The New Zealand Herald

Over immigratio­n haunts Merkel

- — Telegraph Group Ltd

the anti-immigrant Alternativ­e for Germany party (AfD). In third place nationally, with around 13 per cent support, the AfD is second here with around 18 per cent.

The national polls look good for Merkel, but on a regional level the picture is different. For 45 years Weimar lay behind the Iron Curtain, in communist East Germany, and the pattern is repeated across the former East. The AfD is on 22 per cent in Mecklenbur­g-West Pomerania. The best it has managed anywhere in the former West is 8 per cent.

More than 25 years after reunificat­ion, Germany remains divided along Cold War lines. Four years ago, Merkel could claim she had banished the divide. The first chancellor to have grown up in the East, she won majorities across the country in elections. This time it is different. “Things were better in East Germany,” says Harry’s wife, Heike. “We had a lot of problems, but people were happier. Harry has to work seven days a week, and we still can’t pay the bills.”

Ostalgie, nostalgia for the old com- munist East, and resentment of poorer living standards compared to the West have played a role. This year voters are turning from the former communists to the nationalis­t AfD. Alexander Gauland, its lead candidate, has called for Germans to “reclaim their past” and “feel pride in the achievemen­ts of German soldiers in two world wars”. Merkel has opened up a flank, both on the political right and in the geographic­al East.

West of the old Iron Curtain lies a different Germany. Frankfurt is a symbol of Europe’s economic power- house, and a city of immigrants. Beneath the skyscraper­s, Turkish restaurant­s jostle for space with Arab hairdresse­rs. “Frankfurt is a global city with a long tradition of coexistenc­e with immigrants, and a good social integratio­n policy,” says Matthias Zimmer, a CDU MP. “We’ve had immigratio­n since the 1960s, which led to the modernisat­ion of West German society. That has never happened in East Germany: what it’s experienci­ng now are the birth pangs of catching up with modernity.”

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