Saxony, Thuringia, and controlled elections in the West

Writes Rick Rozoff:

The co-chairperson of the Alternative for Germany, Alice Weidel, lives with her female partner. She formerly worked for Goldman Sachs and China Bank; lived in China for six years and speaks Mandarin; has a doctorate degree in international development.

This is who we are told to believe is a modern Nazi.

Just in time to thwart the Alternative for Germany’s first-time victories in German state elections, this year Sarah Wagenknecht, parliamentary co-chairperson of The Left party and leader of its  Communist Platform faction, formed an eponymous Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht, which has now come in third place in the Saxon and Thuringian elections. How very, extraordinarily convenient that a new (nominally) populist, immigration-skeptical party emerged at just such a moment.

At with the recent French elections, the German ones will demonstrate the reversal of historical and logical consistency regarding European multiparty parliamentary politics; that the party which wins the most votes will *not* be allowed to forge a coalition  government, but will have all other parties brought together by the deep state and oligarchs, domestic and *Euroatlantic,* to keep it out of government. In fact, winning first place in the first round of elections is the ultimate defeat. A policy that goes back to Slovakia and Yugoslavia in the 1990s.

See here.

Right-wing party projected to win election in German state.

The third place in Thuringia and Saxony went to the newly-formed left-wing party of Sahra Wagenknecht (BSW). Despite being on the opposite sides of the political spectrum, BSW and AfD both call for stronger controls on immigration and an end to Berlin’s support for Ukraine amid its conflict with Russia.

AfD is unlikely to be able to form a regional government in any of the states, as their political opponents refused to work with it.

 

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