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Merkel’s Conservatives Win Elections in Socialist Rival’s Traditional Heartland | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks during an election rally in Aachen, Germany, May 13, 2017. (Reuters)


German Chancellor Angela Merkel struck a major blow to her rival center-left Social Democrats after her conservative party won a state election in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia on Sunday.

The region is Germany’s most populous and has been led by the center-left Social Democrats for all but five years since 1966.

It is also the home state of Martin Schulz, the Social Democrat seeking to deny Merkel a fourth term in the September 24 election. Schulz was hoping for a boost after two previous state election defeats sapped his party’s momentum.

Instead, Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union won 33 percent of the vote in the election for the state legislature, with the Social Democrats trailing on 31.2 percent.

Social Democrat governor Hannelore Kraft’s coalition lost its majority as her junior governing partners, the Greens, took only 6.4 percent. Conservative challenger Armin Laschet, a deputy leader of Merkel’s party, was set to replace Kraft.

“The CDU has won the heartland of the Social Democrats,” said the conservatives’ general secretary, Peter Tauber.

“This is a difficult day for the Social Democrats, a difficult day for me personally as well,” Schulz, who wasn’t on the ballot Sunday, told supporters in Berlin. “I come from the state in which we took a really stinging defeat today.”

But he urged the party to concentrate now on the national election. He said that “we will sharpen our profile further — we have to as well.”

“We will continue fighting; the result will come on September 24,” Schulz said.

The Social Democrats’ national ratings soared after Schulz, a former European Parliament president, was nominated in January as Merkel’s challenger. But defeats in two other state elections since late March punctured the party’s euphoria over Schulz’s nomination.

The Social Democrats’ result in Sunday’s election, the last before the national vote, was their worst in North Rhine-Westphalia since World War II. In the state’s last election in 2012, the Social Democrats beat the CDU by 39.1 percent to 26.3 percent.

The pro-business Free Democrats won a strong 12.6 percent of the vote Sunday after a campaign headed by their national leader, Christian Lindner. That gave the party, with which Merkel governed Germany from 2009 to 2013, a strong base for its drive to return to the national parliament in September after it was ejected four years ago.

The nationalist Alternative for Germany won 7.4 percent, giving it seats in its 13th state legislature. The opposition Left Party fell just short of the 5 percent needed to win seats.

After a blaze of publicity earlier this year, Schulz — who chose not to join the government when he returned to Germany in January — has struggled to maintain a high profile. He has focused on addressing perceived economic injustices, but critics have accused him of providing too little detail of his aims.

He admitted Monday that his party faces a “rocky road” to September elections.

“We suffered a difficult moment last night,” said Schulz on Monday at the SPD’s headquarters.

“One thing that is totally clear is that, before general elections on September 24, we’ll have a long way to go. It is a rocky road, but the SPD is a battle-hardened party and we will put up a fight in the elections,” he said.

The SPD had already suffered two setbacks since Schulz took over, with the CDU scoring strong victories in the small states of Saarland and Schleswig-Holstein.