European Elections Highlight The German Political East-West Divide
The Christian Democrats have won the European elections in Germany, and the Greens were losing significantly. The Sahra Wagenknecht alliance (BSW) came out stronger than the libertarian FDP and the Left.
As expected the ballot turned out to be a desaster for Germany's ruling
coalition which may hope to hang on to the next federal elections in the second half of 2025. If the snap elections in Britain and France have actually been ordered from above we can be sure to see a similar change in Germany as well. That wouldn't have to be a national ballot as it will suffice to form a new coalition with another federal chancellor.
You see, in Germany the PTB do not have to bother with tampering with the elections, they just ordain the coalitions that form governments consisting of actors that have been groomed and predetermined by the PTB themselves.
New elections could only result in a larger share of the vote for the newly formed BSW and the feared AfD party.
As for the east-west divide there are some crucial
state elections ahead, all three of them in Eastern Germany which are apt to rattle the political system as the 'right-wing extremist' AfD have 'home-turf advantage'.
A map of the voting districts (as of June 9) clearly displays the outlines of former West and East Germany.
While the West is dominated by the Christian Democratic (Christian Social in Bavaria) Party, though sprinkled with Green party preserves in larger cities and university towns the East is uniformly dominated by the right-wing AfD.
There are actually two exceptions to the rule which are Berlin and Potsdam (with paper-thin victories by the Greens) and the Eichsfeld district, a catholic enclave in Eastern Germany with a voting pattern out of sync with eastern habits.
Indicated in red the state results of the newly formed Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) which has all but obliterated Wagenknechts former Left party which she had deserted because of its endemic wokeness.
This is another map demonstrating Easternes' lack of wokeness and 'disrespect' for climate policies...
The darkest dots on the map indicate the vicinities of car factories as auto makers usually offer significant price advantages to their workers.
(Wolfsburg/Brunswick - Volkswagen; Stuttgart - Mercedes-Benz; Ingolstadt - Audi; München/Munich - BMW)
Again the East-West distinction is clearly visible. As for cars money may also be a significant factor.
The orange colored areas around Berlin should indicate an influx of woke middle class city dwellers with EVs to the surroundings.
Apart from the political it seems there is also a cultural divide between the green grovelling Westerners who for up to 80 years have been conditioned by Anglo-American Zionist mind control - which you don't realize as long as you're under its spell - and the much more down-to-earth Easterners...
While I'm still reserving judgment on the AfD it seems that they are mainly representing CDU/conservative politics of the 70s and 80s which are now being branded as extremely right-wing by the leftist political and media apparatus while adding the occasional 'Nazi' accusation to the mix.
That's when most of West Germans will cave in as they are being conditioned not to 'repeat the mistakes of the German past''.
Any time the system wants to impose a certain political course on them it mainly has to invoke their collective guilt complex.
(A European superstate? National sovereignty could lead to fascism! Mass immigration? An influx of people the Nazis would have rejected!)
Political conditioning in former communist East Germany was somewhat different.
If you were a law abiding citizen supporting the communist regime you were more or less absolved of the country's Nazi past as the German Democratic Republic was a result of the Soviet victory over fascism and that was that.
The public was told that the bulk of Nazis in the East had fled to West Germany (which is mainly true) and anyone remaining had repented and committed themselves to the buildup of a communist Germany.
Implying that there were Nazis in the East would have forced the regime to admit that they were unsuccessful in detecting these people within their jurisdiction.
This is but one explanation why easterners have much less reserve against voting for AfD.
In the end it seems to come down to the realization that people in the eastern states of Germany are more capable of thinking independently although they are being treated by the same official television network as are those in the West.
Many easterners may still feel fleeced and marginalized by the (western) system thereby appreciating any political alternative which brings us to the enormous success of the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) which seemingly appeared out of nowhere to reap double-digit election results all over the east.
The self-destruction of the Left party and the degradation of the SPD is caused by competing with the Greens for the same woke inner city voters as well as adopting the post-modernist ideas and goals of the Greens thus objectively governing against its former clientele, the lower middle class, driving them to the BSW and the AfD.
The most important issues for voters polled in Saxony are in the following order, migration, schools and education, social inequality, the economy and internal security even though many media outlets are making hysterical statements about climate change, wanting to see the Greens in government.