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POLITICS

How the German government will be tested in 2023 with four state elections

Bavaria, Hesse, Bremen, and Berlin are all set to have state parliament elections this year – with the capital having to repeat the one it ran barely a year ago. What does that mean for the federal traffic light coalition’s agenda?

Annalena Baerbock and Robert Habeck of the Greens with the SPD's Olaf Scholz and the FDP's Christian Lindner in November 2021 during coalition agreement negotiations.
Annalena Baerbock and Robert Habeck of the Greens with the SPD's Olaf Scholz and the FDP's Christian Lindner in November 2021 during coalition agreement negotiations. Lindner's FDP may end up being battered in 2023 state elections, whereas the Greens might have the most to gain. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Michael Kappeler

Although they’re not facing a federal vote until 2025, Germany’s government will be tested several times this year. Four of the country’s 16 federal states will vote in 2023.

Campaigning and voting has already started in Berlin, ahead of February 12th’s Wiederholungswahl – or “repeat vote.” Berliners will be voting again for the same choices of candidates, after the state constitutional court declared the 2021 Berlin vote invalid due to logistical snafus with Berlin Marathon roadblocks preventing ballots from reaching polling stations.

As the year rolls on, we’ll see Bremen vote on May 14th and Bavaria on October 8th. Hesse will vote sometime in autumn but the exact date isn’t clear yet.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: Why Berlin could vote again after 2021 election disaster

Federal politicians like Chancellor Olaf Scholz will keep their eye on state elections for two main reasons. The first is that it’s a litmus test for how popular each of the parties are doing. The second is that each state election may theoretically end up changing the composition of the Bundesrat – Germany’s upper chamber that represents the states. Depending on the law being considered, that can sometimes make it harder for the federal government to pass laws.

State elections as a popularity contest

The party most concerned about state election results is likely to be the liberal Free Democrats (FDP). Their poll ratings have had the biggest drop of the three governing parties since taking office and state-level votes could end up confirming this. Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD) have also lost popularity, but to a slightly lesser extent.

“If the liberals’ negative trend continues in the 2023 elections, it will shake the coalition federally,” Uwe Jun, a Professor of Political Science at the University of Trier, told the Tagesspiegel newspaper.

The Greens’ Bettina Jarasch und the SPD’s Franziska Giffey are facing off for the Mayor’s office in Berlin’s repeat election this February. Photo: picture alliance/dpa/dpa-Zentralbild/POOL | Soeren Stache

Meanwhile, the Greens and conservative Christian Democrats have enjoyed rises in popularity and may well be looking forward to state results. In Berlin, polls are close enough between current SPD Mayor Franziska Giffey, Green candidate Bettina Jarasch, and CDU leader Kai Wegner that the Mayor’s office may well change hands. At 25 percent in the polls, there’s even the possibility the conservatives could take the Berlin Mayor’s office for the first time in over 20 years.

State elections and the Bundesrat

When a new state government is elected, it sends new representatives to Germany’s upper chamber – the Bundesrat. Since laws in Germany have to pass both the Bundestag and the Bundesrat, a German Chancellor will always have his or her eye on their Bundesrat majority. As each year usually sees a handful of state elections, each year tends to offer several chances for the Bundesrat’s makeup of delegates to change.

The current party composition of Germany’s upper legislative chamber, the Bundesrat, which represents state governments. A citizenship reform bill must pass both the Bundestag and Bundesrat. But a Bundesrat veto will be hard to achieve and its composition is unlikely to change much in 2023. Image: Bundesrat

The current polls though, suggest the Bundesrat’s makeup is unlikely to change very much. Both Bavaria’s and Bremen’s state governments are on track to be comfortably re-elected – something that might well happen in Berlin too. In Hesse, either the Greens or SPD look likely to take state leadership from the conservative CDU. That’ll make it even easier for Olaf Scholz to pass traffic light coalition legislation federally.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: Could Germany’s conservatives block dual citizenship?

Certain landmark legislation, such as the federal government’s citizenship reform bill – which will allow dual citizenship and shorten the time someone needs to be resident in Germany before naturalising – is also likely to pass in summer. That’ll be after Berlin and Bremen have voted but before Bavaria and Hesse, meaning that not enough seats could even theoretically change hands in the Bundesrat to block the bill before it passes.

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POLITICS

Macron’s German teacher opens up about ‘ideal student’

When Emmanuel Macron switches to German as he makes a keynote address in Dresden later on Monday, Frank Gröninger will be all ears to detect if the French president has internalised his instructions.

Macron's German teacher opens up about 'ideal student'

Over the last year, Gröninger, a German language teacher based in France, has been helping Macron to prepare for his state visit to Germany — the first in a quarter of a century by a French president.

The French leader learnt German in school but had turned to the language teacher, who also trained Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, to improve it.

Macron is keen to interact with Germans in their own tongue, Groeninger told AFP.

“He wants to reach and touch people through the German language,” said the teacher, who also helped Macron to prepare his eulogy for the late former German finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble which he delivered before the Bundestag partly in German.

“People probably think that he just memorises everything. But he understands everything that he is saying,” said Groeninger.

Bread and cold cuts

In his younger days, Macron travelled twice to the western city of Dortmund on student exchanges.

“I would never forget the German Abendbrot (evening bread) — this tradition of not serving anything warm in the evening, but bread and cold cuts,” he once told his German biographer.

Since then as French leader, Macron has made many more trips to Germany, including one to Hamburg in October, where Chancellor Olaf Scholz treated him to the local delight — fish sandwich.

Despite the culinary culture shocks, Gröninger said his student is not lacking in enthusiasm.

“He is an ideal student. He is receptive and really wants to do his best. He also has fun doing it,” said Gröninger.

But scheduling is an issue, said the teacher, who has to be at the ready in case the president has a spare minute to practice a bit more.

Before giving his first lesson, the teacher had doubts about correcting the French president.

“I was thinking, how am I going to interrupt him?” he recalled. “But I was surprised. He is a very nice guy.”

As to Macron’s weakness in German, the teacher politely pointed to the “typical difficulties of the French to pronounce the H” correctly.

Key in the training is mouth movements, said Gröninger, who noted that “the French language activates only three muscles, the German a few more”.

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