Social media in election campaigns: How it worked in Germany


How TikTok Helped the Far Left Surprise in Germany

Struggling a month ago, the Die Linke party surged into Parliament by riding a backlash against conservative immigration policy.

By Tatiana Firsova and Jim Tankersley New York Times

Reporting from Berlin

Feb. 24, 2025

Her fans call her Heidi. She is 36 years old. She talks a mile a minute. She has a tattoo of the Polish-German revolutionary Rosa Luxemburg on her left arm and a million followers across TikTok and Instagram. She was relatively unknown in German politics until January, but as of Sunday, she’s a political force.

Heidi Reichinnek is the woman who led the surprise story of Germany’s parliamentary elections on Sunday: an almost overnight resurgence of Die Linke, which translates as “The Left.”

A month ago, Die Linke looked likely to miss the 5 percent voting cutoff needed for parties to earn seats in Germany’s Parliament, the Bundestag. On Sunday, it won nearly 9 percent of the vote and 64 seats in the Bundestag. It was one of only five parties to win multiple seats in the new Parliament, joining the Christian Democrats, the Social Democrats, the hard-right Alternative for Germany and the Green Party.

It was a remarkable comeback, powered by young voters, high prices, a backlash against conservative politicians, and a social-media-forward message that mixed celebration and defiance.

At a time when German politicians are moving to the right on issues like immigration, and when the Alternative for Germany, or AfD, doubled its vote share from four years ago, Ms. Reichinnek, the party’s co-leader in the Bundestag, and Die Linke succeeded by channeling outrage from liberal, young voters.

They pitched themselves as an aggressive check on a more conservative government, which will almost certainly be led by Friedrich Merz, a businessman who has led the Christian Democrats to take a harsher line on border security and migrants.

Mr. Merz’s ascent, and his decisions in the middle of a campaign that his party led from the start, appear to have helped Ms. Reichinnek. In January, after a deadly knife attack by an immigrant in Bavaria, Mr. Merz pushed the Parliament to vote on a set of migration restrictions that could only pass with votes from the AfD — breaking decades of prohibition in German politics against partnering with parties deemed extreme.

Many analysts trace Die Linke’s surge to Ms. Reichinnek’s furious — for the German Parliament, anyway — speech denouncing Mr. Merz and his measures.

“You just said that no one from your party is reaching out to the AfD!” she shouted, in a speech that has since racked up nearly seven million views on TikTok. “That’s right! They’ve been happily embracing each other for a long time already!”

In the month that followed, she called the AfD a fascist party and demanded that the Christian Democrats fire Mr. Merz. She proposed strengthening immigrants’ rights, increasing pensions and imposing stricter rent controls to help people struggling with postpandemic price increases across Germany.

A politician wearing a blue suit speaks into a microphone as he is flanked by others on a stage.
Friedrich Merz, center, who is likely to be Germany’s next chancellor. Many analysts trace Die Linke’s surge to a furious speech by Ms. Reichinnek denouncing Mr. Merz and his measures.Credit…Martin Meissner/Associated Press

She also called Die Linke the country’s last great firewall against the far right.

Die Linke coupled those calls with an aggressive social media outreach and party-like atmospheres at its rallies. It added more than 30,000 new members in the last month of the campaign, said Götz Lange, the party’s press officer.

In the campaign’s final week, Ms. Reichinnek traveled to the Berlin suburb of Treptow-Köpenick to talk to Ole Liebl, a queer influencer, about “techno and TikTok.” Afterward there was a party, with a DJ set, including a techno mix with the voice of a famed left leader in Germany, Gregor Gysi.

The venue, an old brewery, was bursting at the seams: Instead of the allowed 400 guests, around 1.200 people showed up. Most of them were techno lovers in black hoodies, people with multicolored hair and T-shirts with “antifa” slogans written on them. They mostly appeared to be in their early 20s.

There wasn’t enough space inside for everyone, so around 800 guests followed the event outside and downstairs, on a livestream. Wearing a rust red-colored sweater and jeans, Ms. Reichinnek appeared after a 30-minute delay, smiling and waving to the crowd.

“Thank you for being here,” she said. “It’s crazy, I don’t even want to know what it looks like down there. If you need help, try banging on the ceiling really loudly, we’ll know.”

The crowd roared.

On Election Day, Die Linke surprised analysts and appeared to snatch votes from the Greens and the Social Democrats, the party of the incumbent chancellor, Olaf Scholz, and got new voters to turn out. In Berlin’s central Mitte neighborhood, it won areas previously dominated by the Greens.

Founded in 2007 and descended from the former ruling party of East Germany, Die Linke had recently been better known for its failures than any success.

Its most well-known leader, Sahra Wagenknecht, quit the party to start her own — which blended some traditional left economic positions with a hard line on migration and an affinity for Russia.

That may have been a blessing, said Sven Leunig, a political scientist at the University of Jena, a public research university in Germany. Ms. Wagenknecht’s positions had split the party. “They were torn,” Mr. Leunig said, and voters did not like it.

The departure also allowed Die Linke to enlist new candidates and leaders. Other mainstream parties continued to push familiar faces and may have paid the price.

Daria Batalov, a 23-year-old nursing student from the central town of Hanau, said she was won over by Ms. Reichinnek’s TikTok videos. “They really spoke to me,” she said, adding, “And it was clear to me after a few videos that, OK, my vote is going to Die Linke.”

Analysts said Ms. Reichinnek and her party also benefited from a backlash to Mr. Merz’s migration measures, and from fears about the rise of the far right. “She had good luck,” said Uwe Jun, a political scientist at the University of Trier.

Her supporters called it something else: the rebirth of a movement. At Die Linke’s election-viewing party in Berlin, the crowd erupted into cheers when early exit polls flashed across the screen. Jan van Aken, a party leader, was greeted onstage with confetti.

“The Left lives,” he said.

Adam Sella contributed from Berlin and Sam Gurwitt from Hanau.

Jim Tankersley is the Berlin bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of Germany, Austria and Switzerland. More about Jim Tankersley

Are we in a global democratic recession?


Today in Singapore’s Straits Times (13 December 2024, page 21)
Unfortunately, Partyforum Southeast Asia cannot help sharing the pessimism…

Super election year masks what’s really wrong with democracy

Election officials preparing to count votes during Japan’s general election on Oct 27. For democracy to hold its ground, the gap between what it promises and what it delivers cannot keep widening, says the writer.PHOTO: AFP

Record turnouts and robust competition may feel like a festival but, in many countries, democracy is not solving people’s problems. It’s in trouble.

By Bhavan Jaipragas, Deputy Opinion Editor

Are we in a global democratic recession? The numbers don’t seem to suggest that.

In 2024, the biggest election year in human history, with 3.7 billion people eligible to vote across 72 countries, experts noted strong turnout, vibrant political competition, and only limited success for disinformation campaigns.

The Economist, drawing on data from 27 countries, even noted a drop in election-related violence and protests compared with previous contests.

So, procedurally at least, democracy appears to be thriving. But let’s not be fooled by surface-level success.

Beneath this shiny exterior lies a troubling undercurrent of disillusionment, mistrust and dysfunction. This goes beyond doubts about the system itself – trust is eroding in the very people who run it.

In many places, politics no longer feels like actual governance – problems aren’t getting fixed today, and there’s little thought for the future.

In a Pew survey of 24 countries published in February (including India, Australia, Indonesia, Japan and South Korea, but excluding Singapore), a median of 74 per cent said elected officials in their country did not care what people like them thought.

The pollster said of the results: “One factor driving people’s dissatisfaction with the way democracy is functioning is the belief that politicians are out of touch and disconnected from the lives of ordinary citizens.”

Instead, as British commentator Stephen Bush put it recently on the affairs in his country, with politicians’ fixation on staying in power rather than day-to-day governing, it’s more like “staging theatrical set pieces between near-constant electoral clashes”.

This isn’t just a handful of isolated examples; it’s a pattern playing out across a good number of the world’s democracies. We’re seeing rising polarisation, the demonisation of rivals, power grabs that push the limits of executive authority, and a collapse of public trust. Peer beneath the surface, and you’ll find democracies once thought solid that are now flailing.

Asian fault lines

Take South Korea, front and centre after last week’s drama. President Yoon Suk Yeol’s abortive martial law declaration – a self-coup in all but name – tells you everything. To outmanoeuvre an obstructionist opposition, Mr Yoon flirted with wrecking the economy and national security. The message is clear: Crushing political foes tops any notion of the national good.

Japan wasn’t as theatrical in 2024, but one can argue it was just as myopic. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, leading the long-dominant Liberal Democratic Party in its current cycle of leadership churn, forced a snap election a year early. This calculated gamble, aimed at securing a fresh mandate, backfired, leaving his party without the majority it had held for 15 uninterrupted years. As The Straits Times’ Japan correspondent Walter Sim recently observed, Mr Ishiba is now on precarious footing heading into 2025. Long-term strategy? Off the table, it seems.

Consider also the Philippines. Instead of genuine policy debates, its rumbustious democracy boils down to dynastic feuds. The Marcos and Duterte clans are currently locked in ugly conflicts, even hinting at assassination. Under these conditions, one wonders why ordinary Filipinos would believe their elites care about anything other than holding on to power.

Even Western Europe – supposedly liberal democracy’s heartland – is not in a good place. France and Germany enter 2025 with governments toppled by budget feuds, proving they can’t compromise or level with voters about tough economic choices. All this as Europe braces itself for Donald Trump’s return to the White House, uncertain of American policy. Add Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine, and the leadership void in Paris and Berlin feels like a ticking time bomb.

Speaking of Trump, there’s the US – an obvious reference point for glaring democratic dysfunction. Re-electing a president who openly admires autocrats and once fuelled an insurrection attempt, and who now keeps the Republican Party firmly under his heel, lays democracy’s fragility bare.

Yes, it’s grim. But that’s the point. Regular elections and popular mandates might make democracy appear strong, but true democracy is revealed in its conduct – solving public problems and addressing the concerns and interests of ordinary citizens. To be clear, this isn’t a cheap shot at the democracies in place in these societies, or a suggestion that there’s a superior system to open, electoral contests for power. If anything, high turnout and waves of anti-incumbency in 2024 – across countless ballots – show just how fiercely people still believe in it.

The Democracy Perception Index, one of several surveys tracking how people view democracy, found in its 2024 poll that some 85 per cent of 63,000 respondents from 53 nations (including Singapore) viewed democracy as important, compared with 79 per cent in 2019 when the survey started.

And yet, paradoxically, even as voters line up at the polls, their faith in politicians and the system is crumbling.

Supply and demand factors

What’s behind this wobbling in the way democracy functions? To understand this, consider both “supply” and “demand” in electoral politics. Using the phraseology of Harvard University comparative politics professor Pippa Norris, much of the dysfunction comes from the “supply side” – how leaders and parties behave. Instead of mending disillusionment and restoring trust, many have deepened the divides.

Commentators have long noted that many leaders, buoyed by steady growth and easy credit, avoided tough economic decisions. That era is over, leaving today’s leaders to confront the problems their predecessors dodged.

Take Germany: Its fiscal shortfalls, energy security struggles, lenient emissions rules and pension woes all trace back to former chancellor Angela Merkel’s habit of deferring tough decisions – a tendency so pronounced it inspired the verb “Merkeln”. She leaned on a status quo that treated China as a reliable market and Russia as a steady energy supplier – until they weren’t. Now, Chancellor Olaf Scholz faces the fallout: a floundering electric vehicle sector, an ageing population, and an energy transition still in limbo. With elections looming, his centrist Social Democratic Party is squeezed by challengers on both the extreme left and right.

Not to single out Germany, but these supply-side political woes reflect a broader pattern plaguing many of the world’s oldest democracies. Short-termism appears everywhere: populist handouts and bloated social programmes that prove unsustainable, anti-immigration rhetoric that placates xenophobia but hobbles long-run growth, and tariffs slapped on foreign goods that might bolster short-term sentiment but sabotage long-term competitiveness. This pattern repeats across democracies. Mainstream parties – left, right or centre – keep chasing quick electoral gains while sacrificing enduring stability, leaving voters disillusioned and betrayed.

That anger clears the way for right-wing groups and other fresh faces who promise quick, easy answers. They tap into everyday worries – rising prices (blamed for 2024’s anti-incumbency wave), a shortage of homes, joblessness, and crime – invoking a simpler past when life seemed smoother. Desperate for solutions, people give them a chance. But tough problems don’t vanish just because someone claims they can fix them overnight. When these newcomers fail, disappointment runs even deeper. The cycle starts all over again, making it harder to have calm, sensible conversations about what to do next.

Still, blaming politicians alone is too easy. Democracy works both ways, and voters share responsibility.

Take France. Its recently sacked government tried to impose spending cuts and tax hikes to plug a huge deficit and mounting public debt. The far-left and far-right parties that oppose such measures ignored this economic reality but remain highly popular. This is despite an ageing population and rising security costs that will only strain public finances further. There’s little willingness to admit that budgets can’t be stretched indefinitely, or that someone eventually ends up footing the bill for generous social spending. The so-called chattering classes seldom draw attention to these uncomfortable truths.

As Financial Times columnist Janan Ganesh noted in 2022, lamenting similar “demand side” issues in Britain, voters are rarely assigned any blame. In his words, “there is something messianic about the notion that, if voters err, it is because of goings-on among one’s class at the commanding heights of society”.

These financial pressures aren’t going away, and many voters remain unwilling to acknowledge the necessary trade-offs. The outcome is a vicious circle: more heated rhetoric, deeper extremes and fewer workable solutions.

No quick fixes

Is there a quick fix to this democratic malaise? Of course not. But in recent days, as commentators reflected on just how close South Korea came to losing its democracy, a number of old proposals have resurfaced.

For starters – without sounding corny – voters need to adopt a “what can I do for my country” mindset. If you don’t like what you see, do something about it.

Political scientists have warned for decades about declining participation in political parties. In Europe, for instance, party membership has fallen sharply.

Disillusionment with traditional parties is part of the problem, but that creates a self-perpetuating cycle. Parties stay dominated by the same elites who seem out of touch, while citizens stay on the sidelines, leaving a vacuum that opportunists easily fill.

Another remedy: Voters should make more informed, sensible choices, and not be swayed by comforting fantasies. Don’t get bribed by handouts your country can’t afford. Don’t join calls to throw out foreigners and imagine that this will not hurt your economy. Easy to say, yes, but it still needs saying. The antidote is to stay informed, think long term, and not fixate on single-issue politics.

As for the political elite – the “supply side” in these places where affairs are especially dysfunctional – they don’t need more lectures. They know democracy is in trouble, and they’ve said as much. But acknowledging the problem and actually doing something about it are two different things.

Whether they mean what they say about changing their ways is another question.

One thing is clear: Procedural democracy still stands strong, as evidenced by this vast “festival of democracy” in 2024.

But for democracy to hold its ground, the gap between what it promises and what it delivers can’t keep widening. Both voters and leaders, the “demand” and “supply” sides of politics, have a part to play – if they don’t step up, democracy risks becoming exactly what its fiercest critics say it is: a noble idea that never works out in real life.

bhavan@sph.com.sg

The Beginning of the End of Election Campaigns?


Partyforumseasia: Are social media replacing old fashioned campaigning with posters, canvassing, rallies, and personal activities of party members? If yes, election campaigning could become much cheaper than the recent billion $$ presidential campaign in the U.S.

Here is an interesting case from Japan:
Japanese politician rides social media wave to polls win

Mr Motohiko Saito’s campaign for re-election cast him as an underdog reformist, among other things.

His stunning comeback after ouster from office rattles political, media establishments

Walter Sim, Japan Correspondent, Straits Times, Singapore, 26.11.2024

TOKYO Japan is reckoning with its first social media-influenced election of consequence, as a spectacular political comeback rattles traditional political and media establishments, while even being compared with Donald Trump’s victory in the US presidential election.

On Nov 17, Mr Motohiko Saito, 47, won a second term as the Governor of Hyogo prefecture, despite having been ousted just weeks earlier in a unanimous no-confidence motion across the political divide in the local assembly.

He had been accused of “power harassment” – or abuse of authority – as well as bullying that led to the suicide of a whistleblower against his administration, among other things.

Japanese media was quick to write him off, and his career seemed dead in the water. Photographs online after his ousting showed a forlorn figure standing alone at a train station, with passers-by giving him the cold shoulder.

But social media helped in Mr Saito’s rehabilitation, resulting in a stunning re-election over six other candidates to govern the western prefecture of 5.3 million people that borders Osaka and is known for the cities of Kobe and Himeji.

Turnout, at 55.65 per cent, was substantially higher than the 41.1 per cent in 2021.

This came as mainstream media outlets in Japan, which like titles elsewhere in the world suffering from a decline in readership, were perceived to be biased in their reporting about Mr Saito.

His campaign tapped into these sentiments to criticise traditional establishments, while also speaking directly to voters who were dissatisfied with the status quo.

“No one thought this would happen a few weeks ago,” political scientist Ko Maeda of the University of North Texas told The Straits Times.

“Either the media reports were wrong, or Saito’s support increased greatly in the last few days of the campaign. Or maybe both.”

The result has triggered a wave of soul-searching. On Nov 18, a headline in the Sankei newspaper pondered: “Is Saito’s re-election a defeat for mass media and a victory for social media?”

The introspective piece compared Mr Saito to US President-elect Trump in his victory against a groundswell of resentment, adding that public distrust of mainstream media that had been harsh with its condemnation of Mr Saito had worked to his advantage.

Both men also emphasised reforms in their crusade against the status quo.

Among the commentators who have weighed in on the result is mountaineer Ken Noguchi, who wrote on X: “It seems like the Trump wave has surged across the Pacific Ocean. Either way, the era in which mass media equals public opinion is over.”

However, Mr Noguchi, whose comments about Mr Saito have been widely picked up by the Japanese media, added: “As distrust of mainstream media grows, I also feel an acute sense of danger that social media, which often has unreliable information, will take centre stage.”

Mr Nobuo Inaba, chairman of public broadcaster NHK, told a news conference on Nov 20: “How can the media provide appropriate information for people to make their voting decisions? We need to seriously consider what our role as a public broadcaster is in election reporting.”

Mr Saito won 1.11 million votes, or 45.2 per cent of the total, handily defeating hot favourite Kazumi Inamura, 52, the former mayor of Amagasaki city, who won about 970,000 votes. 

Ms Inamura, who won the backing of 22 out of 29 city mayors in Hyogo, echoed mainstream media in her criticism of Mr Saito for his alleged authoritarian tendencies. 

But Mr Saito’s campaign, supported by his former classmates and hundreds of volunteers recruited through social media, cast him as an underdog reformist and a hero who went too far in upsetting entrenched vested interests.

“Was the media’s reporting truly accurate? Were some prefectural assembly members only interested in political manoeuvring?” Mr Saito said in a stump speech during a campaign in which he repeatedly stressed his innocence.

“What is the truth? And what is truly the best for the prefecture?”

Over street speeches and live streams on social media, he also touted his track record in his three years as governor, during which he reduced his wages by 30 per cent and made prefectural universities free of charge, while weaving in personal stories from his upbringing and school days.

Mr Saito said after his victory: “I’ve never really liked social media because it is a hotbed of harsh comments, but I’ve come to see its positive side in how it reaches a lot of people and spreads support.”

Doshisha University political scientist Toru Yoshida told ST: “This election reflects how traditional parties have completely lost the grip on independent voters, and are very much behind in new ways of mobilising them.”

He added that analyses have shown that the most significant difference between Mr Saito’s and Ms Inamura’s voters is their degree of trust in traditional media.

Still, in a sign of how social media may be unfairly weaponised, Ms Inamura’s campaign lodged a report with the Hyogo Prefectural Police on Nov 22 over the freezing of her social media accounts during the election period, purportedly because large numbers of people made false reports to platform operators.

Mr Saito’s victory comes on the heels of the political ascent of Mr Shinji Ishimaru, 42, who had little name recognition but rode the wave of social media to place second in the Tokyo governor race in July, winning more votes than the much higher-profile opposition candidate Renho, who goes by one name.

Mr Ishimaru said on Nov 12 that he plans to establish a new regional party ahead of the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly election in July 2025.

Nationwide, the Democratic Party For The People not only quadrupled its presence in Parliament in a general election in October, but is now the most favoured party among under-40s given its social media presence, according to various media polls.

“Traditional media will probably try to maintain public support and trust by asserting that their reports are more trustworthy than what people see in social media,” Dr Maeda said. “But I don’t know if the power of social media will ever become smaller from here on.”

Dr Yoshida, meanwhile, said that although traditional media is shocked by the Hyogo outcome, its approach to news reporting “will not change in a day, given the need for reforms”.

waltsim@sph.com.sg

Democracy in Decline


Partyforumseasia: The Third Wave of Democratization is history, optimism is more and more being replaced by pessimism. International IDEA is explaining it with carefully collected facts and research. Their report
The Global State of Democracy 2024
Strengthening the Legitimacy of Elections in a Time of Radical Uncertainty
is a must read for everybody in politics or concerned with one’s own politics at home.

Key findings

1. Despite the many threats to elections and the declines found in many countries, elections retain their promise as a mechanism for ensuring popular control over decision makers and decision making. Incumbent parties have lost presidential elections and parliamentary majorities in many highly watched elections in 2023 and 2024.

    2. In an election super-cycle year in which approximately 3 billion people will go to the polls, one in three¹ will vote in countries where the quality of elections is significantly worse than it was five years ago.

    3. Electoral outcomes are disputed relatively frequently. Between 2020 and 2024, in almost one in five elections a losing candidate or party rejected the electoral outcome. Elections are being decided by court appeals at almost the same rate.

    4. The global rate of electoral participation has declined as elections have become increasingly disputed, with the global average for electoral turnout declining from 65.2 per cent to 55.5 per cent over the past 15 years.

    5. Countries experiencing net declines in democratic performance far outnumber those with advances. About one in four countries is moving forward (on balance), while four out of every nine are worse off.

    6. Declines have been most concentrated in Representation (Credible Elections and Effective Parliament) and Rights (Economic Equality, Freedom of Expression and Freedom of the Press).

    7. In addition to declines in weaker contexts, democratically high-performing countries in all regions have suffered significant deterioration, especially in Europe and the Americas.

    8. While substantial progress has been made in improving electoral administration, disputes about the credibility of elections deal mainly with irregularities at the point of voting and vote counting.

    The whole report is available here:  The Global State of Democracy 2024 Report (GSoD): Strengthening the Legitimacy of Elections in a Time of Radical Uncertainty.

    NB: The country ranking, ending with the United Arab Emirates and Yemen at the bottom and starting with Germany und Uruguay on top is open to debate. As an old German living abroad but following the news, I have my doubts…

    The European Parliament Election in Germany


    Earlier this week, I received my ballot paper for the European Parliament Election, marked it immediately and rushed to the next post office to send it back to Berlin. Since this was my last registered residence in Germany, from where I moved to Singapore 16 years ago, the city administration in a suburb of the German capital is still responsible for my participation. And the deadline is looming, the election is on 9 June. For me the European Union is important, a dream come true during my lifetime. In my student days, my first membership after the Boy Scouts was with the “Young European Federalists”, and together with my parents, I was active in the Franco-German twin city movement. I was sad about the Brexit and sadder about the ongoing debates about other “-exits”.

    In the ASEAN-debates over the last decades, the comparison with the EU was ubiquitous, often with a whiff of regret that ASEAN was not yet as far as the EU. Sure, ASEAN has no Parliament and no governmental institution like the powerful EU Commission which can make important political decisions binding the legislation of the member states. Just as an interesting example, look at the ban of combustion engines in motorcars by 2035 and the controversies it has created in the car industry.
    At least for the average voter in Germany, the understanding of the role and decisions of the EU Parliament is limited. In the last election in 2019, the overall voter turnout was 50.6 %, the highest in twenty years, in Germany with 61 per cent even higher. This time, the very open party registration system in Germany does not make it more transparent or more attractive for the voters. The ballot paper is eighty centimetres long and lists 34 parties. While on the national level the ruling coalition between Social Democrats, Greens, and Liberals is increasingly unpopular, the main opposition Cristian Democratic Union joins the coalition in its fight against the more Right-wing Alternative for Germany. But probably many German voters will be surprised about the multitude of fringe parties they find on the ballot paper. If party systems all over Europa are more and more fragmented, with a trend toward the right because of the dramatic increase of immigration from Middle Eastern and African countries, 34 parties in Germany alone are somewhat strange.

    Some curious fringe parties competing for a seat in the EU parliament, very probably have not much of a realistic chance. Either the five per cent threshold of all valid votes nor winning a direct mandate should be feasible for them, though some of the candidates on the list are quite prominent on the federal level in Germany. For many years, a certain type of political veterans has been “promoted” to Brussels, a parliament with limited powers of legislation. The right to initiate legislation lies with the commission and not with the EU Parliament, but the income of the MPs and the lifestyle in Brussels are attractive enough.

    From the 80 cm long ballot paper below, parties 1 (The Greens), 2 (Christian Democratic Union), 3 (Social Democratic Party), 4 (The Left), 5 (Alternative for Germany), and 7 (Free Democratic Party) are established mainstream parties, the Social Democrats even with a 150-year history. The Alternative for Germany, as a right-wing party, is being attacked by all the others and the media. New on the scene is 28 (Alliance Sahra Wagenknecht) named after its leader, an outspoken younger politician who is omnipresent in talk shows and married to a Social Democratic veteran. As a registered party since only a couple of months, 28 is getting seven per cent in the polls, while The Left and the Liberal Free Democrats are struggling for survival above the five per cent threshold.
    Surprisingly, socialist and communist tendencies have survived in Germany with the German Communist Party (20), Marxist-Leninist Party (23), and the Socialist Equality Party – 4th International (24).
    With the environmental protection high on the government agenda via the Green Party in the ruling coalition, more groups are competing for Europe: The Ecological Democratic Party (13), Climate List Germany (30), and Last Generation (31) a grassroots group famous for street and airport blockades by gluing themselves to the streets.
    The Action Party for Animal Welfare (15), Human World –  Happiness for All (21), or the Party for Change, Vegetarians and Vegans (34) are the more exotic ones. But in an era where conservative world views and attitudes are uncool and being replaced by new and colourful lifestyles and social innovations, the list reflects the country’s transformations.
    What reminds more of the old and bureaucratic Germany is the instruction leaflet for the postal vote procedure – at the end of this post after the ballot paper. The last instruction says that the voter should mark the ballot paper discreetly, without being observed by others, the secrecy of ballot principle.