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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, January 4, 2016
Refugee crisis could shake up German political landscape in 2016
German
Chancellor and leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) Angela
Merkel holds up her voting card during a vote on a resolution about
refugees at the CDU party congress in Karlsruhe, Germany December 14,
2015.REUTERS/KAI PFAFFENBACH
For the past decade, German politics has been a relatively dull affair,
with Angela Merkel dominating at the national level and the major
parties in agreement on all the big issues, from euro zone bailouts and
refugees to the phase-out of nuclear energy.
But that may change in 2016, when five of Germany's 16 states hold
elections in the build-up to the next federal vote a year later.
Not only is Chancellor Merkel looking more vulnerable than ever before
because of her welcoming stance toward the hundreds of thousands of
refugees fleeing war in the Middle East, but the rise of the
anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has injected a new
element of surprise into the political landscape.
Add to that an unprecedented splintering of the electorate, which means
that six parties have a legitimate shot of entering most state
parliaments, and Germany's normally cozy, consensual politics begins to
look a bit less predictable, and potentially more divisive, than it has
in a long time.
The wild card is the threat of an attack by Islamist extremists on
German soil, a risk highlighted on New Year's Eve when authorities
received a tip that Iraqi and Syrian nationals were planning suicide
bombings at train stations in Munich.
It could be fatal for Merkel, officials in Berlin acknowledge in
private, if such an attack were carried out successfully by people who
entered Europe with the flood of migrants, as was the case with two of
the men involved in the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris.
Even if Germany is spared such a horror, the refugee crisis will
continue to dominate the political debate this year, polarizing voters
and emboldening Merkel's opponents on the right and left.
So far the most damaging attacks have come from her conservative sister party, the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU).
"If we don't see success in limiting the tide of refugees, we could have
a grassroots political tremor in Germany," said one senior government
official, who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the
issue.
"If Merkel doesn't deliver you could see the AfD approaching 20 percent in the polls," the official predicted.
AFD ON THE RISE
Currently the AfD is polling between 8-10 percent, roughly double the
4.7 percent the party won in the last federal election in 2013, when it
narrowly failed to clear the 5 percent mark needed to enter the
Bundestag.
That seems relatively harmless if you compare it to other like-minded
parties across Europe, like the National Front in France, the Freedom
Party in Austria or the Danish People's Party, which enjoy more than
twice as much support.
But the AfD's rise looks more significant when one considers that it has
occurred against a backdrop of infighting and financial trouble within
the party that might have crushed it.
In the past half year, the party has weathered the departure of its
founder, embarrassing slurs about African reproductive habits from one
of its leading politicians, and a party financing law from the
government that threatened to strip bare its coffers.
In response to the new law, the AfD asked its supporters for donations
and raised roughly 2 million euros in just three weeks, a testament to
its drawing power.
In three state elections that are due to be held in March, the AfD's newfound strength will be on stark display.
It is on track to win 7 percent in the western states of
Baden-Wuerttemberg and Rhineland-Palatinate and roughly twice that in
Saxony-Anhalt in the east.
"In every one of these elections, the performance of the AfD will be key
in determining what constellations are possible," Torsten Krauel wrote
in a front-page editorial in German daily Die Welt last week.
MORE FRAGMENTED
The rise of the AfD and a nascent comeback by the Free Democrats (FDP), a
business-friendly, socially liberal party that was the kingmaker of
German politics for decades before imploding in the last federal vote,
means that there are now three legitimate right-of-center parties in
Germany, including Merkel's conservative bloc.
Add to that the three leading parties of the left, the Social Democrats
(SPD), Greens and hard-left "Linke", and German politics looks more
fragmented than at any time since reunification in 1990.
Merkel could yet emerge as the big loser from the new German political
landscape if she is unable to stem the tide of refugees in the months
ahead.
If she is successful, it may be her coalition partner in Berlin, the SPD, who suffer most.
The rise of the AfD and return of the FDP would make it more difficult
for the SPD to form left-leaning majorities at the state or federal
level, condemning it to second-tier status for the foreseeable future.
And that weakness could turn the SPD into a more confrontational and
unpredictable partner for Merkel as the next federal vote in 2017
approaches.
(Reporting by Noah Barkin; editing by John Stonestreet)