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Germany’s Merz faces first state election test

By Thomson Reuters Mar 6, 2026 | 5:50 AM

By James Mackenzie

BERLIN, March 6 (Reuters) – German Chancellor Friedrich Merz faces his first electoral test since taking office last May on Sunday, when voters go to the polls in the south-western state of Baden-Wuerttemberg, offering his ​party a chance to reclaim dominance.

There will be four more state ‌elections this year.

Baden-Wuerttemberg, home to Mercedes-Benz and a historic centre of Germany’s car industry, was for years a stronghold of Merz’s conservatives. But for the past decade, his Christian Democrats (CDU) have been the junior partner in a Greens-led coalition there.

Opinion polls suggest the partnership will continue, although it ‌is unclear ​whether the CDU’s candidate – 37-year-old newcomer Manuel Hagel – ⁠or the more experienced Cem Ozdemir ⁠from the Greens will come out on top to replace the popular Green premier, Winfried Kretschmann.

With the latest poll for the broadcaster ZDF putting the two neck-and-neck on 28% support, a victory for the Greens could stir internal ​party discontent with Merz, whose own ratings have hit record lows.

Still, moderate former agriculture minister Ozdemir  would be unlikely to cause serious problems for the government in ⁠the Bundesrat, the upper house of parliament that ⁠represents the states.

FAR-RIGHT AFD MAINTAINS STRONG SUPPORT

Aside from the choice ​of premier, there will be close attention to the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), which has ​been polling at around 20%, maintaining the strong gains it has ‌made across Germany in recent years.

Merz has ruled out any cooperation with the AfD, whose support in Baden-Wuerttemberg – one of Germany’s most prosperous regions – has been boosted by a crisis in the country’s car industry.

Also underlining the ongoing transformation in German politics ⁠is the possibility that the far-left Left Party will pass the threshold to enter state parliament, and the shrivelling in support for the centre-left Social Democrats to single figures ⁠in recent polls.

Overshadowing the election ‌is the uncertainty caused by the U.S.-led conflict with ⁠Iran, which has already jacked up fuel prices and could ​stoke deeper ‌economic problems if the war continues, although there is little ​sign of ⁠any direct impact on the vote.

“Voters are smart, they know that in Baden-Wuerttemberg, it’s about state political issues,” said Manfred Guellner, head of the polling group Forsa.

The Baden-Wuerttemberg election will be followed by a vote in the neighbouring state of Rhineland-Palatinate on March 22, then by ballots in Saxony-Anhalt, Berlin and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in September.

(Reporting by James Mackenzie, ​editing by Andrei Khalip)