Die Linke secured 5.5%,
putting it above its 2020 result of 3.8%.
Political
observers say the vote indicates the AfD is on track to repeat the big gains it
has made in the states of the former communist east, where it has been most
successful at drawing on voters’ disgruntlement with the status quo. It has set
as its goal to enter the federal government by 2027. Currently it is the
largest opposition party in parliament.
The vote
took place against the backdrop of a weakened German economy, rising
unemployment and growing unease over immigration – the AfD’s key issue. Merz
has pledged to get the economy back on track, reduce immigration and cut the
far right down to size.
Since
February’s federal election, the AfD has come top in several national opinion
polls. The more success the AfD achieves in securing a foothold in local
political positions, by securing mayoralties and councillor posts, the harder
it will be for the mainstream parties to uphold their pledge to maintain a
“firewall” preventing political collaboration with the AfD at the federal
level, experts say.
International
issues also played a role in the North Rhine-Westphalia campaign, even if they
only indirectly affect local political issues, with Merz seen as a bolder
figure in representing Germany’s interests abroad than his Social Democrat
predecessor, Olaf Scholz.
Particular
attention has been given to the role he has forged in trying to bring European
allies together over the defence of Ukraine as the Trump administration
vacillates over its backing. But on immigration, where he has pledged to
dramatically change Germany’s policy, voters have said they are not so
convinced, despite the fact that numbers have dropped in recent months.
The AfD
has presented itself as a confident alternative, scoring points with voters on
issues such as energy provision, education and above all immigration, even
though these policy areas are not decided at the local level.

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