Green party wins several big city mayor posts in 骋别谤尘补苍测鈥檚 most populous state
骋别谤尘补苍测鈥檚 Green Party in North Rhine-Westphalia, the country鈥檚 most populous state, crowning a surge in municipal elections two weeks ago and highlighting the party's strength ahead of next year's national elections.
While local elections are often dominated by local issues and personalities, commentators noted the broad surge of the Greens across the state in the first round two weeks ago and highlighted several mayoral races where joint candidates supported by the Greens and the conservative CDU, which heads the state government, won. The local elections are seen as proof that a 鈥渓ove match鈥 is in the making on a federal level, Handelsblatt after the first round.
With Germany heading into a 12-month-long run up to the federal elections, which will determine Chancellor Angela Merkel鈥檚 successor, the local election received additional attention. While all three candidates for the leadership of Merkel鈥檚 conservative CDU hail from the state, they each have a set of different priorities. Merkel鈥檚 CDU has gained in federal opinion polls thanks to the government鈥檚 handling of the coronavirus pandemic, but the Green party has kept its second place as climate change remains one of the top concerns among German voters.
In Bonn, the former German capital and seat of the UN鈥檚 climate body, the UNFCCC, the Greens鈥 Katja D枚rner beat conservative incumbent Ashok-Alexander Sridharan (CDU). The most prestigious price in North Rhine-Westphalia鈥檚 local elections 鈥 the mayoralty of Cologne, 骋别谤尘补苍测鈥檚 fourth largest city -- went to independent incumbent Henriette Reker, whom both the conservatives and Greens supported.
A joint candidate of the two parties won in Wuppertal (population: 350,000): Uwe Schneidewind, who until recently headed the Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy think tank, 聽beat the Social Democratic incumbent. Schneidewind ran on a carefully calibrated transformation agenda in the city with a proud industrial tradition that has been battered by decades of structural change, Peter Unfried, columnist for left-leaning daily taz.
The conservative CDU of state premier Armin Laschet, who is vying for the party鈥檚 leadership and with that to succeed Merkel as chancellor, came top overall in the local elections two weeks ago, also winning back the mayoralty in the state capital D眉sseldorf. Laschet is seen as the moderate front-runner to take the party chairman position. His main rival, Friedrich Merz, the former head of the Bundestag鈥檚 conservative parliamentary group, is positioning himself as a more conservative, business-oriented option. The third candidate, former federal environment minister Norbert R枚ttgen, has seen a recent rise in popularity because of his call to end the controversial Nord Stream 2 pipeline project with Russia after the poisoning of Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny. Current party leader Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer decided last year to step aside.
A that nearly half of current voters for Merkel鈥檚 CDU are not sure if they will vote again for the party once she steps down as chancellor. The poll also showed that Markus S枚der, Bavarian prime minister and head of the CDU sister party CSU, is leading in voters鈥 preferences to succeed Merkel as chancellor.