Testing times for Merkel in three German state votes
GERMANY German voters go to the polls Sunday in the first of three
quick-fire state ballots which could hand Chancellor Angela Merkel's
coalition ally a drubbing ahead of a 2013 national election.
After a gruelling seven regional votes last year, Merkel and her
junior Free Democrats were only slated to fight one in 2012, but that
unexpectedly swelled to three after the sudden collapse of two state
governments.
Analysts say the three votes, taking place over a eight-week period,
pose no direct challenge to the chancellor, whose conservative Christian
Democratic Union (CDU), as well as her own approval rating, is riding
high in the polls.
However, all eyes will be on the fate of her junior coalition
partner, the pro-business Free Democratic Party (FDP), who, polls
suggest, could be kicked out of all three regional parliaments.
“The situation for the FDP is quite serious, and we know that,”
Christian Lindner, the party's main hopeful in the pivotal western North
Rhine-Westphalia state election on May 13, said on ZDF television.
As Germany's most populous state with 18 million people and a major
industrial base, NRW's centre-left minority government fell after just
22 months over a budget dispute.
The state historically plays a big role in federal politics -- in
2005, a lost vote in NRW prompted then chancellor Gerhard Schroeder to
call a snap federal election, which he then lost to Merkel.
A week later, another strategically-important vote takes place in
northern Schleswig-Holstein.
But the electoral season kicks off Sunday in Saarland, a small region
of about 800,000 voters bordering France and Luxembourg, where the CDU
is polling neck-and-neck with the main opposition Social Democratic
Party (SPD).
Both parties' leading candidates have indicated a willingness to form
a “grand coalition”, leaving the question of which of them will head it
as state premier the only likely suspense in the race.
The snap vote in the western state, whose traditional coal mining
industry has been replaced by car and other manufacturing, was called
after the coalition of FDP, CDU and Greens collapsed in January.
Results in the three polls will give Merkel key pointers ahead of
fighting for a third time in office in the 2013 national vote, Werner
Weidenfeld, of the centre for applied political research at Munich's LMU
university, said.
“The state legislative elections indicate how the majorities in
Germany fall into place in view of the next general elections,” he said.
AFP |