Katja Hoyer Katja Hoyer

German politics is a mess

Olaf Scholz (Credit: Getty images)

The German Chancellor Olaf Scholz lost a confidence vote in parliament yesterday. It’s almost certain now that Germans will head to the polls for a snap election on 23 February. What is less certain is whether this will bring about the change so many of them crave.

Of 717 Bundestag deputies only 207 expressed their ongoing confidence in the German Chancellor, the vast majority who did so being members of Scholz’s own party, the Social Democrats (SPD). This didn’t come as a surprise since he intended to lose the vote: Scholz’s ruling coalition collapsed last month, leaving him to run a minority government. The only way out of this stalemate is a fresh election triggered by a lost confidence vote.

Underneath lies a fractured political landscape that looks increasingly murky to German voters

What should have been a parliamentary formality turned into an undignified spectacle during which all political parties attacked one another.

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