Virtual ghost
Complex paradigm
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2008
- Messages
- 22,133
Since you are always interested in trends:
It very much looks like the CDU will head the next government, the question is with whom. There have been intense debate within the party with Söder saying they should definitely not work with the Greens, Merz saying he'll not work with the Greens "as of now" (which, mind you, was before the party leadership stepped down collectively so he could have a ready excuse for changing course) and several others who have actually already worked with them in a regional level saying that black and green actually works just fine and is very productive.
A lot can Change in a year of course and it's difficult to fortell where polla will BE going by then.
Der Spiegel just published an article suggesting that parts of the CDU and SPD are already preparing a return of the grand coalition (the headline of the article is "The Specter of the Grand Coalition Returns", lol)
The fact that CDU will lead next government is something that I already realized on my own. That is completely obvious if you know anything about German politics. Therefore the most natural junior partner is indeed SPD.
The only problem is that currently those two have 47% of the vote in the polling average on Politico. However many smaller parties wouldn't make it and that probably applies to FDP as well. So that should provide the two main parties with 50+% of the seats. The only problem is if the sum of both parties will be bellow 47% in a year from now. In other words if CDU has to govern with SPD and greens that really is opening the question if this is worth it for them. What means that it would perhaps make more sense to have "honest conversation" with AfD instead. After all center right + far right is the new trend all around Europe.
I know that I am not comforting but I am just trying show that I am familiar with all the details of the topic.
In a sense its the same with the Russians and Ukraine / the whole of eastern europe, there's no conceiving anything new or different or better than something they imagine existed in the past. Its a flaw in all the conservative or pseudo-conservative / traditionalist ideologies that can adapt or innovate.