NRW local election: CDU wins, SPD despite heavy losses to Greens



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KBiggest electoral victory for the CDU, another setback for the SPD and a record result for the Greens: in the local elections in North Rhine-Westphalia, voters gave a clear accent on Sunday. According to an extrapolation (9:33 pm), Prime Minister Armin Laschet’s Christian Democrats can count on 35.7 percent of the votes nationally for the WDR. They were 1.8 percentage points below their 2014 result.

The second strongest force is therefore the Social Democrats, who should finish just ahead of the Greens after major losses. According to Infratest Dimap’s forecast, the SPD loses 8.1 percentage points to only 23.3 percent, its worst result in a local NRW election. The Greens were able to increase their share of the vote by 6.4 percentage points to 18.1 percent. That would be his best state-level result in North Rhine-Westphalia. According to the forecast, the Greens will be by far the strongest force in the city hall of the metropolis of Cologne.

Based on extrapolation, the AfD has improved to 5.4 percent after playing only a minor role in 2014 at 2.6 percent. 5.5 percent voted for the FDP. That’s 0.8 percentage points higher than in 2014. At 3.5 percent, the left is 1.2 percentage points below the 2014 result, when it had reached 4.7 percent. The 51.5 percent share was slightly higher than in 2014 (50 percent).

The 51.5 percent share was slightly higher than in 2014 (50 percent). The NRW local elections were viewed with particular tension this year. It was the last big vote before the CDU’s federal party conference in December, in which NRW Prime Minister Armin Laschet requested the party chairmanship. “I’m happy it’s a good Sunday,” Laschet said. The vote was the largest election in Germany this year. “And the CDU won the elections.”

NRW Prime Minister Armin Laschet (CDU) casting his vote in Aachen

NRW Prime Minister Armin Laschet (CDU) casting his vote in Aachen

Those: dpa / Federico Gambarini

Protection of the environment and climate as the most important issue

According to an Infratest-Dimap poll commissioned by WDR, environmental and climate protection was the most important political issue for voters in local elections. The importance of the issue has increased significantly compared to the 2014 local elections, the WDR reported. WDR political scientist and election expert Martin Florack said this was also a success for the Greens, who had successfully taken up the issue in the debate.

According to an Infratest-Dimap poll commissioned by WDR, the Greens obtained by far the largest number of votes among young voters. Among young people aged 16 to 24, their participation was 33 percent: the CDU (22 percent), the SPD (16), the FDP (8), the left (6) and the AfD (4) are very behind in this age group. The Greens clearly outperformed their overall expected result for all age groups of 19 percent among young voters.

In addition to the municipal parliaments, mayors, mayors and district administrators were also elected in NRW. In Suburb There are growing signs of a second round of the elections between Mayor Henriette Reker (independent) and her SPD rival, Andreas Kossiski. According to an extrapolation from the WDR, Reker was clearly ahead in the OB election with 48.1 percent of the vote, but narrowly missed an absolute majority. Member of the state parliament Kossiski received the projection according to 24.3 percent of the vote.

Reker has been in office since 2015. The independent politician was supported in the election by the CDU and the Greens. The FDP, which had also supported the candidacy the first time, was no longer by his side. Polls before the election had indicated that Reker could possibly achieve an absolute majority on the first ballot.

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In the mayoral election of Dortmund Thomas Westphal, applicant for the SPD, clearly received the most votes. The CDU’s Andreas Hollstein was second by a narrow margin Sunday night, and would become Westphal’s challenger in the second round of the election in 14 days. After counting 494 of the 671 electoral districts in Dortmund, Westphal reached 36.07 percent, Hollstein reached 26.98 percent. The former president of the state of the Greens, Daniela Schneckenburger, came in third place with 21.27 percent.

“We are again the strongest force and we will leave the field as winners in two weeks,” Westphal said. Schneckenburger told the WDR that due to the significant growth, it was definitely a great election night for the Greens, even if it wouldn’t be enough for them personally to run away. With around 588,000 inhabitants, Dortmund is the largest city in Westphalia and the third largest in North Rhine-Westphalia.

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The mayor of the SPD in BochumThomas Eiskirch (49) has a good chance of direct reelection after counting almost half of the electoral districts. After counting 125 of the 281 districts, it was clearly ahead with 61.4 percent, as the city reported Sunday night. His challenger from the CDU, attorney Christian Haardt (55), reached nearly 18.2 percent by now.

In the mayoral election of Düsseldorf A second round is likely to take place between SPD incumbent Thomas Geisel and his CDU rival Stephan Keller. After counting 301 out of 454 constituencies, Keller led with 31.36 percent before Geisel with 28.29 percent, according to an online summary from the city Sunday night. Green candidate Stefan Engstfeld (17.59 percent) and FDP candidate Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann (11.63 percent) followed at a considerable distance.

In the mayoral election of Essen A narrow electoral victory is emerging for incumbent Thomas Kufen (CDU). After counting 285 of the total 429 constituencies, the 47-year-old was slightly ahead at 51.8 percent. SPD challenger Oliver Kern (54) reached 20.5 percent. Mehrdad Mostofizadeh (Greens, 51) was 12.5 percent. Kufen has been mayor of the Ruhr area city since 2015.

In the mayoral election of Gelsenkirchen none of the candidates achieved an absolute majority. As the city announced Sunday night on the Internet after counting all constituencies, City Director Karin Welge (SPD, 57) received the most votes with 40.4 percent. In the second round on September 27, she will race against the CDU candidate, lawyer Malte Stuckmann (42). She got 25.1 percent on Sunday.

The third-highest number of votes was obtained by AfD candidate Jörg Schneider, with 12.1 percent. David Fischer of the Greens got 9.3 percent. Former Mayor Frank Baranowski (SPD, 58) has been in office since 2004. He wasn’t running again. Around 265,000 people live in Gelsenkirchen.

In Bonn Mayor Ashok-Alexander Sridharan (CDU) has to face a second round. In the OB election, he received the highest approval with 34.46 percent of the vote, as announced by the city. But it was not enough for the necessary absolute majority. With 27.59 percent of the vote, green candidate Katja Dörner came in second. In a second vote on September 27, Bonn will have to choose between her and Sridharan.

Sridharan has been in office since 2015. At that time he broke the SPD’s more than 20-year subscription to the Bonn OB chair for the CDU. In addition, a CDU politician with a migrant background became mayor of a major German city for the first time. Dörner is a member of the Bundestag.

In the mayoral election in Wuppertal A second round is emerging between SPD incumbent Andreas Mucke and the joint CDU / Greens candidate Uwe Schneidewind. The two politicians went head-to-head on Sunday night, well ahead of all other applicants. After 174 of 272 results, Mucke came in at 38.8 percent and Schneidewind at 37.6 percent, as the city announced online. Schneidewind was director of the renowned Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy. Mucke had beaten then-CDU incumbent Peter Jung in a runoff in the 2015 election.

In Münster Mayor Markus Lewe (CDU) missed a direct reelection. In local elections, he reached 44.55 percent of the vote on Sunday night, as the city announced after the scrutiny of all electoral districts. This means that a second round will be required in 14 days, in which Lewe competes against Peter Todeskino (Greens). Death Cinema obtained 28.47 percent of the votes. SPD candidate Michael Jung reached 16.3 percent. Administrative specialist Lewe, 55, has been mayor of the student town of about 310,000 residents since 2009. In 2015, he received nearly 60 percent of the vote when he was reelected.

In Mönchengladbach the first results suggest a second round for mayor. After counting about two-thirds of the votes cast, SPD candidate Felix Heinrichs was at the top with about 38 percent. Frank Boss (CDU) followed with 28.5 percent. Green candidate Boris Wolkowski was able to convince nearly 17 percent of voters.

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