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Germany dodges a historic second far-right win in a state election

Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats hold back the far-right in the eastern German state of Brandenburg

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Brandenburg’s State Premier Dietmar Woidke gets a kiss from his wife Susanne after the publication of the exit polls on Sunday. Photo: AFP

Germany avoided having a far-right party as the strongest force in a second state, just weeks the anti-migrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) became the first far-right party in post-war history to win an election.

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The centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) achieved a narrow election victory over the far-right AfD in the eastern German state of Brandenburg.

Brandenburg’s incumbent SPD premier, Dietmar Woidke, who has led the state for 11 years, claimed another term with 30.9 per cent of the vote, while the AfD came in at 29.2 per cent, according to final results published Sunday evening by the state electoral administration.

The SPD has ruled in Brandenburg since 1990, when the first democratic elections were held in the state following the collapse of the communist regime in the former East Germany.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, in New York for a UN summit, called the results ‘good, of course’. Photo: dpa
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, in New York for a UN summit, called the results ‘good, of course’. Photo: dpa

The AfD’s 29.2 per cent is a meaningful gain from 2019, when it got 23.5 per cent of the vote. But the AfD had hoped for a first-place finish over the SPD after opinion polls in the weeks before the election showed them in a narrow lead.

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