SPD and FDP lick their wounds: CDU triumphs in NRW – Greens are kingmakers

SPD and FDP lick their wounds
CDU triumphs in NRW – Greens are kingmakers

Markus Wüst has been Prime Minister of North Rhine-Westphalia since October 2021, but he has convinced: his CDU clearly wins the state elections ahead of the SPD. The Greens will come in third ahead of a “disastrous” FDP. At 55.5 percent, voter turnout reached an all-time low.

Prime Minister Hendrik Wüst’s CDU clearly won the state elections in North Rhine-Westphalia. However, due to heavy losses by the FDP, it is not enough to continue his previous black-yellow coalition. The Greens, who achieve record results, are likely to become the decisive factor in forming a government: there are many indications of black and green. The SPD ended up in second place with a historically poor result. Lead candidate Thomas Kutschaty could still try to forge a traffic light coalition with the Greens and FDP.

According to the preliminary official result, the CDU received 35.7 percent (2017: 33.0) of the votes. The SPD slips to 26.7 percent (2017: 31.2). The third strongest force are the Greens, who imported 18.2 percent and thus almost tripled their result from 2017 (6.4). The FDP loses more than ever in a state election in North Rhine-Westphalia, it only gets 5.9 percent (2017: 12.6) of the votes. The AfD deteriorated to 5.4 percent (2017: 7.4). The left fails again, it only comes to 2.1 percent (2017: 4.9).

“This is the order”

The CDU and the Greens, who were the only ones to gain shares, could now strive for a black-green alliance, as is also the case in Hesse and Baden-Württemberg, but in the southwest under the leadership of the Greens. “This is the task of forming and leading a future government,” said Wüst. “There are two winners tonight. These are the Greens and this is the CDU, my party.”

The 46-year-old announced that he would speak to all factions except for the AfD. Kuschaty, on the other hand, said about a possible traffic light alliance: “We will not close our minds to talks.” The victory of the CDU and the strong result of the Greens “does not automatically mean that a government will be formed between the two”. There are “quite other options conceivable”.

SPD leader Lars Klingbeil emphasized that governments have often been formed from second place. The political director of the federal Greens, Emily Büning, said that she could imagine a coalition with the CDU as well as with the SPD and FDP. However, FDP top candidate Joachim Stamp now sees it as the turn of the election winners, the CDU and the Greens – and assumes that they will form a government.

“Disastrous Defeat”

The North Rhine-Westphalian SPD general secretary Nadja Lüders says: “Of course, the government mandate lies with the CDU and the Greens.” According to an analysis by the Wahlen research group, the election was also a vote against a new edition of the black-yellow coalition. Above all, the voters wanted a red-green alliance.

For the FDP – government partner of the CDU in the state for five years and partner of the SPD and Greens in the federal government since autumn 2021 – it is a bitter defeat. In 2017, with today’s Federal Minister of Finance Christian Lindner as the top candidate, she had become the third strongest force. On Sunday evening she even had to worry about entering the state parliament. Lindner spoke of a “disastrous defeat”.

For the first time, the Greens won direct mandates in a state election in North Rhine-Westphalia, seven at a time. With their strong result, they are now the “kingmakers” in NRW. Her top candidate, Mona Neubaur, declared that her party wanted to have a say in governing in Düsseldorf and “finally make politics up to date”. She called the record result a leap of faith, and the reason for this was also the tailwind from Berlin. The Green politicians in the federal government have shown “attitude and compass” in times of crisis.

“The CDU is back”

The vote in the most populous federal state was considered a “small federal election” and an important mood test for federal politics, Chancellor Olaf Scholz and the new CDU opposition leader Friedrich Merz. 13 million citizens were eligible to vote, about a fifth of all eligible voters in Germany. The result means tailwind not only for the Greens, but also for the CDU and party leader Merz. He wrote on Twitter that evening: “The CDU is back, our forward-looking course has been confirmed.”

For his CDU, it is the second success after the sweeping election victory in Schleswig-Holstein, which ended the series of defeats at federal level and in several states a week ago. Wüst had only taken over the office of head of government in October 2021 from Armin Laschet, who had failed in the federal election as the Union’s candidate for chancellor. Laschet subsequently resigned as CDU federal chairman. Merz also comes from NRW, he had actively supported Wüst in the election campaign. The 46-year-old libertine began his career as general secretary of the NRW-CDU, resigned in 2010 as a result of an affair and later became managing director of the North Rhine-Westphalian newspaper publishers’ association. In 2017 he became Minister of Transport under Laschet.

SPD undercuts itself

NRW has long ceased to be the “homeland” of social democracy. The CDU and SPD have alternated in government in recent electoral terms, and since 2005 no coalition government has lasted more than seven years. Today’s SPD party and faction leader, Kuchaty, was state justice minister in the red-green coalition until 2017. Under the leadership of the 53-year-old, whose level of awareness on the Rhine and Ruhr was rather low until recently, the SPD is now slipping below the result of 2017, which at 31.2 percent marked a historic low.

The AfD, which was kicked out of a state parliament for the first time in Schleswig-Holstein a week ago, is also suffering losses in NRW, but makes it back into the state parliament. The Left Party, which has not been represented in the state parliament for ten years and only just missed the five percent hurdle in 2017, remains outside.

According to the state returning officer, the CDU will get 76 seats in the new state parliament (2017: 72). The SPD received 56 mandates (2017: 69). The Greens have 39 seats (2017: 14), the FDP 12 (2017: 28), and the AfD also has 12 MPs in the state parliament (2017: 16). Voter turnout reached a historic low of 55.5 percent.

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