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Angela Merkel's party suffers election drubbing in 25-year low | Angela Merkel's party suffers election drubbing in 25-year low |
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Angela Merkel's conservatives suffered their second electoral blow in two weeks on Sunday, slumping to their lowest level since reunification in 1990 in a Berlin city vote in which citizens roundly rejected her open-door refugee policy. | |
Voters turned to the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD), which, with 12.2 per cent of the vote, will enter its 10th regional assembly of the country's 16 states. | |
A year before a federal election, the result is likely to raise pressure on Merkel and deepen divisions within her conservative camp. | |
"There is no question. We didn't get a good result in Berlin today," said Michael Grosse-Broemer, a senior CDU lawmaker said. However, he blamed his party's historic losses in Berlin primarily on local issues. | |
"I think it is dangerous to transfer the Berlin result to the federal level," he told broadcaster ZDF. | |
A backlash against her migrant policy has raised questions about whether Merkel, Europe's most powerful leader, will stand for a fourth term next year. But given a dearth of options in her party, she still looks the most likely candidate. | |
Initial projections from broadcaster ZDF put Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU) on 18 percent, down from 23.3 percent in the last election in 2011. | |
The Social Democrats (SPD) also lost support, falling to 23.1 percent from 28.3 percent but remained the biggest party and are likely to ditch the CDU from their current coalition. | |
The result compounds Merkel's problems after a rout in the eastern state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern two weeks ago triggered calls from her conservative allies in Bavaria to toughen up her migrant policy. In particular, they want a cap of 200,000 refugees per year but Merkel has rejected this outright. | |
The AfD has campaigned heavily on the migrant issue, playing to voters' fears about the integration of the roughly 1 million migrants who entered Germany last year. | |
"From zero to double digits, that's unique for Berlin. The grand coalition has been voted out - not yet at the federal level, but that will happen next year," said AfD candidate Georg Pazderski to cheering supporters after the results. | |
The SPD, Merkel's junior coalition partner at the federal level, wants to form a coalition with the Greens and possibly the radical Left party. | |
The increasingly heated debate about Merkel's migrant policy boosted overall turnout, which jumped to 66 percent, up 6 points from the last election in 2011, according to broadcaster ARD. This was the highest turnout in Berlin since 2001. |