Wednesday, October 17, 2018

Bavarian Parliamentary Election Results


Germany held Parliamentary elections on Sunday 10/14/18.

The Liberal Christian Social Union Party got 37.2%.The Liberal Green Party got 17.5%. The Conservative Free Voter’s Party got 11.6%. The Conservative AFD Party got 10.2%. The Liberal Social Democrat Party got 9.7%. The Liberal FDP got 5.1%.

The Liberal Green Party took seats from the other Liberal parties. The Conservative parties took seats from the Liberal coalition parties. 

Wikipedia reports: The 2018 Bavarian state election took place on 14 October 2018 to elect the 180 members of the 18th Landtag of Bavaria.
The parties of the CDU/CSU-SPD federal-government grand coalition suffered heavy losses. The CSU and the SPD both lost more than 10 percentage points compared to the 2013 election, finishing at 37.2% (CSU) and 9.7% (SPD) respectively. AfD, which ran in Bavaria for the first time, made double-digit gains and won 10.2% of the total vote. The Greens gained 8.9pp and hence finished as the second strongest party, at 17.5%, replacing the SPD. The FDP, which failed to enter the Landtag in 2013, barely made it with 5.1% (+1.8pp) as the smallest party in the new legislature; the Bavarian Free Voters gained 2.6pp and finished third, slightly ahead of AfD at 11.6%. All other parties failed to cross the 5% threshold required to make it into the Bavarian Landtag.
Turnout increased by 8.8pp to 72.4%.[2]

(AJC, 10/15/18, page A8 reported “Bavaria’s controlling party, a Merkel ally, loses ground. 

Germany: On eve of important regional election, German Leftists of all stripes head to the streets, by Ann Corcoran, 10/14/18.

Invasion of Europe news…..There was a massive (by all accounts) demonstration in Berlin yesterday, just as Bavarians in the south headed to the polls for a critical election today. First, on the election, a sampling of headlines says it all!

At CNN: Bavarians vote in election that may spell doom for Merkel

At Reuters: Merkel’s Bavarian allies brace for bruising in state election

At The Express: German Bavaria election polls: Angela Merkel IN CHAOS as Chancellor holds on by a thread

We are the World? Therein lies the problem! But meanwhile in Berlin tens of thousands rallied for, well, everything! 

A hodge podge of Leftwing interest groups took to the streets ostensibly under a banner of opposition to racism and populism.  They want unity in Germany.

Underlying it all, of course, is the disastrous decision by the Merkel government to welcome hundreds of thousands of migrants from the Middle East and Africa to the country beginning in 2014-2015. Not much hope of unity now!

From Deutsche Welle: Berlin protests against far-right politics draw thousands    

Over 200,000 people have taken to the streets of Berlin to face down the rise of far-right populism in Germany and Europe. The protesters were demanding more solidarity with marginalized groups.

Berlin produced an absurdly hot and sunny fall day on Saturday to welcome an estimated 240,000 people demonstrating against racism and calling for solidarity against the rise of far-right populism across Germany.

Julia Naji joined Saturday’s protest to represent Cycling Friends, a Berlin initiative that, among other things, runs cycling classes for refugees. “Today, people will meet up and show that we should fight against racism and homophobia as loudly and with as many people as possible,” she told DW.

A 5-kilometer (3-mile) stretch of the capital city’s center, from Alexanderplatz through the Brandenburg Gate to the Victory Column, had to be closed down to accommodate the huge parade, which was united under the hashtag #unteilbar (“indivisible”).

The crowds were punctuated by 40 trucks mounted with loudspeakers, some delivering political messages, others pumping out music of all genres. They also included the traditional Berlin staple: the techno truck surrounded by semi-clothed dancers. The march was bookended by two concert events, the second of which was expected to stretch into the evening.

All kinds of organizations joined in, including trade unions, NGOs, political parties (both mainstream and fringe), gay rights groups, schools and theaters, all carrying a variety of banners, each with their own cause to promote (Ryanair workers were a conspicuous presence), but all united behind the slogan: “Solidarity not marginalization.”

Senior government figures lent their support to the demonstration, most notably Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, who tweeted: “It is a great signal that so many people are going on the streets and showing a clear position: We are indivisible. We won’t let ourselves be divided — certainly not by right-wing populists.” More here.

See my ‘Invasion of Europe’ archive here. And, I have written dozens of posts on dear Deutschland, here.
‘We are the world’ reminded me of one of my favorite youtube spoofs—-We con the world.  See it here.


Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader

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