Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Germany’s state of Brandenburg could be on the brink of a major political shift as voters head to the polls this weekend in a neck-and-neck race between the AfD and Social Democrats.
The state hosts Tesla’s first factory in Europe and includes affluent areas within the Berlin commuter belt, but many of its rural villages and farmlands have been in decline for decades.
Hans-Christoph Berndt, the leading candidate of AfD-Brandenburg, is challenging the Social Democrats’ dominance by tapping into local discontent.
“Dramatically declining quality of education can also be seen as an attempt to strip Brandenburgers of their own critical thinking,” he says.
“It’s basically just SPD and AfD. If the SPD loses with a popular candidate, this would have huge ramifications,” he said. “This would mean that the federal government’s negative reputation is so profound now that even a popular candidate in a heartland cannot win an election.”
Schenk explained that while people are generally content with the state government, the federal government is seen as highly unpopular.
“Only 14 percent of people in all of Germany say that the government is doing its job well.”
He also pointed out that energy issues and immigration concerns resonate with Brandenburg’s rural population.
“Brandenburg used to have the biggest oil refinery for Russian oil in Germany, and the federal government stopped importing Russian oil,” Schenk said, adding that the AfD has been the only party to really capitalize on discontent over the proliferation of wind farms in the state.
If the SPD falters in Brandenburg, it could pave the way for the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) to form a coalition, potentially with the support of the left-wing nationalist, populist, Eurosceptic, and socially conservative party the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW).
These parties are often seen as prioritizing ideological positions over rational solutions, reflecting a deepening divide between eastern and western Germany.
Domestic security services have treated the main AfD as a potentially extremist party since 2021, granting security services the right to keep it under surveillance. However, the party denies that it is extremist.
In response to the AfD becoming the strongest party in a federal state for the first time, Scholz urged other parties to block the AfD from governing. The party has since been unable to form a coalition.
The SPD told The Epoch Times that it could not comment. The Epoch Times also contacted the AfD for a response.