SPD celebrates success, but Braunsberg becomes the AfDP fortress: Woidkes Dilemma!

SPD celebrates success, but Braunsberg becomes the AfDP fortress: Woidkes Dilemma!

The latest developments in Brandenburg have changed the political landscape of the federal state sustainably. After the SPD's election success, at the top of Prime Minister Dietmar Woidke, the party faces major challenges. The election campaign mainly aimed at the "fight against the right", but the pressing problems that many voters have driven to the AfD remain.

The SPD celebrates its election victory as if it had saved Brandenburg and Germany from taking over power. But critical voices are loud that these successes have been bought expensive and put the country into a difficult situation. Prime Minister Woidke focuses on fighting right -wing currents instead of devoting themselves to the country's actual problems.

CDU shrinks to the edge party

Interestingly, the CDU in Brandenburg has greatly reduced and has dropped to the level of a marginal party. Michael Kretschmer, the CDU tipman from Saxony, recommended that the SPD to choose the SPD, which led to a massive voter migration. A significant part of the former CDU electorate has overflowed to the AfD to counter the political course of the traffic light coalition.

The remaining CDU has become so weak that it cannot enter into a coalition with the SPD. Instead, she has to come together with the old communists around Sahra Wagenknecht. A situation that many Brandenburgers do not want because they reject a unit party led by a Saarlander. Oskar Lafontaine, who comes up with his political strategy against market economy, modernization and freedom efforts, is currently interfering in Brandenburg's politics.

focus on the fight against right

Woidke's main concern remains the fight against the right, a task that he pursues with tireless commitment. Nevertheless, he ignores the country's real problems: mass migration and its consequences, economic downturn, housing shortage as well as energy and labor market problems. Instead of addressing these challenges, Woidke remains focused on an imaginated right enemy that the SPD and other parties and institutions have created.

Germany not only has to deal with the economic problems, but also with increasing social contributions and an increasing impoverishment, especially in East Germany. These difficulties are not addressed by Woidke's politics, since it focuses solely on the politically motivated fight against the right.

The grandiose election success could also lead to new measures in the fight against right. A tougher gait in the exclusion of unsolved parties and in media policy may be taken. The recent tightening of weapons laws in the Bundestag also show this course. Although these are officially directed against crime, they also open up the possibility of carrying out “precautionary” searches even without a judicial decision, which could further tighten the social tensions.

Many young people have chosen the AfD in this choice. The ubiquitous propaganda and the consistent "fight against the right" met with resistance. Young people feel the negative effects of migration in the education system, on the housing market and in the world of work very directly and do not want to pay for this policy.

More details on this topic can be found in a detailed report www.tichysing.de .

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