Kasper
Full Member
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- Mar 10, 2013
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- Hansa Rostock / Bradford City
Which has no actual implications at all.The worst thing is that the opposition will be lead by a far-right party now. What a shit decision.
Which has no actual implications at all.The worst thing is that the opposition will be lead by a far-right party now. What a shit decision.
I meant that the SPD leading the opposition would have stopped the Afd.Which has no actual implications at all.
1) You didn't phrase it that way.I meant that the SPD leading the opposition would have stopped the Afd.
They get to be the first to respond to the government in the Bundestag. They will be certain to demand ARD & ZDF give them the air time a opposition deserves in a democracy. They won't have any actual power, but it is far from ideal.Which has no actual implications at all.
It's a matter of perspective. They're representing actual, living people that deserve to be heard as much as the rest.They get to be the first to respond to the government in the Bundestag. They will be certain to demand ARD & ZDF give them the air time a opposition deserves in a democracy. They won't have any actual power, but it is far from ideal.
They use populism to appeal to the unworthiest of human instincts. They use fear as a political tool to exploit the ignorance of the unfortunate. While I cannot keep them from entering the Bundestag (and wouldn't want the law to do so) it is well within my democratic right to voice my displeasure about them.It's a matter of perspective. They're representing actual, living people that deserve to be heard as much as the rest.
Go on but I don't think that approach leads to solutions. Those are actual people that voted for them because they want specific things. It's fair to not like what they want but the way to deal with that is not to close them all in a box marked AFD (bad) and put it away somewhere. Democracy is based on negotiation, is it not?They use populism to appeal to the unworthiest of human instincts. They use fear as a political tool to exploit the ignorance of the unfortunate. While I cannot keep them from entering the Bundestag (and wouldn't want the law to do so) it is well within my democratic right to voice my displeasure about them.
Solution for what exactly?Go on but I don't think that approach leads to solutions. Those are actual people that voted for them because they want specific things. It's fair to not like what they want but the way to deal with that is not to close them all in a box marked AFD (bad) and put it away somewhere. Democracy is based on negotiation, is it not?
I'd rather not have them in parliament as well either but I was referring to the specific aspect of being 'opposition leader' which is basically an empty phrase.They get to be the first to respond to the government in the Bundestag. They will be certain to demand ARD & ZDF give them the air time a opposition deserves in a democracy. They won't have any actual power, but it is far from ideal.
[...]I was referring to the specific aspect of being 'opposition leader' which is basically an empty phrase.
Schulz is a tosser for going back on his promise.
There can be change. Who on earth wants more Merkel.What they did on election night was irresposible and stupid. Absolutely the right decision to enter a grand coaliation again. There is no alternative.
When centre left parties fail to change
When centre left parties fail to change
INSA is heavily pro AfD, it was revealed long time ago that the founder is cooperating with the AfD through his other organizations and received payments from them.
Emnid has the SPD at 20 and AfD at 13. Forsa has them at 13 as well.
Anyhow, the SPD is dead. What killed them was their refusal to work with Die Linke a couple of years ago under Lafontaine/Gysi for no reason at all and buying into the conservative/media "Ex SED DEVILS" propaganda. Limited their own options to eternal Große Koalition with CDU/CSU (or were delusional enough to believe SPD + Grüne could reach a majority ever again). CDU/CSU won't make the same mistake. Like in Austria, the Christ Democrats won't have any issues whatsoever to go into a coalition with the AfD once Merkel is gone.
If SPD did a serious approach instead of buying into the demonisation from conservatives they wouldn't have gotten themselves in a situation where they can only be the junior partner of the CDU/CSU and take all the blame for the negatives that comes out of such a coalition.
If the news are correct, the SPD gets foreign-, labour-, finance-, environment-, family-, and justice department. They'll have 4 (out of 7) of the most important resorts under their control, which is great considering that they are only the junior partner (~12% behind conservatives). Overall they got many many things from Merkel. Anyone who fancies centrist social democratic policies should be delighted. Currently anything further to the left doesn't have a majority in Germany.
The government uses the significant fiscal space to throw money at everything.
At the same time the polling numbers for this coalition are plummeting. The next 4 years are going to be interesting. Hopefully the opposition is going to use their power to scrutinize this government properly.
How much in terms of policy is fixed by this 'Koalitionsvertrag' for the coming govt. period?
I had hoped the AfD would score lower, would have loved for them to fail the 5% hurdle. The SPD's result is tragic, and it's mainly down to the government SPD-Union coalition. SPD is quite invisible within Bavaria, so they have nothing really going for them but all misgivings with german federal politics against them.
Yep, here are first results on voting shifts, don't know how accurate:@Synco
It might look like this. But the CSU for sure lost a lot of the voters because of the stunts of Söder and Seehofer in the recent months to anybody but the right wing...
That's right, and certainly responsible for the lion's share of gains for the Greens.I know a lot people that were undecided prior to the election but that for sure wanted to vote but for sure not AFD - and then not CSU or SPD. Somehow like - do not give anything to the established parties but for sure take care that the AFD does not get strong.
Yep, here are first results on voting shifts, don't know how accurate:
https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/bayern-waehlerwanderung-101.html
Indeed a merry-go-round in all directions, as it seems. SPD has lost to all other voter blocs, AfD has won from all (very different amounts, though).
On a second thought, the AfD was there for the first time, so it's obvious they can only have gained from everyone, silly me.Interesting is that they gained from all - but that they even gained more from people that did not vote or that voted protest (or NPD or Republikaner who weren't participating this time) last time...