ZeroHedge:
“This Is An Earthquake For Bavaria”: CSU Suffers Stunning Defeat, Loses Absolute Majority In Worst Result Since 1950.
Voters in Germany’s economically dominant southern state of Bavaria delivered a stunning rebuke to the ruling Christian Social Union, in an election that underscored the evaporation of support for the parties in Angela Merkel’s grand coalition in Berlin.
With all eyes on Sunday’s Bavaria election, moments ago the first exit polls showed a historic collapse for the ruling CSU party, which has ruled Bavaria continuously since 1957, and which saw its share of the vote collapse from 47.7% in the 2013 election to just 35.5%, losing its absolute majority and suffering its worst result since 1950, as voters defected in their droves to the Greens and the far-right Alternative for Germany.
German newspaper Welt called the election “the most painful election defeat of the past 50 years for the CSU”. As predicted in the polls, the CSU experienced a “historic debacle” in the Bavarian state elections, according to Welt. The CSU was followed by the Greens which soared in the election, more than doubling to 18.5% from 8.6% in 2013, the Free Voters also rose to 11% from 9.0%, in 2013.
Meanwhile, the nationalist AfD are expecting to enter Bavaria’s parliament for the first time ever with 11% of the vote, and as such are setting up for their post-election party. Party leader Alice Weidel already is having the first beer in the small community of Mamming in Lower Bavaria. MORE
:Laughs in German.:
Auf wiedersehen dummkopf!
I finally get to use something from my 3 years of HS German.
Warm up the Trabant Günter and make room for a fat old cow!
@Aaron Burr: Would that be like “Ja, ja, ja”?
Yeah, I keep hearing about Merkel’s defeat and had been for a few years now and yet the tubby slob endures.
She appears to be as resilient as a herpe but not as likable.
“@Aaron Burr: Would that be like “Ja, ja, ja”?”
That would be yes yes yes in German. And it would be pronounced yah yah yah.
ja ja ja is ha ha ha in Spanish, though.