[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Chancellor Angela Markel has been re-elected for a fourth term, in federal elections dubbed as “political earthquake” with much weaker strings, forcing her to reconsider her policies on extending asylum and giving refugee status for those fleeing their homelands due to violence.
The conservative Christian Democrat (CDU) – Christian Social Union (CSU) bloc, headed by Markel, has seen the worst results in 70 years but will remain the largest group in the German parliament known as Bundestag .
Social Democratic SPD, its coalition partner, has decided to sit with opposition. It’s leader Martin Schulz said the outcome meant the end of the “grand coalition” with Mrs. Markel’s alliance. He was quoted saying, “It’s a difficult and bitter day for social democrats in Germany. We haven’t reached our objective.”
The nationalist Alternative for Germany (AfD) has emerged as third largest party in the parliament. This would be for the first time when members of six political parties will sit in the house.
According to Deutche Welle, Angela Markel has won a fourth term, but official results have shown she will have a “tough road” for coalition talks. While CDU remains the largest party, the far right AfD will be the third biggest political force.
Markel reacting to the election results said, “We had hoped for a better results,” to a clapping but subdued crowd at her party headquarters in Berlin. She spoke of “tough weeks ahead” but expressed confidence that Germany would have a new government by Christmas.
She promised to listen to the “concerns, worries and anxieties” of voters of the AfD in order to win them back. “Today we can say that we have a mandate to assume responsibility and we’re going to assume this responsibility calmly, taking with our partners of course,” she said.
The right wing, nationalist anti-Islam AfD party supporters gathered outside their headquarters in Berlin showing some placards saying “Refugees are welcome”. The party has capitalized on a backlash against Markel’s policy towards migrants and refugees, many of them from war-torn, mainly Muslim countries like Syria.
With all 299 constituencies results declared, Chancellor Angela Markel’s CDU and its Baverian sister party the CSU have gained 33 percent of the votes much less than 41.5 percent they got 2013. Hence Markel is about to begin a far less stable administration than in her past three terms.
Rival Social Democrats (SPD) tumbled to a mere 20.5 percent, while the Green and Left parties remained at 8.9 and 9.2 percent respectively where they stood in 2013 elections.
BBC correspondent adds that the Chancellor is being punished for opening Germany’s door to almost 900,000 undocumented refugees and migrants.
A prominent AfD leader Frauke Petry has said that Germany experienced an incompatible “political earthquake” and asserted that his party’s performance was better than forecast in the opinion polls.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]