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.
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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Photorealistic illustration of Greens' narrow 30.2%-29.7% win over CDU in Baden-Württemberg election, showing jubilant supporters, results screen, and CDU leader offering rejected resignation.
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Greens narrowly win Baden-Württemberg state election

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The Greens have narrowly won the Baden-Württemberg state election with 30.2 percent, ahead of the CDU with 29.7 percent. Both parties will receive 56 seats each in the state parliament. CDU leader Manuel Hagel offered his resignation after the defeat, which was unanimously rejected by the state executive.

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.

Twelve days before the state election in Baden-Württemberg, an Insa poll shows the Greens at 22 percent just ahead of the AfD at 20 percent, with the CDU leading at 28 percent. In a campaign debate, the top candidates presented their plans with a touch of humor. The parties agreed on reducing bureaucracy and strengthening the economy.

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The leaders of Germany's CDU, CSU, and SPD coalition announced the results of their overnight consultations in the Federal Chancellery on Thursday morning. Topics included looming increases in health insurance contributions, infrastructure expansion, and pension reforms. The party heads highlighted progress on several contentious issues.

The Values Union received just 0.2 percent of the votes in the recent Baden-Württemberg elections. The party does not plan to run in the next state elections. In an interview with Junge Freiheit, top candidate Jörg Meuthen addresses questions about potentially dissolving the party.

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In Rhineland-Palatinate's state election, the CDU won with 31 percent ahead of the SPD's 25.9 percent, ending 35 years of opposition. The AfD achieved its best result in a western German state at 19.5 percent, becoming the third strongest force. A grand coalition under CDU leader Gordon Schnieder is likely.

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