Germany is a nation that has been extremely hard hit by the disaster of the migrant crisis, a crisis exacerbated greatly by the open borders policies of current German Chancellor Angela Merkel. The influx of mostly Islamic migrants has turned a relatively safe, ordered and prosperous nation into one where sexual and violent crime is rampant and where jihad is being plotted and carried out.
From reading various news reports and social media accounts of what is going on in Germany I get the impression that things are getting really bad for the average German. It’s pretty obvious to me that there are a lot of Germans who are fed up with the violence, crime, welfare poncing and cultural insanities that have been brought to their nation by Merkel’s mobile Mohammedan mayhem. There have been demonstrations in a number of German cities by ordinary citizens angry at the murders, rapes and social dislocation that Merkel’s Islamic pets have brought to them and despite draconian speech restrictions in Germany, that nations citizen are speaking up about the migrant disaster.
The growing street resistance to the politicians who have wrought Germany’s migrant disaster is both interesting and somewhat gratifying to see as Germany has suffered much from its government’s migrant policy and I wondered when the tipping point would come which got Germans out on the streets. The street protests, often spontaneous ones, against Merkel’s migrant policy are an interesting phenomenon but what will be equally as interesting to find out is whether this anger will be reflected in the results of today’s Bavarian regional election.
Various pollsters and news outlets such as the BBC and Breitbart are predicting that the cenrre right Christian Social Union (CSU) which has governed Bavaria since 1957 may be on course to take a big hit at the polls. However, despite the spin that both the BBC and Breitbart are putting on this story, the CSU are still at 33% down from 47.4 in 2013, which although a significant drop in support does not look to me like a figure for a party that has been decimated or is likely to be decimated. Some of the former CSU supporters have moved over to the Alternative for Germany party (AFD) because of the affliction that Merkel’s migrant policy has brought and it is likely that they will do well from those who may see the CSU as not doing enough to turn back the tide of Islamic savagery that Merkel welcomed into Germany. The AFD are currently polling on 14% and although I predict they will do well they have a mountain to climb in order to gain the support needed to give them more political influence. The Left have also not gone away in Bavaria they seem to be abandoning the traditional social democrat parties and are gravitating towards the Far Left Greens and are now on 18% leaving the soft left Social Democrat Party on 10% down from 20% in 2013.
The CSU could scrape back by the skin of their teeth or there could be great changes in Bavaria, it all depends on the level of voter turnout and who these voters choose. Both sides, Left and Right, need to get the vote out, if rightists stay at home then he Left will benefit and vice versa. When the votes are counted we shall know whether the citizens of Bavaria will have chosen to virtue signal by voting Left/Green or whether they will register their discomfort at Merkel’s migrant mismanagement by voting AFD. We could even see a situation where people return to the CSU as a way of keeping hold of nurse for fear of finding something worse? When the election results are released a few days after the poll we shall know which path the people of Bavaria have chosen.