Cheat sheet on Germany's colour-coded politics
Confused? Here is a cheat sheet for Germany's colour-coded party politics ahead of the pivotal vote in Europe's most populous country and biggest economy.
Every German party is traditionally associated with a colour, and national flags and other imagery are commonly used as shorthand for possible coalition combinations.
Here are Germany's main parties, their colours, leaders and what they stand for:
- Red: Social Democratic Party (SPD) -
The centre-left party of embattled Chancellor Olaf Scholz, 66, is Germany's oldest with origins in a labour association founded in the mid-1800s.
Its key demands are fair wages, safe pensions and social benefits, and its symbol is a red rose.
The SPD prides itself on its principled opposition to the Nazis before it was banned and its members exiled.
Party lore says that dialogue with Moscow, rather than confrontation, helped end the Cold War.
Prominent former SPD chancellors include Willy Brandt, Helmut Schmidt and Gerhard Schroeder.
- Black: Christian Democratic Union (CDU) -
Germany's main conservative party, led by former corporate lawyer Friedrich Merz, 69, prioritises boosting the economy, law and order and traditional social values.
Merz has promised to steer the party back to its right-wing roots, away from the more centrist course charted by former chancellor Angela Merkel.
He has vowed to strongly restrict irregular immigration and perhaps bring back nuclear energy, phased out under Merkel.
The CDU is in a permanent alliance with Bavaria's Christian Social Union (CSU) led by Markus Soeder.
Well-known former CDU chancellors include the first post-WWII leader Konrad Adenauer and Helmut Kohl, dubbed the father of Germany's 1990 reunification.
- Yellow: Free Democratic Party (FDP) -
The FDP, which promotes liberal economic policies and small government, was long Germany's main "third party" and has had a key role in building and bringing down governments.
Its leader, former finance minister Christian Lindner, 46, provoked the government crisis that came to a head when Scholz fired him on November 6.
The turmoil recalled a 1982 power play when the FDP switched sides, bringing down Schmidt, who was replaced by Kohl.
The FDP is sometimes mocked as the party of the rich but sees itself as a watchdog against government overreach, bureaucracy and red tape.
- Green: Alliance 90/The Greens -
The Greens emerged from the environmental, anti-nuclear and peace protest movement of the 1970s.
Its first MPs were elected in the early 1980s and they shocked the staid Bundestag when they showed up in knitted pullovers and put their feet on the benches.
But the party has since firmly entered the mainstream and advocates strong military support for Ukraine against Russia.
The current alliance was built in 1993 with activist groups from the formerly communist East Germany.
Vice-Chancellor Robert Habeck, 55, is the top election candidate of the Greens, which is also the party of Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock.
- Blue: Alternative for Germany (AfD) -
The far-right party started off a decade ago as a eurosceptic fringe party but has since embraced a virulent anti-immigration agenda.
It railed against Merkel's 2015 green light to allow in more than a million migrants, many from war-torn Syria.
AfD politicians tend to doubt climate change, hold pro-Moscow positions and support US President Donald Trump whose ally Elon Musk has strongly backed the AfD.
Some AfD key figures have used Nazi-era phrases, and the domestic security services consider elements in the party to be extremists, fuelling calls to ban it.
With its top candidate Alice Weidel, 46, the AfD has been polling at around 20 percent, with most of its support in the ex-communist east.
All other parties have committed to an anti-AfD "firewall" of non-cooperation, although Merz breached this in late January when he accepted AfD support in parliament to pass a motion calling for an immigration crackdown.
- Violet: Linke and Alliance Sahra Wagenknecht (BSW) -
Germany's two far-left parties have hovered around the five-percent cutoff mark for reentry into parliament.
Die Linke has enjoyed a late poll surge above that mark, boosted by a spirited anti-fascist speech by its top candidate Heidi Reichinnek, 36.
The Linke's former leading figure, Sahra Wagenknecht, 55, left last year to form her own "left-wing conservative" BSW, which is sceptical of immigration.
Wagenknecht, who grew up in the communist East, promotes anti-capitalist views and opposes NATO, has struggled to maintain the initial buzz around her new party.
- Colourful coalitions -
Scholz's collapsed red-yellow-green coalition was dubbed the "traffic light" government.
In 2017 Germany almost got a black-yellow-green "Jamaica" coalition, before the FDP pulled out of talks.
Polling suggests Germany could next be headed for a CDU-led "black-red" grand coalition with the SPD that may need a third partner.
If the FDP were to join in, their colours would match the national flag for a "Germany" coalition.
If instead the Greens joined, this would lead to a black-red-green "Kenya" coalition.
Also seen at the state level before, but highly unlikely at the national level, is a black-red-violet alliance of the CDU, SPD and BSW, dubbed the "blackberry".
bur-fz/gv

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
CEO of Twitter Suddenly Departing After Grok's "MechaHitler" Crisis
After spending just over two years justifying Elon Musk's disastrous ownership over X-formerly-Twitter, CEO Linda Yaccarino has finally had enough. The former media exec announced her resignation on Wednesday, less than 24 hours after Musk's Grok AI chatbot went on an incredibly racist tirade, calling itself "MechaHitler" and attacking Black and Jewish people in astonishingly hateful terms. "When Elon Musk and I first spoke of his vision for X, I knew it would be the opportunity of a lifetime to carry out the extraordinary mission of this company," Yaccarino tweeted. "I'm immensely grateful to him for entrusting me with the responsibility of protecting free speech, turning the company around, and transforming X into the Everything App." It's a baffling new development, especially considering the timing. While we still don't know the exact reason for her sudden departure, it's entirely possible Grok's latest Nazi meltdown could've been a factor. Since Musk bought the platform for a whopping $44 billion in 2022, the site has become unrecognizable. Twitter, which Musk renamed to X in 2023, opened up the floodgates to hate speech and disinformation by systematically dismantling its already woefully inadequate guardrails and content moderation efforts. Yaccarino, a former NBCUniversal executive, was brought on at a time when the site's ad sales started cratering. Adverstisers were spooked by Musk's repeated antisemitic outbursts and were unhappy being associated with literal Nazis on the platform. The subsequent advertiser exodus left an enormous hole in the company's already precarious finances, culminating in Musk admitting defeat in a January note to staff. "Our user growth is stagnant, revenue is unimpressive, and we're barely breaking even," he wrote at the time. In other words, Yaccarino, brought on as a fixer of broken relationships, had her work cut out to encourage advertisers to return to Musk's hate speech incubator. Mere months into her stint as the company's CEO, colleagues from the advertising industry were already privately advising Yaccarino to jump ship to save herself following Musk's hateful outbursts. "I think the advertising community is now working to save the reputation of a beloved member of our industry who does not share Elon Musk's views and certainly did not know them when she accepted the role of CEO," marketing consultant Lou Paskalis told Axios in 2023. Yaccarino went on to serve as X's CEO for another year and a half, repeatedly siding with Musk throughout numerous crises, many of which were the direct result of the billionaire's own actions. In short, the legacy Yaccarino leaves behind is bizarre and contradictory, much like Musk himself. Last month, Yaccarino claimed that 96 percent of advertising clients prior to Musk's acquisition had come back to the platform, promising that the company would return to its 2022 advertising goals "super soon." But especially now that she has abruptly left the company, and Grok calls for a "second Holocaust," that goal seems as distant as ever. More on Twitter: Grok Mocks Its Developers as They Try to Delete Its Incredibly Racist Posts Solve the daily Crossword


American Military News
11 hours ago
- American Military News
Iran Tells Europeans To Abandon ‘Worn Out' Threats Amid Nuclear Sanctions Debate
This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi has called on European powers to halt threats against Tehran, including warnings about reinstating UN sanctions. Tehran's top diplomat wrote on X on July 18 that he told his British, French, and German counterparts, as well as the EU foreign policy chief, during a joint call that Europe 'should act responsibly' and abandon 'worn-out policies of threat and pressure.' He said the EU and the European trio, the so-called E3, have 'no moral or legal ground' to trigger the 'snapback' of UN sanctions. On July 15, French Foreign Minister Jean‑Noel Barrot told fellow EU ministers that the E3 is prepared to reimpose UN sanctions on Iran unless Tehran offers a 'firm, tangible and verifiable commitment.' The Europeans reiterated the same stance during the call with Araqchi, according to a French diplomatic source cited by Reuters, who said Iran was pushed to reach a 'verifiable and lasting' deal with the United States. Under the 2015 nuclear agreement — the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) — long‑standing UN restrictions on arms sales, banking, and nuclear‑related technology were lifted a decade ago. European governments can still invoke the deal's 'snapback' mechanism before an October 15 deadline, a step that would restore those sanctions and give them a narrow but significant source of leverage in current negotiations. Iran suspended cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in the wake of the US and Israeli bombing of its nuclear sites last month. The European are pressing for UN nuclear inspectors to resume work in Iran, aiming in part to prevent Tehran from reorganizing its nuclear program after the damage caused by the strikes. Under the 2015 nuclear deal, China and Russia — longtime supporters of Iran in such negotiations — cannot veto a snapback of sanctions. Although the formal window to trigger the mechanism closes in October, European governments could opt to postpone the move beyond that deadline to keep the door open for further talks. Iranian and US negotiators were scheduled to meet in Oslo last week but the meeting was postponed, with apparently no new date agreed upon. 'Any new round of talks is only possible when the other side is ready for a fair, balanced, and mutually beneficial nuclear deal,' Araqchi wrote on X. Speaking at a press briefing this week, US President Donald Trump said that while Iran is eager to engage in talks, he is in 'no rush' to do so, noting that 'we obliterated their sites' in the June 22 strikes on nuclear facilities in Fordow, Isfahan, and Natanz.
Yahoo
15 hours ago
- Yahoo
Democrats Are Failing to Adapt to Trump's New World
Democrats and legacy media outlets are failing to meet the urgency of the current moment, leaving it to independent media to pick up the slack. That's where Brian Tyler Cohen comes in. A political commentator with 4.5 million subscribers on YouTube, Cohen sat down with The Daily Beast Podcast host and Chief Creative and Content Officer Joanna Coles to discuss the role independent media outlets and commentators can play in a new ecosystem where the old rules no longer apply. Cohen began covering the Trump administration during Trump's first term, and quickly realized there was a gap in the market for left-wing video content. As he explains, 'I had some experience in front of the camera, so I figured if I'm only getting served right-wing content, I'm just gonna start making this content on my own and putting it out there and see how it does.' Now, working for himself means that he has full autonomy, which has allowed him to grow his platform and become one of the most popular progressive personalities on YouTube. This independence has also enabled him to try and meet the current moment with the urgency it requires, something Cohen feels both establishment Democrats and legacy media have failed to do. 'I wish that the people who hid behind slogans like 'Democracy dies in darkness' were able to meet the urgency of this moment and to recognize that, okay, if democracy is gonna die in darkness, then it's everybody in the media's responsibility to actually call out what's happening,' Cohen told Coles. 'Democracy dies in darkness' is the slogan of the Jeff Bezos-owned Washington Post. In February, Bezos announced that the Post's opinion pages would shift to focusing on 'personal liberties and free markets,' and just this week, reports emerged that Bezos was attempting to capitalize on President Donald Trump's falling out with Tesla CEO Elon Musk in an attempt to secure more government contracts for his space tech company, Blue Origin. Cohen argues that legacy media outlets have continued to use the same playbooks as they have in the past to respond to Trump's second term, which doesn't work, 'because we're in a different moment. And it requires fighting in a different way than we have fought before.' 'Republicans get that. They get how to adapt to this moment, how to adapt to the Trumpism of it all, and how to fight with everything they've got, because they know that their goal at the end of this is to consolidate power for themselves,' Cohen explains. Unfortunately, 'the left and the media doesn't seem to get it. We seem to be stuck in this idea that we can usher in some bygone era of bipartisanship or compromise, and we're just not there anymore,' he argues. In doing this, they're not only failing to meet the moment, but 'actually giving a green light to the worst actors in government to know that we're just not able to do what needs to be done to confront them.' There's an asymmetry in how Republicans and Democrats use the media, Cohen argues: Democrats continue to rely on legacy media outlets like MSNBC, CNN, and The New York Times, while Republicans realized they 'weren't getting what they needed from liberal media,' and began creating their own outlets instead: Fox News, OAN, Newsmax, The Daily Wire, as well as personalities like Alex Jones, to name a few. As a result, Democrats are now 'sprinting from behind to try and create parity,' but having only recently realized the problem exists, it's now 'a matter of whether we're going to be able to have the tools to fight back and build up our presence where people actually are getting their news.' In addition to the role independent left-wing media can play going forward, Cohen is also hopeful about potential challengers to Trump who are emerging in the Democratic Party, including California Governor Gavin Newsom, former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, and Maryland Governor Wes Moore. Cohen says that these men, particularly Newsom and Buttigieg, 'know how to get into uncomfortable spaces,' with Newsom having already established a reputation as a fighter eager to tackle Republicans head-on. Buttigieg, meanwhile, 'is probably the best-spoken politician that we have,' and while Moore is largely unknown, that could work in his favor, alongside his natural charisma. Cohen also sees Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) as the future of the party, and believes that Democrats 'should be elevating her every chance we get.' As for whether the U.S. will make it to 2028 with its democracy intact, Cohen believes, 'if we have Democrats who are willing to fight with everything they've got and not kind of defer to this bygone era of our friends on the other side of the aisle, if we have people who are truly looking to exercise the full strength of the party, the courts, the law, whatever we have at our disposal, then I think there is a world in which we can stave off what I believe is an inevitable onslaught by Republicans.'