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Viewing cable 09DUSSELDORF39, SPD RECEDES DRAMATICALLY IN TRADITIONAL STRONGHOLD: NORTH

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
09DUSSELDORF39 2009-10-02 15:18 2011-08-24 01:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Consulate Dusseldorf
VZCZCXRO0286
RR RUEHIK
DE RUEHDF #0039/01 2751518
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 021518Z OCT 09
FM AMCONSUL DUSSELDORF
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0237
INFO RUCNFRG/FRG COLLECTIVE
RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
RUEHDF/AMCONSUL DUSSELDORF 0253
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 DUSSELDORF 000039 
 
SENSITIVE 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PGOV PREL GM
SUBJECT: SPD RECEDES DRAMATICALLY IN TRADITIONAL STRONGHOLD:  NORTH 
RHINE-WESTPHALIA 
 
REF: DUSSELDORF 36 
 
DUSSELDORF 00000039  001.3 OF 003 
 
 
1. (U) Summary:  Until now, North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) and its 
industrial Ruhr region were Germany's Social Democratic 
heartland.  No longer.  The CDU is now the strongest party in 
NRW.  The Bundestag election returns in Germany's most populous 
state of NRW, with few exceptions, reflected the national 
trends, i.e., massive losses for the SPD, moderate losses for 
the CDU, and big gains for the smaller parties - FDP, Greens and 
Left Party.  Voter participation fell to an all-time low, 
helping the smaller parties and hurting the big ones, in 
particular the SPD.  The September 27 national elections are 
also an important indicator of the strengths of the various 
parties in NRW seven months before next year's Landtag 
elections.  NRW politicians are already telling us they expect 
the new federal black-yellow coalition in Berlin to take early, 
decisive action to help shore up the CDU and FDP in NRW as they 
think ahead to May 2010.  End summary. 
 
 
 
Winners and Losers 
 
------------------ 
 
2. (U) The Bundestag election produced historic firsts for all 
five Bundestag parties in NRW -- either the best or worst 
results ever recorded in the state's 63-year history, depending 
on the party.  In terms of percentage shares of the popular 
vote, FDP (14.9%), the Greens (10.1%) and the Left Party (8.9%) 
each achieved their best results ever in NRW since World War II, 
while the two big parties - CDU (33.1%) and SPD (28.5%) - 
recorded their lowest Bundestag election returns in NRW since 
the founding of the Federal Republic.  Voter turnout dropped by 
6.9 percent to 71.4 percent, the lowest level ever in a 
Bundestag election in NRW, and only slightly better than the 
national average of 70.8 percent.  The poor voter turnout helped 
the small and hurt the big parties, in particular the SPD, which 
failed to mobilize its core clientele in the Ruhr's cities. 
 
 
 
Increasing Political Fragmentation 
 
---------------------------------- 
 
3. (U) The strong electoral performance of the FDP, Greens and 
the Left Party, together with the disappointing results for the 
big parties, is evidence of increasing fragmentation of the 
political party landscape in NRW and in Germany in general.  The 
smaller parties continue to grow, at the expense of the larger 
ones, a trend that started in the 1980s, and has now 
accelerated.  In 1976, for example, CDU and SPD together 
received well over 90 percent of the popular vote in Bundestag 
elections in NRW; this share has continually decreased to reach 
an all-time low in this last election of just 61.6 percent.  (On 
the national level, this was more pronounced, where the figures 
for 1976 and 2009 were 91.2 percent and 56.8 percent, 
respectively.)  The Left Party's good showing in last Sunday's 
election also virtually ensures it will enter the NRW state 
parliament after next May's state election. 
 
 
 
SPD: A Defeat of Catastrophic Proportions 
 
----------------------------------------- 
 
4. (U) Although its losses across NRW (minus 11.5 percent 
state-wide) only slightly exceeded those at the national level, 
the SPD's defeat in its traditional heartland was so devastating 
that NRW SPD state chair Hannelore Kraft described it as a 
defeat of "catastrophic proportions."  The party suffered 
massive losses in its previous strongholds in the Ruhr, 
amounting to 15 percent or more (e.g., in Dortmund and 
Recklinghausen).  Several factors caused this development:  The 
especially low voter turnout in these constituencies was a clear 
indication that traditional SPD voters, disaffected with their 
party, stayed away from the polls, and the Left Party succeeded 
in bringing a sizable chunk of SPD voters into its fold -- it 
was in the traditional SPD strongholds where the Left Party 
achieved its best gains in NRW. 
 
 
 
5. (U) Despite heavy losses, NRW with the Ruhr region remains 
the SPD's weakened mainstay in the post-election German 
political landscape.  Despite the massive hemorrhaging of votes 
in the Ruhr area cities, there are no other electoral districts 
in Germany where the SPD performed better.  In Gelsenkirchen, 
Duisburg, Bochum and Herne, the SPD garnered between 42 and 44 
 
DUSSELDORF 00000039  002.3 OF 003 
 
 
percent of the popular vote, down from the 55 or even 60 percent 
it used to poll.  With one exception, the SPD won all the 
constituency races in the Ruhr area, but overall lost 15 
constituencies to the CDU, mostly in the Ruhr periphery, as well 
as in Cologne, Aachen and Bielefeld.  The NRW SPD will only send 
39 Bundestag deputies to Berlin (in 2005, it sent 54). 
 
 
 
6. (U) The more prominent losers who will not return to Berlin 
include Turkish-born Lale Akguen, the SPD's commissioner for 
Islamic Affairs (and the only SPD Bundestag deputy from NRW with 
an immigrant background), Defense Committee chairwoman Ulrike 
Merten, Parliamentary State Secretaries Michael Mueller and 
Karin Kortmann, and Family Affairs Committee chairwoman Kerstin 
Griese.  Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck and Health Affairs 
Minister Ulla Schmidt lost their constituency races, but were 
elected via the SPD state list, as was SPD national chairman 
Franz Muentefering. 
 
 
 
CDU: Emerging as NRW's Strongest Party 
 
-------------------------------------- 
 
7. (U) For the first time since 1983, the CDU emerged as the 
strongest party in NRW, with 33.1 percent of the popular vote, 
slightly below the national average and 1.3 percent below its 
state election result of 2005.  Also struggling with the erosion 
of support from core voters, the CDU suffered its biggest losses 
(up to 7 percent) in its strongholds in rural and Catholic 
areas, where the CDU had to be content with 42-46 percent (e.g., 
in Paderborn and in the Muensterland and Sauerland regions). 
 
 
 
8. (U) There will be 45 CDU Bundestag deputies from NRW (one 
fewer than in 2005), making the NRW CDU state group 
("Landesgruppe") the largest group in the 17th Bundestag. 
Fifteen are newcomers to the Bundestag, including two former 
participants in the IVLP program.  Most prominent NRW CDU 
Bundestag deputies won their constituency races, notably 
Secretary-General Roland Pofalla, Minister of State in the 
Chancellor's Office Hermann Grvhe, Chief Whip Norbert Rvttgen, 
Foreign Committee Chairman Ruprecht Polenz, and Deputy Floor 
Leader Wolfgang Bosbach.  Only Bundestag President Norbert 
Lammert and Junge Union chairman Philipp Missfelder had to use 
the "safety net" of the CDU state list, because they ran in Ruhr 
area constituencies which were defended by SPD incumbents.  The 
only prominent CDU Bundestag deputy from NRW not reelected was 
former national CDU Secretary General Laurenz Meyer.  As before, 
there will be one CDU Bundestag deputy of (Iranian) immigrant 
background. 
 
 
 
Strong Showing of FDP, Greens and Left Party in NRW 
 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
 
9. (U) Twenty FDP Bundestag deputies of the 17th Bundestag will 
come from NRW, more than from any other German state.  The 14 
Greens deputies and the 11 Left Party deputies from NRW also 
constitute the largest state groups within their respective 
caucuses.  The FDP achieved its best results (up to 22 percent 
of the popular vote) in Cologne, Bonn and the neighboring 
Rhein-Sieg county.  FDP national chairman Guido Westerwelle lost 
the constituency race in his home town of Bonn, but was 
re-elected via the FDP state list, as were former Minister of 
State in the Foreign Office Werner Hoyer and Budget Committee 
Chairman Otto Fricke.  Promising FDP newcomers from NRW include 
the national chairman of the "Junge Liberale," Johannes Vogel, 
and Christian Lindner, FDP Secretary General in NRW and until 
the youngest member of the NRW Landtag, both recent IVLP 
participants.  Among the FDP newcomers from NRW is a member with 
an (Iranian) immigrant background. 
 
 
 
10. (U) The Greens' strongholds (up to 20 percent of the vote) 
were in university cities like Cologne, Muenster, Bonn and 
Aachen.  As before, former NRW Environmental Affairs Minister 
Baerbel Hoehn, former Minister of State in the Foreign Office 
Kerstin Mueller, as well as chief whip Volker Beck are among the 
more prominent members of the Greens Bundestag caucus from NRW. 
The Left Party garnered its greatest support (up to 14 percent) 
in Ruhr area cities like Duisburg, Herne and Gelsenkirchen. 
Sarah Wagenknecht, the leader of the orthodox communist platform 
within the Left Party, is the most prominent Left Party deputy 
 
DUSSELDORF 00000039  003.3 OF 003 
 
 
elected in NRW.  Two of the Left Party Bundestag deputies from 
NRW have an immigrant background (Turkish and Iranian). 
 
 
 
Comment: Looking to the Future 
 
------------------------------ 
 
11. (SBU) Coming seven months before the May 2010 NRW state 
parliament elections, NRW's Bundestag election results are an 
important indicator of the respective strengths of the parties 
here.  The current CDU-FDP government coalition may be able to 
continue beyond 2010, although with a much narrower 
parliamentary majority.  Much will depend on the political and 
economic performance of the to-be-formed Merkel-Westerwelle 
government during its first six months in office.  Both 
Minister-President Ruettgers and his deputy and FDP state 
chairman Andreas Pinkwart will be members of their national 
parties' negotiating teams, who will hammer out a coalition 
agreement between CDU/CSU and FDP within the next few weeks in 
Berlin.  Ruettgers in particular can be expected to use his 
influence to postpone decisions on possible unpopular measures 
until after the elections in NRW next May, while pressing for 
positive forward action from Berlin to show how effective 
black/yellow can be nationally.  As if to make the point, the 
coalition negotiations between the federal government partners 
will be held at the NRW State Representation in Berlin.  End 
comment. 
 
 
 
12. (U) This message was coordinated with Embassy Berlin. 
WEINER