Days after the Bundestag elections, some constituencies are counting again. Every little discrepancy is checked. There have been no major corrections to the results so far.
The Washington Examiner followed the Berlin-Pankow chapter of the AfD in the days up to election night as the once-outsider party became the defining movement in German politics.
"Because of problems with the organization": Wagenknecht demands a review of the Bundestag elections
The leader of the Sarah Wagenknecht Union for Reason and Justice party, Sarah Wagenknecht, announced her intention to challenge the results of the Bundestag elections. The reason was organizational problems,
Fears after rise of far right in eastern Germany leaves multicultural Berlin surrounded - Germans on either side of the voting spectrum in the capital tell Tom Watling they voted out of fear
5don MSN
German voters go to the polls Sunday to elect a parliament that will determine who runs the country for the next four years.
In Germany’s special election Sunday, seven months earlier than the normal date because the trio-run government collapsed, there were a full 29 parties
1don MSN
The European Union is getting good at adapting to unprecedented circumstances. Over the last five years, the 27 member countries have pulled together to fund the purchase of tens of millions of vaccines and devised a massive recovery fund to resuscitate economies ravaged by the pandemic.
February 23, Germany is holding elections for the Bundestag. Voter turnout in the early stages of voting has slightly decreased compared to the previous elections in 2021. However, German politicians,
Friedrich Merz’s Christian Democrats took the highest portion of a record number of votes. An ascendant far right, crumbling international order and sluggish German economy face the incoming chancellor.
Alternative for Germany, the reformation party that sits to the right of the CDU/CSU's centrist conservatism, received approximately 20.8% of the vote.
February 23, marks the fifth election day in three and a half years in Berlin. There are a few special features this time. Here's what voters need to know.
Friedrich Merz, the leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and soon to be chancellor of Germany, announced
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