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    25 commenti

    1. Beautiful-Health-976 on

      bye bye! Hope you will never get close to this office again!

    2. wgszpieg on

      So what’s the most likely outcome of the elections? Can afd gain a lot? Pretty sure tik tok will be busy now

    3. TheCrunker on

      Who would have thought that Meloni’s Italy would be the most stable of the major EU countries

    4. ICA_Basic_Vodka on

      Olaf Scholz has done his last Scholzing – Good riddance & Auf Wienerschnitzel!

    5. nicubunu on

      A warning to the Germans: your upcoming elections will be heavily targeted by Russian influence and propaganda. Expect surprise results.

    6. treebeard87_vn on

      I hope you guys’ cheering for his downfall won’t be known later as “famous last words”. Alas.

    7. yasinburak15 on

      Wow I mean it was expected but wow, it’s a very bad year to be an incumbent. My money is on the CDU winning, but let’s see how many seats the AFD will get this time.

      It’s funny as an American voter, the “grand coalition” wouldn’t really work here much. Everyone hates each other even in their own party factions.

    8. FYI: This was the expected and intended outcome. In Germany early elections are only possible after the mentioned no-confidence vote.

    9. BlassAsterMaster on

      If I hear him deny Taurus to Ukraine one more time because “it would escalate things”, my blood pressure will spike so hard, I might get a stroke. Please, get him out of the office.

    10. fearless-fossa on

      For context: This was intentional. Scholz fired his Minister of Finance, Christian Lindner, who tried to backstab the coalition and build a narrative around “well we’ve tried but the *others* were unreasonable”. As a result of that Lindner’s party (which he’s the leader of) left the government, leaving only a minority government in place.

      To guarantee fast re-elections to keep Germany’s ability to do stuff without having to fight for temporary majority’s every day, Scholz initiated the no-confidence vote and the Greens abstained so even if the trolls from the AfD voted for Scholz the vote would fail.

      That there’d be early elections was known to pretty much anyone who has a superficial idea of the German political system.

      It’ll be an interesting election for sure, as two parties have high chances to not get enough votes to have representation in the Bundestag (Linke/Left and FDP/Liberals), while there will be two Russian troll parties (AfD and BSW). Depending on how the voting will go the only possible coalitions will be CDU + SPD + Greens or CDU with either of them.

    11. doyoueventdrift on

      Keep together Germany, resist obvious attempts at dividing yourselves, us vs then.

      Disagreeing is fine, vote for who you believe in, but enhance in open minded constructive dialogue with each other. Do not fight each other, that is exactly what Putin wants.

      We Europeans need to stick together, but first we need to stick together as countries.

    12. SZEfdf21 on

      He was counting on this himself, no? (or at least his party). That’s why the government did the vote.

    13. FunFact: Over the last 40 years every SPD Chancellor lost a no-confidence vote

    14. 0x80246747 on

      One less guy to pat Vučić on the back while Serbia’s autocracy is on the rise. Good f-ing riddance

    15. For the German people in this thread, which party do you plan to vote for next year and why?

    16. slazer2k on

      It is worth mentioning that he wanted to loose to trigger the election so this is not a lose for him the question is what AFD and BSW will get ….

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