German
parliament sits for first time with AfD as second biggest party
Far right
party doubles its number of seats, while chancellor-in-waiting, Friedrich Merz,
hopes to form government before Easter
Ajit
Niranjan in Berlin
Tue 25 Mar
2025 05.00 GMT
Germany’s
new parliament sits for the first time on Tuesday with the far-right
Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) the second biggest force, as negotiators seek
to iron out key differences on tax and migration that are likely to dominate a
new coalition government under Friedrich Merz.
The 630
members of the Bundestag, 230 of whom are newly elected, will sit in parliament
at a unique time in postwar German history. The AfD has doubled its number of
seats to 152, while centrist parties are overhauling the country’s military and
fiscal policy in response to rising threats to European security.
The MPs
taking seats on Tuesday range in age from 23 to 84. The youngest is Luke Hoss,
a student from the far-left Die Linke who has promised to give away most of his
€11,000-a-month salary. The oldest is Alexander Gauland, a former journalist
from the AfD who in 2018 downplayed Hitler and the Nazis as “just birdshit in
our more than 1,000-year history”.
The new
parliament contains about 100 fewer MPs than the previous one after the
outgoing government reformed Germany’s electoral law to shrink persistent
bloat. Fewer than a third of MPs in the new Bundestag are women, slightly below
the share in the previous legislature.
The gender
inequality is lowest in the Greens, where women make up 61.2% of MPs, and
highest in the AfD, where they make up 11.8%. Women are also greatly
underrepresented in the centre right, accounting for 22.6% of MPs in the
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and 25% of MPs in the Christian Social Union
(CSU).
Lawmakers of
foreign descent are also disproportionately rare in the new parliament. The
share of MPs with a migration background – those with at least one parent who
was born without German citizenship – is 11.6%, according to estimates from the
nonprofit group Mediendienst Integration, compared to about 30% in the general
population.
Zada Salihović, a 24-year-old from Die Linke who
has become the second-youngest MP in the Bundestag after Hoss, said the new
parliament was “still a
reflection of a privileged minority” that did not adequately represent women, workers, young people, eastern
Germans and people with migrant backgrounds.
“It’s not a
coincidence, it’s an expression of structural barriers and power relations,”
she said. “When parliaments are so homogeneous, it’s not only the perspective
of the majority that’s missing – there’s also a lack of fair solutions.”
The first
sitting will open with a speech from Gregor Gysi, the longest-serving member of
parliament, who began his political career in the Socialist Unity party in
communist East Germany. The 77-year-old will be free to decide the length and
content of his speech, and will chair the session until the president of the
Bundestag is elected.
The CDU/CSU
has nominated the CDU party treasurer, Julia Klöckner, to be Bundestag
president, a position similar to that of the speaker in other countries. The
Greens had protested after reports that Klöckner, the former agriculture
minister under Angela Merkel, had planned to introduce herself to the AfD
faction this week, arguing that it would “send a wrong signal of
normalisation”. Klöckner’s presence at the meeting appeared to have been
cancelled after scheduling conflicts, the news outlet Redaktionsnetzwerk
Deutschland reported on Monday.
Tense
coalition talks are under way between the CDU/CSU, the largest faction in
parliament, and the Social Democratic party (SPD). The chancellor-in-waiting,
Merz, hopes to form a government before Easter.
The probable
incoming government scored an early win this month after securing the support
of the Greens to amend the constitution and loosen Germany’s debt brake. The
proposal, which was approved on Friday by the Bundesrat, a legislative body
akin to an upper house of parliament, paves the way for a debt-financed package
of investments in defence, infrastructure and climate action.
The proposal
would have probably failed to pass in the new parliament, which contains a
“blocking minority” from the AfD and Die Linke, who oppose sending weapons to
Ukraine.
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