• Naughty_not_bad@lemmynsfw.com
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    6 hours ago

    Since you need at least 316 out of 630 seats to have a majority we get only a few viable combinations.

    1. SPD (middle left) + CDU/CSU (middle right)
    2. AfD (far right) + CDU/CSU (middle right) Anthing else would be bonkers like: middle left + far right + green. So best case we get to continue as is but with Mister Burns Friedrich Merz as the chancellor. Worst case we still get Friedrich Merz but with a way more right wing régime.
  • exu@feditown.com
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    14 hours ago

    It’s troubling that 20% of people, with exception of those who grew up under nazi rule, voted for nazis.

    Edit: You can also see the split between east and west Germany extremely well

    • Tja@programming.dev
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      13 hours ago

      Süddeutsche had an east-west graphic, in the east AfD got 37% of the vote. It would probably could govern if east Germany was it’s own country. If you take “west Berlin” out of it, probably much higher %.

      The right loves the poorly educated, and vice versa.

  • stochastictrebuchet@sh.itjust.works
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    14 hours ago

    Final graphic shows why the far-right hates education. I’m probably jumping to conclusions, but I wonder if their relatively low popularity among higher-educated voters is due to:

    1. Voters being more aware of their history (a “… doomed to repeat it” sort of thing)
    2. Better at spotting populist lies (I don’t know enough about German politics to know how populist the Left Party is)
    3. Leading more comfortable lives, thus less inclined to reach for extremes.

    It’s an undemocratic thought, but sometimes I wish there were some sort of aptitude test right before casting a vote. Or at the very least, a quick quiz to confirm you’re aware of the party’s key program points. Obviously, both options are ripe for abuse.

    • jonne@infosec.pub
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      14 hours ago

      If democracy doesn’t work for people, they’re fine with getting rid of it altogether. The East was never really invested into after reunification, and in the whole country the poorest have been going backwards for decades. It’s the consequence of the political debate being limited to very strict parameters of what is and is not acceptable to talk about in terms of solutions to problems. Even the ‘socialist’ party will go for neoliberal solutions and won’t talk about the wealthy and corporations extracting wealth from the country.

      And if you can’t talk about that, it’s easy to blame immigrants instead for the very real economic problems people are experiencing.

      • Mora@pawb.social
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        10 hours ago

        The East was never really invested into after reunification

        Gee, I wonder why, after having been screwed by the sovjiet regime for decades (first by complete destruction of all industry, then in regards to fair voting process) and then getting screwed by west Germany by complete destruction of all industry & a lot of scams running wild, thus leading to high unemployment, thus leading to all kind of fun things, like widespread drug abuse, which then leads to domestic abuse and poorer education, digging the hole even deeper.

        This is a problem 75 years in the making and there is no help in sight.

        • jonne@infosec.pub
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          9 hours ago

          Yeah, after the excesses of the GDR they weren’t exactly going to vote for the socialists either.

          • Gloomy
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            9 hours ago

            The PDS, which is Basicly the GDRs successor, got 10 % in East Germany eight after the unification.

  • o_arguido@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Elections results by age supports what I’ve been feeling for a while now - capitalism reduces our capacity to dream of a better world, to believe we all deserve a better life, takes away hope.

    Once in the job market, people become competitive and enter the debt cycle, slowly losing capacity for empathy.

  • vividspecter@lemm.ee
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    12 hours ago

    Young people between the ages of 18 and 24 leaned to the extremes, casting their ballot more often for the far-right AfD and the Left Party.

    Kind of misleading. Their AfD vote was roughly the same as other age groups, but they had the most support for the Left Party.

    Millennials having the highest vote for the AfD is embarrassing, however.

  • Saleh@feddit.org
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    12 hours ago

    Note for the Charts: The parties ordered politically left to right in the seat distribution, using grey instead of black for the CDU/CSU.

    For the further graphics they are mixed together in a poor way. The Parties from “most left to most right” are in the following order:

    Left Party -> The Greens -> SPD -> CDU/CSU -> FDP -> AfD

    The FDP can be debated, as they are a bit more socially liberal but also strongly against human rights for refugees, hard neoliberal destruction of the public sector, anti renewable energies… They have been sucking Musk and Milei on Twitter and other media platforms these past months. The CDU/CSU are also mentioned together because the CSU only exists in Bavaria and in exchange the CDU stays out of Bavaria. There are two distinct parties though, with the CSU being even more far right populist than the CDU currently. They are also staunchly against refugees, against renewable energies and more outspoken against womens rights and LGBT rights than the CDU. BSW is a bit of a wild card, because they are for proper social systems and taxation of the rich, but against refugees and pro Putin.

  • mysticpickle@lemmy.ca
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    16 hours ago

    German Election Results Explained in Graphics

    Full text article with no graphics

    • water@lemmy.worldOP
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      16 hours ago

      Not sure why the graphics aren’t showing up for you. It’s rendering fine in Firefox for me. I’ve added some graphics to the summary just in case you can’t see them on the website.