The Washington Times

Merkel’s party suffers historic defeat in German state

BERLIN (AP) — German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives have suffered a historic defeat in a state ballot after almost six decades in power there, partial results showed Sunday, in an election that amounted to a referendum on the party’s stance on nuclear power.

The opposition anti-nuclear Greens doubled their voter share in the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg and seemed poised to win their first-ever state governorship, according to calculations based on partial results published by public broadcaster ARD.

“We have secured what amounts to an historic electoral victory,” the Greens’ leader, Winfried Kretschmann, told party members in Stuttgart, the state capital.

The Greens secured 24 percent of the vote, with the center-left Social Democrats down 2 percentage points at 23.2 percent, giving them enough form a coalition government in the state, the results showed.

Representatives of all parties said the elections were overshadowed by Japan’s nuclear crisis, turning them into a popular vote on the country’s future use of nuclear power — which a majority of Germans oppose as they view it as inherently dangerous.

Conservative Minister-President Stefan Mappus, who long has been an advocate of nuclear energy, conceded defeat and said his party’s lead in the polls dwindled away in the wake of the disaster at Japan’s Fukushima nuclear facility.

“Voters were touched by the terrible events in Japan; those images still haunt people today,” he said.

Mr. MappusChristian Democrats secured 39.5 percent of the vote, and its coalition partner, the pro-business Free Democrats, saw its voter share halved to 5.1 percent — just above the threshold to enter the state legislature, the partial results showed.

The Free Democrats’ national chairman, Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, also said his party was punished for its favorable stance on nuclear energy.

“It was a vote on the future of nuclear power,” he said.

The disaster in Japan triggered Mrs. Merkel's government last week to order a temporary shutdown of seven of the country’s older reactors, two of them in Baden-Wuerttemberg, pending thorough safety investigations.

But the chancellor’s abrupt about-face has raised doubts about her credibility in a country that remembers well Ukraine’s 1986 Chernobyl disaster, which spewed radiation across Europe.

A center-left government a decade ago penned a plan to abandon the technology for good by 2021, but Mrs. Merkel's government last year amended it to extend the lifetime of the plants by an average of 12 years.

The government now has put that plan on hold, and the opposition wants to abolish the use of nuclear power by 2020 for good. Germany currently gets about a quarter of its energy from nuclear power but plans to replace it eventually with renewable energies.

Mrs. Merkel’s party has held power in Baden-Wuerttemberg — home to some 11 million people — since 1953, and the ballot was seen as the most important of Germany’s seven state elections this year.

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