Far right
gains stronger foothold in western Germany
Chancellor
Friedrich Merz’s conservatives came out on top in municipal elections in the
country’s most populous state, but the Alternative for Germany party nearly
tripled its support.
September
14, 2025 10:44 pm CET
By James
Angelos
https://www.politico.eu/article/far-right-afd-west-germany-vote-cdu-spd-polls/
BERLIN —
The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party nearly tripled its support in
municipal elections in Germany’s most populous state on Sunday, according to
initial results.
The
results in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, in Germany’s west, underscored
the party’s growing appeal to voters outside its strongholds in the states of
the former East Germany, where it is the strongest political force.
AfD
leaders now see the more populous west of the country — including the declining
industrial cities of North Rhine-Westphalia, home to steel factories and a
diminishing coal industry — as the key to expanding the party’s base,
particularly with working-class voters increasingly defecting to the far right.
The AfD
won nearly 15 percent of votes in the state, coming in third place, according
to the initial results. In the last municipal elections in North
Rhine-Westphalia five years ago, the party won 5.1 percent of votes. In the
city of Gelsenkirchen, a former center of heavy industry, the AfD candidate
appeared set to face a center-left politician in a runoff for mayor.
German
Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) still
came out clearly ahead of all other parties with 33 percent of the total vote,
according to initial results. Merz’s coalition partners in the center-left
Social Democratic Party (SPD) — once the dominant political power in North
Rhine-Westphalia’s industrial centers — came in second with around 22 percent,
according to an early tally. These vote shares are slightly lower than results
for the parties in the state’s municipal elections five years ago.
The
elections, while having no direct effect on national politics, were widely seen
as a barometer of the national mood, coming roughly four months after Merz took
office. Some of Germany’s conservative and centrist politicians expressed
relief that the CDU and SPD performed as well as they did, since both parties
have seen their national poll numbers slump while the AfD’s have risen.
“All
Christian Democrats will be delighted with this result,” Hendrik Wüst, the
conservative premier of North Rhine-Westphalia, said in a televised interview
shortly after the polls closed. At the same time, Wüst added, the AfD’s strong
result “cannot allow us sleep peacefully.”
Centrist
politicians must ask themselves “what the right answers are when it comes to
poverty and migration,” Wüst said. “Are all parts of our welfare system really
fair? What about problems with housing costs? Some issues have been allowed to
drag on for a very long time.”
In
Germany’s federal election in February, the AfD came in second with 20.6
percent of the vote, the best national result for a far-right party in
Germany’s postwar history. The AfD’s success rested largely on its dominance in
the former East Germany, where it came first in virtually all regions.
Since
then the AfD has become even more popular despite being designated as an
extremist party by Germany’s domestic intelligence agency, intensifying a
simmering debate as to whether the party should be banned under the provisions
of Germany’s constitution.
AfD
leaders are now intent on increasing their support in the former West Germany.
Turnout in the North Rhine-Westphalia municipal elections increased
significantly to 58 percent on Sunday, according to exit poll data, suggesting
the party may have mobilized new voters.
AfD
politicians celebrated the results. “A huge success,” Alice Weidel, a national
party leader, wrote on X.
“We have
cemented our voter base,” Enxhi Seli-Zacharias, an AfD politician in North
Rhine-Westphalia, added in a televised interview. “It is no longer purely a
vote of frustration.”

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