Young Germans flocked to opposite ends of the political spectrum in the federal election, rejecting the centre.
Friedrich Merz's CDU party emerged as the largest party in Germany's parliament, the Bundestag, earning 28.6% of the vote.
The Christian Democrats won with 28.6% of the vote while the far-right Alternative for Germany came second with 20.8%.
Notably, the far-right Alternative for Germany came second with 19.5 percent votes. Its leader Alice Weidel expressed her ...
Friedrich Merz, leader of Germany’s conservative opposition, achieved a modest victory in the national election. The ...
Merz’s CDU/CSU bloc won 28.6% of the votes, followed by 20.8% for the far-right Alternative for Germany, according to the ...
Seven out of twelve Kurdish candidates have won seats in Germany’s federal parliament, the Bundestag, revealed the ...
“That feeds into this whole far-right populist narrative that the mainstream parties are abandoning those areas,” Lueders ...
Threatened by far-right gains, Friedrich Merz faces tricky coalition talks as he tries to address anti-immigration sentiments while keeping potential left-wing government partners ...
Friedrich Merz, the presumptive chancellor of Germany, has confirmed he will seek a coalition with the social democratic SPD ...
The Prime Minister aspires to build on his already good relationship with Merz, given the dominant role played by Germany in ...