On September 24, 2017, Germany will hold
national elections. Current Chancellor Angela Merkel is running for a fourth
consecutive term, meaning that if she wins and finishes the next term, she will
become the longest serving head of government since World War II, ahead of
Helmut Kohl who served for sixteen years from 1982 to 1998. Angela Merkel was
first elected as chancellor in 2005.
Overview
Germany elects its government as per two
electoral lists. The first vote is a direct vote for the candidate in a
specific district. This vote elects about half of the members of the upcoming
parliament. The second vote is a party-specific vote, in which the electorate
casts its vote for the political party that they would want to see govern for
the next four years. This is actually the key vote as it determines the ruling
arrangement. To illustrate, Angela Merkel is running as a direct candidate in
her own district of Vorpommern-Rügen (in the northeast of the country where she
grew up) and as the head of her Christian Democratic Party (CDU) as part of the
second party vote.
In the end, the German election is not a
direct vote for the chancellor. Rather, it is a vote for a political party. For
the 2017 vote, 42 political parties are vying for the electorate’s vote. Of
those 42 parties, only 7 parties will, in the end, be represented in parliament
as Germany has a 5 percent clause in its electoral law. This clause stipulates
that a political party must gain at least a 5 percent share of the overall vote
in order to gain representation. The majority of the 42 parties, which includes
parties such as the Party for Animal Welfare, the Senior Citizens Party or the
satirical “The Party”, will in the end not come close to reaching the required threshold.
Following the final vote tally, Germany is
traditionally ruled by a coalition of parties, as no single party tends to get
enough votes to gain an absolute majority. Only during the period from 1960 - 1961
did Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and his CDU party gain enough parliamentary
seats to govern alone. All other ruling arrangements have been coalitions of
two or more parties.
Anticipated Scenarios
Currently, Germany is governed by a
so-called “grand coalition” composed of the two major political parties in
Germany; the CDU[1] representing
the right-of–center political spectrum and the Social Democratic Party (SPD)
representing the left-of-center position. In addition to these two, the following
parties are expected to enter the parliament for the next four years: the
Alternative for Germany (AFD – conservative right party running on an
anti-immigrant platform); the Free Democratic Party (FDP – liberal positions
based on degrees of individual responsibility); the Green Party
(environmentally conscious movement) and the Left Party (Linke – successor
party of the former Communist Party of East Germany prior to 1989).
The final composition of the upcoming
government will be determined by which parties can realistically put together a
majority-government. Given the current polling data[2],
the vote on September 24 will result in the CDU coming in first place with
approximately 35 percent of the vote, followed by the SPD with an average of 23
percent and with the other four parties (AFD, FDP, Greens and Left) vying for
third place, which each projected to receive between 8 to 11 percent of the
total vote.
Given the fact, that no party is ready to
enter into a coalition with the AFD, given the AFD’s anti-immigrant and severe
rightist stances, there are only 3 possible coalition outcomes: a continuation
of the grand coalition between the CDU and the SPD, a conservative-liberal
alliance between the CDU and the FDP, or a potentially path-breaking so-called
“Jamaica” coalition between the CDU, the FDP and the Green Party (Jamaica as
based on the colors of the parties – black, yellow and green). The Social
Democrats will be unable to form an alternative leftist coalition, if current
poll data is to be trusted.
“Boring” Election Campaign
The election campaign has been
characterized by most observers as boring and uninspiring. The Social
Democratic candidate, Martin Schulz, has run a campaign focused on social
fairness. Despite that Schulz was able to gain some percentage points when he
first announced its candidacy at the beginning of 2017, Angela Merkel and her
CDU were quickly able to regain their majority status over the following
months.
In a much anticipated direct debate between
Merkel and Schulz at the end of August, the challenger Schulz tried to attack
Merkel for a variety of positions ranging from growing economic inequality, the
immigration debate, and future of relations with Turkey (a contentious issue
given the growing rift between the German government and Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan over the arrest of German citizens in Turkey), but Schulz was
unable to score any definite points against the sitting chancellor.
Angela Merkel, meanwhile, has run her
campaign on a continuation of her past policies suggesting that while Germany
faces numerous challenges to be tackled, in particular in areas such as
education reform and digitalization, the overall situation of the German
population was satisfactory. Opinion polls suggest that most Germans do view
their own situation as not sufficient enough to warrant a change in government.
Most observers, thus, characterized the television debate as being simply an
advertisement for a continuation of the current grand coalition.
The one unknown factor, meanwhile, is the
relatively large number of still undecided voters. Whether this is significant
enough to change the expected election outcome remains to be seen.
Unintended Consequences
The main debate within the Social Democratic
party is whether they should risk the way into the opposition or continue as Merkel’s
junior partner in a grand coalition. One of the main criticisms of the past
eight years of grand coalition government is the fact that Germany has been
ruled by a large degree of consensus politics among the two main parties. Thus,
the system gave no enough room for contentious debate, where opposition
politics deemed essential for a thriving democratic system.
In all aspects of the current electoral
make-up, the smaller political parties have at the moment no chance to prevent
decisions of the CDU or the SPD from being enacted. In the medium- to
long-term, political commentators view such a situation as being detrimental to
the future of Germany’s political democratic culture. The rise of the AFD as a
neo-conservative rightist party with fascist overtones is cited as a direct
result of this deteriorating situation.
All of this suggests another period of
consensus politics inside Germany. However, that will have little impact on
tackling rising challenges such as the growing rift between the rich and poor,
or the rising poverty levels among Germany’s senior citizens. Figures and data
demonstrate that Germany’s social security system is no longer adequate in
alleviating growing rifts within society. The main magazine in Germany, Der Spiegel, highlighted this issue with
reference to the so-called “Wutbürger” i.e. those people that are simply driven
by rage and who are ready to vote for parties outside the given mainstream.[3]
What this points to is a period of increased division and contention over the
coming four years given the indication that Angela Merkel once elected will
simply continue with the same governing style that she has practiced over the
past 12 years. If the social climate
were to become more contentious, there are no guarantees that Angela Merkel would
in fact be able to finish her term to the end.
No Shifts in Foreign Policies
Whatever the outcome of the election, the
result is unlikely to bring about a significant change in the foreign policy
orientation of Germany, in particular when it comes to the Gulf region. Germany
still sees itself as a strategic partner of the GCC countries and wants to
benefit economically from a continued relationship. Yet, the debate over the
continuation of the Iran nuclear deal (which Germany strongly supports) and the
recent rift within the GCC over Qatar also have exposed some of the limitations
of German and European approach when it comes to the Gulf.
Germany will continue to try to balance out
the various contradictions that currently define the Gulf security environment
but it will find itself in a difficult position to maintain that balance. The
new German government will, thus, find itself challenged to find the right tone
in order not to damage its strategic relations with the important Gulf region.
[1] The CDU itself governs in a coalition with the Christian Socialist
Union (CSU), its sister variant in the state of Bavaria. While technically, the
two parties could represent different positions, they have partnered since of
founding of the Federal Republic in 1949. This coalition will also continue for
the foreseeable future.
[2] See, for example, http://www.forschungsgruppe.de/Aktuelles/Politbarometer/
(accessed September 18, 2017)
[3] See, for example, the Spiegel issue of September 9, 2017 (issue 37)
with its cover story “Alles wird Wut” – Everything will be rage, a play of
words on the German “Alles wird Gut” meaning everything will be fine.