2024 Brandenburg state election

The election to the state parliament Landtag of Brandenburg of 22 September 2024 was the third state election within Germany in the month of September 2024, three weeks after the state elections in Thuringia and in Saxony, all part of former East Germany.[1][2][3][4] The outgoing government was a black-red-green "flag of Kenya" coalition consisting of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and The Greens, led by Minister-President Dietmar Woidke of the SPD.

2024 Brandenburg state election

← 2019 22 September 2024 Next →

All 88 seats of the Landtag of Brandenburg
45 seats needed for a majority
Turnout1,513,638 (72.9%)
Increase 11.6 pp
  First party Second party
 
Leader Dietmar Woidke Hans-Christoph Berndt
Party SPD AfD
Last election 25 seats, 26.2% 23 seats, 23.5%
Seats won 32 30
Seat change Increase 7 Increase 7
Popular vote 463,678 438,811
Percentage 30.9% 29.2%
Swing Increase 4.7 pp Increase 5.7 pp

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Robert Crumbach Jan Redmann
Party BSW CDU
Last election Did not exist 15 seats, 15.6%
Seats won 14 12
Seat change Increase 14 Decrease 3
Popular vote 202,343 181,632
Percentage 13.5% 12.1%
Swing New party Decrease 3.5 pp

Winning candidates in the single-member constituencies.

Government before election

Third Woidke cabinet
SPDCDUGreen

Government after election

TBD

Despite polling showing them consistently trailing in second place, the SPD, which has governed Brandenburg since its 1990 re-establishment, remained the largest party with a five percentage point swing in its favour. The Alternative for Germany gained six points and won 29% of the vote. The Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) debuted at 13.5%, followed by the CDU which declined to 12%. The outgoing government narrowly lost its majority as the Greens collapsed and fell short of the 5% electoral threshold, losing all their seats. The Left also suffered major losses and fell out of the Landtag, as did the Free Voters. The FDP, which had won 9.3 % of the vote in the 2021 German federal election in Brandenburg, fell to 0.8 % of the vote, their worst result in any state election ever, eclipsing the 0.9 % of the vote in Saxony two weeks prior.

Background

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The 2019 Brandenburg state election had resulted in the formation of the third Woidke cabinet, a "Kenya" coalition of the SPD, CDU, and Greens. The SPD remained the strongest party with small losses, just ahead of the AfD, which became the second largest party on a large swing. The CDU and The Left each recorded significant losses. The Greens achieved their best result to date with almost 11%. BVB/Free Voters improved to 5.0%. The FDP remained below the electoral threshold with 4.1% and did not win seats.

The SPD has governed Brandenburg continuously since the first post-reunification election in 1990. In the 2021 German federal election, the party won all 10 federal constituencies across the state.

The Brandenburg election was the third in a string of elections in Eastern Germany in September 2024, each of which saw a strong performance for the far-right AfD. In Thuringia the party became the largest in a state parliament for the first time; it also recorded its best result to date in Saxony. The parties involved in the federal Scholz government also suffered losses in each. The performance of Woidke's SPD in Brandenburg was considered a key test of Chancellor Olaf Scholz's leadership. The Brandenburg SPD campaigned on Woidke's personal popularity; Woidke pledged to resign if the SPD did not remain the largest party, encouraging tactical voting to deny AfD first place. He also received an unusual endorsement from the Minister-President of Saxony, Michael Kretschmer of CDU, who stated "the strongest party needs to be a democratic party".[5][6]

Parties and lists

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Party 2019 result Con.
candidates
List
candidates
Lead candidate
Social Democratic Party (SPD) 26.2% 44 87 Dietmar Woidke
Alternative for Germany (AfD) 23.5% 43 35 Hans-Christoph Berndt
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) 15.6% 44 45 Jan Redmann
Alliance 90/The Greens (GRÜNE) 10.8% 44 30 Antje Töpfer
The Left (LINKE) 10.7% 43 35 Sebastian Walter
Brandenburg Civic Movement/Free Voters (BVB/FW) 5.0% 44 39 Péter Vida
Free Democratic Party (FDP) 4.1% 44 17 Zyon Braun
Human Environment Animal Protection (Tierschutz) 2.6% 4 13 Christiane Müller-Schmolt
Plus Brandenburg (PLUS) 1.3% 12 17 Thomas Bennühr
BSW Brandenburg (BSW) 30 Robert Crumbach
Third Way (III. Weg) 5 7 Matthias Fischer
German Communist Party (DKP) 4 4 Fabian Große
German Rural Economy (DLW) 6 10 Benjamin Meise
Values Union (WU) 13 Anna-Sophia Werz
Other 11

Opinion polls

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Graphical summary

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Local regression of polls conducted.

Party polling

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Polling firm Fieldwork date Sample
size
SPD AfD CDU Grüne Linke BVB/FW FDP BSW Others Lead
2024 state election 22 Sep 2024 30.9 29.2 12.1 4.1 3.0 2.6 0.8 13.5 4.1 1.7
Wahlkreisprognose 17–21 Sep 2024 940 28 27 13.5 4 3.5 4.5 0.5 12.5 6.5 1
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen 18–19 Sep 2024 1,118 27 28 14 4.5 4 3.5 13 6 1
Wahlkreisprognose 11–18 Sep 2024 982 26.5 28.5 15 4 3.5 4.5 1 12 5 2
INSA 9–16 Sep 2024 1,000 25 28 16 4 3 4 2 14 4 3
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen 10–12 Sep 2024 1,060 26 29 15 5 3 3 14 5 3
Infratest dimap 9–11 Sep 2024 1,513 26 27 16 4.5 4 4.5 13 5 1
Wahlkreisprognose 28 Aug5 Sep 2024 1,420 20.5 30 15 5.5 3.5 4.5 1 14.5 5.5 9.5
Infratest dimap 3–4 Sep 2024 1,207 23 27 18 5 4 3 15 5 4
INSA 29 Jul–6 Aug 2024 1,000 20 24 19 5 5 4 2 17 4 4
INSA 8–15 Jul 2024 1,000 19 24 18 7 5 4 3 17 3 5
Infratest dimap 4–9 Jul 2024 1,153 19 23 19 7 4 3 3 16 6 4
Wahlkreisprognose 15–23 Jun 2024 1,000 16 29 16.5 5 3.5 5.5 1.5 17 6 12.5
European Parliament election 9 Jun 2024 13.1 27.5 18.4 6.0 4.4 3.2 13.8 13.6 9.1
INSA 13–21 May 2024 1,000 19 25 19 7 6 5 3 13 3 6
Infratest dimap 4–8 Apr 2024 1,161 22 26 18 8 6 3 10 7 4
Wahlkreisprognose 28 Mar7 Apr 2024 1,100 21 27 15 7 5.5 5.5 2 9.5 7.5 6
INSA 14–22 Mar 2024 1,000 19 25 19 8 7 4 3 12 3 6
INSA 8–15 Jan 2024 1,000 17 28 18 8 6 4 3 13 3[a] 10
Forsa 6–10 Jan 2024 1,007 22 32 16 7 6 5 3 4 5 10
INSA 13–22 Nov 2023 1,000 20 27 18 8 6 3 3 11 4 7
Wahlkreisprognose 24 Oct–1 Nov 2023 1,017 27 32 13.5 6.5 7 6 2.5 5.5 5
21.5 22 12 4.5 5 4 2.5 21.5 7 0.5
Infratest dimap 8–11 Sep 2023 1,160 20 32 18 8 8 6 4 4 12
Wahlkreisprognose 10–14 Aug 2023 1,003 25 30 15 7 8 7 2 6 5
22 22 13 6.5 5.5 5 2 19.5 4.5 Tie
INSA 26 Jun–3 Jul 2023 1,000 21 28 18 9 10 5 3 6 7
IFM 22 May–1 Jun 2023 1,000 24 24 17 10 12 8 4 2 Tie
Infratest dimap 19–24 Apr 2023 1,200 22 23 23 9 7 5 5 6 Tie
INSA 27 Mar–4 Apr 2023 1,000 21 25 19 10 10 5 4 6 4
Wahlkreisprognose 7–13 Mar 2023 978 23.5 26 17 9 8 6.5 3 7 2.5
pmg – policy matters 28 Nov–15 Dec 2022 1,011 27 23 17 7 9 5 6 6 4
Wahlkreisprognose 6–18 Nov 2022 1,922 26 26 13.5 10 8 7 3.5 6 Tie
INSA 4–10 Oct 2022 1,000 22 25 17 11 10 5 4 6 3
Infratest dimap 22–26 Sep 2022 1,165 24 24 18 11 9 4 4 6 Tie
Wahlkreisprognose 4–11 Sep 2022 1,100 26.5 25 12 12 6 7 5 6.5 1.5
Wahlkreisprognose 9–17 May 2022 1,001 30 19 16 13 6 6 4.5 5.5 11
Infratest dimap 21–24 Apr 2022 1,182 30 19 18 10 7 4 6 3 11
Wahlkreisprognose 21–29 Mar 2022 1,002 29 20 15 11 6 8 5 6 9
Forsa 9–17 Dec 2021 1,008 28 17 14 11 11 8 6 5 11
Wahlkreisprognose 8–16 Dec 2021 1,040 34 19 10 9 7 8 7 6 15
Wahlkreisprognose 7–14 Oct 2021 980 32 19.5 9 9.5 7 9.5 7 6.5 12.5
2021 federal election 26 Sep 2021 29.5 18.1 15.3 9.0 8.5 9.3 10.3 11.4
Infratest dimap 25–30 Aug 2021 1,157 34 17 13 8 9 7 7 5 17
Infratest dimap 12–15 May 2021 1,183 23 18 16 16 11 4 7 5 5
Wahlkreisprognose 7–13 May 2021 22 18 14 19 9 8 5 5 3
Wahlkreisprognose 12–19 Mar 2021 24 18 14 14 10.5 9 5 5.5 6
Forsa 10–15 Dec 2020 1,001 23 16 20 15 12 6 4 4 7
Infratest dimap 12–17 Nov 2020 1,002 26 19 20 12 11 3 5 4 7
Wahlkreisprognose 30 Sep–7 Oct 2020 1,089 23 19 17 13.5 12.5 7.5 2 5.5 4
INSA 29 Sep–6 Oct 2020 1,043 21 20 17 16 13 5 4 4 1
Wahlkreisprognose 19–27 Aug 2020 26 16.5 19 11 12 7 3 5.5 7
Wahlkreisprognose 12–19 Jun 2020 28 16 22 10 10 7 3 4 6
Wahlkreisprognose 4–11 May 2020 29.5 20 23 7.5 7.5 4 4 4.5 6.5
Wahlkreisprognose 3–8 Apr 2020 28 21 20.5 8 8 6 3 5.5 7
Infratest dimap 31 Mar–4 Apr 2020 1,000 27 20 19 12 11 3 4 4 7
Forsa 20–25 Feb 2020 1,001 22 18 14 15 15 7 3 6 4
Infratest dimap 11–16 Nov 2019 1,000 25 22 14 12 12 5 5 5 1
2019 state election 1 Sep 2019 26.2 23.5 15.6 10.8 10.7 5.0 4.1 4.1 2.7

Results

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SPD's and AfD's swing by district

The SPD secured a victory, increasing both its popular vote percentage and the amount of seats held.[5][7] Nonetheless, the two largest populist parties – the left-wing[8] BSW[9] and the far-right AfD[10] – earned significant results, combining for precisely half of all the seats in the legislature. The Greens, the Left and the BVB/Free Voters faced a complete defeat, losing all of their seats. Finally, the FDP fell to less than 1% of the vote.

Overall, the outgoing coalition between the SPD, the CDU and the Greens earned 47.1% of the vote in a decline compared to their combined total of 52.6% of the vote in the 2019 election.[11]

 
PartyParty-listConstituencyTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%+/–SeatsVotes%+/–Seats
Social Democratic Party463,67830.89  4.7013500,92333.57  7.751932  7
Alternative for Germany438,81129.23  5.725470,41231.52  9.372530  7
Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance202,34313.48New1414New
Christian Democratic Union181,63212.10  3.4712238,24715.97  1.49012  3
Alliance 90/The Greens62,0314.13  6.65051,3733.44  6.8600  10
The Left44,6922.98  7.74077,1235.17  7.0100  10
BVB/Free Voters38,5962.57  2.480104,7227.02  0.1900  5
Animal Protection Party30,0322.00  0.6003,7580.25  0.2500
Plus Brandenburg13,5770.90  0.3608,9000.60  0.4800
Free Democratic Party12,4620.83  3.25020,3891.37  2.2800
German Rural Economy6,6190.44New04,5360.30New00
Values Union3,8770.26New00
Third Way1,8100.12New07560.05New00
German Communist Party1,0280.07New07430.05  0.0100
Grassroots Democratic Party3940.03New00
Democrats BB8000.05New00
Die PARTEI2220.01  0.510
Other8,9390.600
Total1,501,188100.00441,492,237100.004488
Valid votes1,501,18899.181,492,23798.59
Invalid/blank votes12,4500.8221,4011.41
Total votes1,513,638100.001,513,638100.00
Registered voters/turnout2,076,95372.88  11.552,076,95372.88
Source: Wahlen Brandenburg

Members

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Constituency Member Party Votes (%)
001 Prignitz I Adam, Jean-René AfD 34.5
002 Prignitz II/Ostprignitz-Ruppin II Arndt, Torsten AfD 36.2
003 Ostprignitz-Ruppin I Liedtke, Ulrike SPD 34.6
004 Ostprignitz-Ruppin III/Havelland II Berger, Kai AfD 35.0
005 Havelland I Funke, Johannes SPD 36.1
006 Havelland II Sahi, Julia SPD 37.1
007 Oberhavel I Noack, Andreas SPD 34.0
008 Oberhavel II Grimm, Benjamin SPD 37.0
009 Oberhavel III Zimmermann, Tim AfD 33.4
010 Uckermark III/Oberhavel IV Galau, Andreas AfD 35.8
011 Uckermark I Teichner, Felix AfD 39.8
012 Uckermark II Rescher, Norbert AfD 39.7
013 Barnim I Kuffert, Roman AfD 32.8
014 Barnim II John, Steffen AfD 26.3
015 Barnim III Kotré, Lena AfD 34.9
016 Brandenburg an der Havel I/Potsdam-Mittelmark I Wernitz, Udo SPD 32.1
017 Brandenburg an der Havel II Kornmesser Britta, SPD 39.2
018 Potsdam-Mittelmark II Balzer, Melanie SPD 38.3
019 Potsdam-Mittelmark III/Potsdam III Adler, Uwe SPD 39.8
020 Potsdam-Mittelmark IV Rüter, Sebastien SPD 40.0
021 Potsdam I Schüle, Majna SPD 34.4
022 Potsdam II Keller, Daniel SPD 42.8
023 Teltow-Fläming I Penquitt, Marcel SPD 36.8
024 Teltow-Fläming II Stohn, Erik SPD 38.8
025 Teltow-Fläming III Seiler, Ines SPD 32.5
026 Dahme-Spreewald I Fischer, Tina SPD 36.5
027 Dahme-Spreewald II/Oder-Spree I Scheetz, Ludwig SPD 35.7
028 Dahme-Spreewald III Berndt, Hans-Christoph AfD 39.3
029 Oder-Spree II Hohloch, Denis AfD 40.5
030 Oder-Spree III Muxel, Kathleen AfD 36.9
031 Märkisch-Oderland I/Oder-Spree IV Vogelsänger, Jörg SPD 32.7
032 Märkisch-Oderland II Pardeik, Erik AfD 33.5
033 Märkisch-Oderland III Günther, Lars AfD 38.0
034 Märkisch-Oderland IV Janke, Falk Gerd AfD 38.8
035 Frankfurt (Oder) Möller, Wilko AfD 33.6
036 Elbe-Elster I Drenske, Peter AfD 36.3
037 Elbe-Elster II Nothing, Volker AfD 43.5
038 Oberspreewald-Lausitz I Bessin, Birgit AfD 44.3
039 Oberspreewald-Lausitz II/Spree-Neiße IV Jank, Fabian AfD 38.7
040 Oberspreewald-Lausitz III/Spree-Neiße III Münschke, Daniel AfD 36.8
041 Spree-Neiße I Kubitzki, Steffen AfD 41.5
042 Spree-Neiße II Hanko, Michael AfD 46.5
043 Cottbus I Hohm, Jean-Pascal AfD 34.6
044 Cottbus II Katzmarek, Lars SPD 38.0
List Freiherr von Lützow, Daniel AfD
Kaufner, Dominik
Hünich, Lars
Filter, Benjamin
Oeynhausen, Daniela Rita
Crumbach, Robert BSW
Gruhn, Jouleen
Roth, Stefan
Lüders, Niels-Olaf
von Ossowski, André
Matzies-Köhler, Melanie
Peschel, Falk
Hornauf, Sven
Meyer, Jenny
Kutsche, Andreas
Reinhard, Simon
Dorst, Christian
Lehmann, Gunnar
Skopec, Oliver
Redmann, Jan CDU
Augustin, Kirsty
Hoffmann, Gordon
Genilke, Rainer
Bretz, Steeven
Ludwig, Saskia
Bommert, Frank
Schierack, Michael
Walter-Mundt, Nicole
Eichelbaum, Danny
Brüning, Julian
Fährmann, Ellen
Woidke, Dietmar SPD
Lange, Katrin
Lüttmann, Björn
Poschmann, Katja
Roick, Wolfgang
Hildebrandt, Elske
Mittelstädt, Hanka
Wolff, Annemarie
Fischer, Kurt
Graßmel, Nadine
Steinfurth, Matthias
Schmidt, Martina Maxi
Schönbrunn, Sina

Electorate

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Demographic SPD AfD CDU Grüne Linke BVB/FW FDP BSW Other
Total vote 30.9% 29.2% 12.1% 4.1% 3.0% 2.6% 0.8% 13.5% 3.8%
Sex
Men 29% 35% 12% 4% 3% 2% 1% 12% 2%
Women 33% 24% 11% 5% 3% 3% 1% 16% 4%
Age
16–24 years old 19% 31% 9% 6% 7% 2% 2% 13% 11%
25–34 years old 20% 33% 11% 6% 5% 3% 1% 14% 7%
35–44 years old 24% 34% 12% 6% 3% 4% 1% 12% 4%
45–59 years old 29% 32% 13% 4% 2% 3% 1% 13% 3%
60–69 years old 35% 28% 12% 2% 2% 2% 1% 15% 3%
70 and older 49% 17% 12% 2% 3% 2% 0% 16% -1%
Employment status
Self-employed 24% 34% 18% 6% 1% 2% 2% 11% 2%
Employees 31% 29% 11% 5% 4% 3% 1% 12% 4%
Workers 24% 46% 7% 2% 1% 3% 1% 12% 4%
Pensioners 40% 22% 12% 1% 2% 2% 1% 18% 2%
Education
Simple education 30% 37% 14% 1% 2% 1% 0% 12% 3%
Medium education 28% 36% 10% 2% 2% 3% 1% 14% 4%
High education 34% 21% 13% 7% 4% 3% 1% 13% 4%
Source: Infratest dimap[12]

Aftermath

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Immediate reaction to the results focused on the successful use of tactical voting to deny AfD first place, and the SPD closing the large gap in pre-election polling as a result. The ARD exit poll found that 75 percent of SPD voters and 59 percent of CDU voters agreed with the statement "I was not convinced by the party, but I'm voting for it to prevent a strong AfD".[13]

This was the worst result for CDU in any state election in the east. Lead candidate Jan Redmann was critical of what he called Woidke's "AfD or me" campaign tactics, arguing that it only served to depress the vote share of the other mainstream parties and did not dissuade anyone from voting for AfD.[14][15] As well, state party leaders criticized CDU Minister-President Michael Kretschmer of Saxony's endorsement of Woidke in the run-up to the election; general secretary Gordon Hoffmann called the endorsement "uncooperative" while Redmann stated it was "completely unhelpful" and disappointed CDU campaigners.[16] The CDU campaign was also damaged by Redmann's arrest for drunk driving in Potsdam in mid-July. He was stopped driving an electric scooter with a blood alcohol content of 1.28 per mille (0.128%), well above the 0.5 legal limit and also past the limit of 1.1 where the offense becomes a crime with a potential prison sentence instead of only a fine. Despite questions about his fitness for office, he remained their lead candidate.[17][18]

This was also the worst result for FDP in any state, federal or European election in the party's history. Its total of 12,462 party-list votes, a share of 0.8%, barely eclipsed the 12,450 invalid party-list votes. FDP federal leader Christian Lindner blamed the poor result on the "tactical situation" and the unpopularity of the federal traffic light coalition, not on lead candidate Zyon Braun or any of the campaign.[19]

The seat distribution was in doubt for part of election night, as Brandenburg has a version of the "basic mandate clause" (Grundmandatsklausel) where all parties winning at least one constituency seat are granted full proportional representation according to their share of party-list votes. Both Green MP Marie Schäffer and BVB-FW leader Péter Vida were competitive in their respective constituencies in Potsdam and Barnim, though neither ultimately won; their parties lost all of their seats as a result. The Left failed to pass the five-percent electoral threshold and also lost its seats, marking the first time the party is not represented in a state parliament in the former East Germany.[20]

Dietmar Woidke lost his constituency seat Spree-Neiße I, which he had represented since 2009, to the AfD candidate Steffen Kubitzki by a margin of seven votes. As all leading candidates are also first on their party's list, Woidke instead fills one of SPD's thirteen list seats.[21]

With more than one-third of seats, AfD has a "blocking minority" (Sperrminorität) that allows it to veto certain parliamentary actions requiring a two-thirds majority, even if it is not in government. In Brandenburg, this includes the selection of constitutional court judges and approval of state constitutional amendments.[20]

On 25 September, the joint leaders of Alliance 90/The Greens, Omid Nouripour and Ricarda Lang, announced their resignations after poor results in the three eastern state elections. After the Greens entered all of them as part of the respective governing coalitions, it was wiped out in Brandenburg and Thuringia, while it received only 5.1% of the party-list vote in Saxony to narrowly retain representation.[22]

Government formation

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The incumbent "Kenya coalition" is no longer possible. With an SPD-CDU coalition one seat short of a majority, and all parties having ruled out working with AfD, the only two mathematically possible majority coalitions are that of SPD and BSW or SPD, BSW and CDU. SPD general secretary Kevin Kühnert confirmed the day after the election that coalition talks would take place with BSW.[23]

In a press conference at SPD headquarters in Berlin later on 23 September, Woidke announced he was inviting both BSW and CDU to begin exploratory talks. BSW leader Robert Crumbach would not commit to participating in government and suggested the SPD-CDU minority government would be workable. CDU leaders, however, ruled out any participation in government in view of their party's poor results. Hoffmann reacted skeptically to the invitation: "To be honest, I don't know what there is to discuss in these talks...we have no mandate to govern."[24][25]

Exploratory talks between SPD and BSW began on 1 October, with a second round occurring the following week. Woidke described good progress but emphasized that "exploratory talks are exploratory talks. The decision is made at the end." The SPD state executive committee scheduled a meeting at the end of the month to potentially consider a recommendation to move forward with negotiations.[26][27] On 28 October, both parties presented an exploratory paper and reached an agreement on the issue of peace, clearing the way for coalition negotiations to begin.[28]

Woidke and Crumbach announced their parties had reached a coalition agreement on 27 November. Each party's executive will vote on approving the agreement in the first week of December, and Woidke's expected re-election as Minister-President is scheduled for 11 December. The coalition has a narrow majority of two seats; talks were threatened when one BSW MdL, Sven Hornauf, publicly stated he would not vote for Woidke in protest of the planned stationing of Arrow 3 missiles at the Holzdorf Air Base. However, Crumbach criticized Hornauf for his statement and was able to confirm the coalition would still have the votes for Woidke without him.[29]

See also

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Notes

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References

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  1. ^ "A German far-right party wins its first state election". NPR. September 1, 2024. Archived from the original on 1 September 2024.
  2. ^ "Far-right AfD wins eastern state in Germany's regional election". Al Jazeera. 1 September 2024. Archived from the original on 1 September 2024. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
  3. ^ "Success of far-right AfD shows east and west Germany are drifting further apart". The Guardian. 1 September 2024. Archived from the original on 1 September 2024. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
  4. ^ "German far right hails 'historic' election victory in east". BBC News. 1 September 2024. Archived from the original on 2 September 2024. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
  5. ^ a b Karnitschnig, Matthew (22 September 2024). "Scholz survives as his party edges far-right AfD in Brandenburg election". politico.eu. Archived from the original on 23 September 2024. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
  6. ^ "Brandenburg: CDU-Regierungschef Kretschmer unterstützt Ministerpräsident Woidke". tagesschau.de (in German). Archived from the original on 18 September 2024.
  7. ^ "Germany's Scholz escapes far-right win in home state - exit polls". BBC News. 22 September 2024. Archived from the original on 22 September 2024. Retrieved 22 September 2024.
  8. ^ "BSW: the newly founded party on the left of the political spectrum". deutschland.de. 3 August 2024. Archived from the original on 24 September 2024. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
  9. ^ Knight, Ben (2 September 2024). "What is Germany's populist BSW party?". dw.com. Archived from the original on 2 September 2024. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
  10. ^ Kuner, Lisa (24 May 2024). "Populist AfD "sand in the gears" of German climate efforts". cleanenergywire.org. Archived from the original on 17 September 2024. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
  11. ^ "Der Landeswahlleiter – Brandenburger Wahlergebnisse". brandenburg.de. Archived from the original on 2024-09-26. Retrieved 25 September 2024.
  12. ^ "Wer wählte wen in Brandenburg?". Infratest dimap. September 22, 2024.
  13. ^ "Germany's Social Democrats hold off far right in Brandenburg election". Financial Times. 22 September 2024. Archived from the original on 23 September 2024.
  14. ^ "Redmann (CDU) kritisiert "extreme Polarisierungsstrategie" der SPD". www.inforadio.de (in German). 23 September 2024. Archived from the original on 23 September 2024.
  15. ^ "Woidke will mit CDU reden – AfD sieht sich als "Partei der Zukunft"". rbb24.de (in German). 2024-09-22. Archived from the original on 23 September 2024. Retrieved 2024-09-22.
  16. ^ "Brandenburg-Wahl: CDU kritisiert Michael Kretschmer als »unkollegial«". Der Spiegel (in German). 23 September 2024. Archived from the original on 23 September 2024.
  17. ^ "Brandenburgs CDU-Spitzenkandidat mit 1,3 Promille: Jan Redmann betrunken bei E-Scooter-Fahrt erwischt". Der Tagesspiegel (in German). Archived from the original on 12 July 2024.
  18. ^ Böger, Frauke (17 July 2024). "CDU-Spitzenkandidat Jan Redmann in Brandenburg: Nach Alkoholfahrt mit E-Scooter tauchen neue Fragen auf". Der Spiegel (in German). Archived from the original on 17 July 2024.
  19. ^ "FDP erzielt in Brandenburg schlechtestes Zweitstimmen-Ergebnis ihrer Geschichte". www.rbb24.de (in German). 24 September 2024. Archived from the original on 2024-09-23.
  20. ^ a b "Das bedeuten Sperrminorität, Grundmandatsklausel und Überhangmandat". www.rbb24.de (in German). 23 September 2024. Archived from the original on 22 September 2024.
  21. ^ Heflik, Katharina (22 September 2024). "Wahl in Brandenburg: Dietmar Woidke verliert Direktmandat an AfD-Politiker". Die Zeit (in German). Archived from the original on 23 September 2024.
  22. ^ "German Greens leadership quits after series of election blows". Reuters. 25 September 2024. Archived from the original on 2024-09-25.
  23. ^ "SPD to seek talks with upstart left party BSW – DW – 09/23/2024". Deutsche Welle. 23 September 2024. Archived from the original on 23 September 2024.
  24. ^ "Brandenburg-Wahl: CDU lehnt Sondierungsgespräche mit SPD ab". Der Spiegel (in German). 2024-09-23. ISSN 2195-1349. Archived from the original on 23 September 2024. Retrieved 2024-09-23.
  25. ^ Eydlin, Alexander (23 September 2024). "Landtagswahl Brandenburg: Dietmar Woidke kündigt Gespräche mit CDU und BSW an – CDU lehnt ab". Die Zeit (in German). Archived from the original on 23 September 2024.
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