BERLIN: A regional election in Lower Saxony delivered mixed fortunes for German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s national ruling coalition on Sunday (Oct 9), with his Social Democrats scoring a clear win but the Free Democrats barely on track to scrape into parliament.
While the result signalled support for Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD), some experts said the drubbing of its federal coalition partner risked destabilising Scholz’s administration at a critical time as Berlin strives to avert energy shortages and further escalation of the war in Ukraine.
The other clear winner in Lower Saxony was the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), reflecting a broader upsurge in support for the party across the country amid frustrations over the cost-of-living crisis in Europe’s largest economy.
Overall, considered as a gauge of the national mood, the local election sent a mixed message on Scholz’s three-way “traffic light” federal coalition of the SPD, Greens and Free Democrats (FDP).
The FDP, a pro-business party that’s never been a natural ideological fit with the centre-left SPD and Greens, called the Lower Saxony result a “blow” and blamed, in part, his party’s participation in the national administration.
“Many of our supporters feel alienated by this coalition,” said FDP leader and German Finance Minister Christian Lindner.
Philipp Koeker, political scientist at the University of Hanover, the capital of Lower Saxony, said the result had the potential to destabilize Scholz’s coalition at a federal level.
“The FDP will now be considerably less likely to back any policies that do not fit its programme,” he said. “This could even lead coalition partners to seek support from opposition parties.”
Projected results from state broadcaster ZDF showed the SPD winning 33.2 per cent of the vote in Lower Saxony, an the economically powerful swing state of 8 million people, home to carmaker Volkswagen, though that was down 3.7 percentage points compared to the last state election in 2017.
The pro-business FDP looks set to only just make the 5 per cent threshold to enter the state parliament, while the AfD was on track to nearly double its share of the vote to 11.7 per cent.
Analysts said the SPD benefited from the popularity of its incumbent Lower Saxony premier Stephan Weil, who won his third consecutive term and is seen as a steady hand in uncertain times.
Support for the party, which lost the two previous regional votes in Germany this year, has slumped to 18-20 per cent at national level after scoring 25.7 per cent in the 2021 federal election.
State governments can influence national politics in the upper house of the national parliament. They also have jurisdiction over important sectors such as the local police and education, give the federal nature of Germany.
In Lower Saxony, the SPD came in well ahead of the conservatives of former Chancellor Angela Merkel who were in second place on 28 per cent, down 5.6 percentage points.
The ZDF exit poll put the Greens, whose ministers are currently Germany’s most popular politicians, on 14 per cent or 5.3 percentage points more than in 2017.
That could enable the SPD to potentially break from the conservatives, with whom they have been ruling in a grand coalition in Lower Saxony, and link up with the Greens instead.