Merz’s party leads, far right makes gains in Rhineland-Palatinate state election

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The CDU has taken victory in Rhineland-Palatinate, ensuring they will lead the state’s next government and ousting a state-wide traffic light coalition led by the SPD.

By Sunday evening it was already clear, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s conservatives are set to oust the centre-left Social Democratic Party on Sunday in a closely watched state election in which the far right also made big gains.

Merz’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU) took around 31 percent of the vote, according to preliminary results published by Tagesschau, and looks poised to win the western state of Rhineland-Palatinate after 35 years under the SPD, which took 25.9 percent.

The far-right Alternative for Germany party (AfD) meanwhile won their top result in a western German state, with 19.5 percent.

AfD co-leader Alice Weidel hailed the result — more than double the insurgent anti-immigration party’s score in the state’s last elections — as a “great success”, in a message on X.

The AfD looks set to pose a bigger threat to the two centrist parties in several state elections in September in the country’s ex-communist east.

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CDU candidate Gordon Schneider meanwhile claimed victory and vowed to bring change in the state’s education, security, health and economic policy.

The CDU had enjoyed a narrow lead in opinion polls over the SPD, their coalition partners at the national level.

The state of Rhineland-Palatinate, bordering France, Belgium and Luxembourg and with a population of about four million, is known for its steep river valleys, many lined with vineyards and topped by castles.

It is also home to heavy industry, including steelmakers and chemicals giant BASF, and hosts several US military facilities, including the sprawling Ramstein Air Base.

Outgoing SPD premier Alexander Schweitzer, 52, had campaigned in hopes of holding together his coalition with the Greens and liberal Free Democrats.

But Schnieder, 50, is now poised to bring his party back in power there for the first time since 1991.

The CDU victory, is a shot in the arm for Merz, who has faced poor popularity ratings and struggled to meet his campaign pledge of rebooting Europe’s biggest economy after years of stagnation.

READ ALSO: Economists warn German government is misusing investment spending

Merz had campaigned with Schneider — brother of his transport minister, Patrick Schnieder — but stressed the state election should not distract the CDU and SPD from their government cooperation at the national level.

SPD struggles

Losing the onetime SPD stronghold is a setback for Germany’s traditional labour party, whose fortunes have faded in recent years amid a string of bitter electoral defeats.

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Nationally, the SPD hit a historic low point last year, when ex-chancellor Olaf Scholz led them to their worst result in more than a century — 16.4 percent — in a February 2025 election.

Nationally, the AfD is now polling neck-and-neck with the CDU, with both at around 25 percent.

Josephine, a 20-year-old student, said she voted to prevent “a slide to the right”.

“We have to make sure we don’t go in a direction that history has already shown us, and we must preserve what we have built in recent years,” she said as she voted in Mainz, the region’s capital.

In September, voters in eastern Germany will take part in several state elections, with the AfD expected to perform particularly well and potentially claim outright majorities.

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Any alliance with the AfD remains taboo in the country, with all other parties refusing to cooperate with the far right.

The CDU faced a bitter defeat earlier this month in the larger state of Baden-Wuerttemberg, where missteps squandered a large lead in the polls to allow the Greens to claim victory.

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: thelocal.de