News illustration of a Forsa poll showing 64% of Germans opposing federal state mergers, featuring a map of Germany, Bavaria highlighted, poll graph, and Markus Söder speaking.
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Two thirds of Germans reject merging federal states

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A Forsa poll commissioned by Stern reveals that 64 percent of Germans oppose reorganizing the 16 federal states. Bavaria's Minister President Markus Söder proposed merging smaller states last week, arguing they are barely viable and rely on financial support from larger ones like Bavaria.

The poll found that 30 percent support a merger, while six percent had no opinion. Even in Bavaria, 67 percent of residents oppose the proposal. Similar results appear in other populous states: 61 percent in North Rhine-Westphalia and 69 percent in Baden-Württemberg are against it. Residents of smaller states with fewer than four million inhabitants reject the idea by 65 percent. There are hardly any differences between West and East Germany: 64 percent in the West and 65 percent in the East oppose a merger.

Söder argued that larger units are more successful than small ones, so there should be "fewer federal states, plain and simple." He did not name specific states for consolidation. In November, he criticized the federal financial equalization system: Berlin has received over 94 billion euros since 1995 without contributing anything. Only four states pay into the system, with Bavaria covering 60 percent alone. The Basic Law requires balancing the varying financial capacities among the states.

The widespread rejection highlights the strong attachment to Germany's existing federal structure.

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Discussions on X mirror the Forsa poll, showing widespread opposition to Markus Söder's proposal to merge smaller German federal states, with users criticizing it as anti-federalist and driven by Bavaria's financial grievances; some support reducing the number of states for efficiency, though news shares dominate highlighting 64% rejection even in Bayern.

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German Social Minister Bärbel Bas presents welfare reform proposals to reduce bureaucracy and digitize benefits.
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German government proposes social welfare reform

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The black-red coalition plans a comprehensive modernization of the social system to reduce bureaucracy and digitize processes. A commission with representatives from the federal government, states, and municipalities has developed 26 recommendations, which Federal Social Minister Bärbel Bas will present on Tuesday. Planned are fewer authorities, merged benefits, and automatic child benefit, without cuts to social assistance.

CDU top candidate Sven Schulze from Saxony-Anhalt has sharply rejected Bavarian Minister President Markus Söder's idea of merging federal states. Saarland's Minister President Anke Rehlinger also opposes the demand. Söder argues with financial burdens on strong states like Bavaria.

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Hessen's Minister President Boris Rhein wants no more new pacts with the federal government. He criticizes that such agreements burden the states in the long term and calls for a federalism reform. Rhein also distances himself from Markus Söder's idea of merging federal states.

A new poll ahead of the 2026 state election in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern indicates strong gains for the SPD under Minister President Manuela Schwesig. The AfD loses support for the first time and has to 'shed feathers'.

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Political scientist Karl-Rudolf Korte warns against the rise of the AfD and calls on democratic parties to offer a more convincing alternative in the 2026 election year. In an RND interview, he stresses that the center should not dwell in fear but optimistically highlight the strengths of democracy. He advocates for a 'confident language of freedom' and warns against conjuring up the AfD.

Amid the poor economic situation, Chancellery Minister Thorsten Frei (CDU) has considered revising the coalition agreement. He criticizes the rigid stance of the traffic-light government toward new challenges like Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Frei advocates for more flexible action in the Union-SPD coalition.

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The Alternative for Germany (AfD) is likened to an extremist beaver gnawing at the pillars of liberal democracy. The dispute over the Otto-Wels Hall in the Reichstag highlights how symbolic debates benefit the party. Democratic parties must create clarity in 2026 and combat the AfD on substantive issues.

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