The recent German election results offer some interesting insights on German society, attitudes and the after effects of several generations who lived under communism in East Germany.
In the last few decades German politics has largely centered around five major political parties.
1. The Christian Democratic Union (CDU) (and its smaller Bavarian sister party the Christian Social Union CSU) which is a center-right party.
2. The Social Democratic Party (SDU) which is a center-left party.
3. The Free Democratic Party (FDU) has views that go both left and right. They favor free market principles but don't have problems with the social welfare state. As a result, they often ended up being the majority maker for either the CDU or SDU to form a governing coalition.
4. Die Linke, or the Left Party which is further left than the SDU.
5. The Greens which is the party of the environmentalists, hard-line opponents of nuclear energy and peace activists. It is also the party favored by much of the media and urban elites.
Over the last decade a new party, Alternative für Deutschland, or the AfD, started to gain support with those disenchanted with the CDU on the right. The media refers to the AfD as the far right wing party. This party is more nationalist in its interest which makes it share some characteristics with the MAGA movement in the U.S.
The CDU/CSU and SPD parties have generally controlled German politics since World War II.
In the last 25 years they have actually come together several times to form the ruling coalition as the Greens, The Left and AfD took more and more of the total votes and seats in the Bundestag.
The election of 2021 saw the SPD take control in a coalition with the Greens and FDP.
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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bundestag |
Every Chancellor (the head of the German federal government) has come from either the CDU or SPD since 1949 including Angela Merkel of the CDU who served for 16 years until Olaf Scholz of the SPD took over in 2021.
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Federal Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany (1949–present) Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chancellor_of_Germany |
The 2025 election took place seven months ahead of schedule due to the collapse last year of the incumbent governing coalition between the SDU, Greens and FDP. Following the loss of its majority, the government called and intentionally lost a motion of confidence, which enabled the approval of a new election.
Reforms in seat distribution reduced the number of Bundestag seats to 630 from the 736 it had been in 2021.
The 2025 election results saw the CDC garner the most votes (28.5%) followed by the AfD (20.8%).
Most telling, the former ruling coalition of the SPD, Greens and FDP saw their vote percentages drop by almost 20 percentage points compared to 2021. From 52.1% of the total vote to 32.4%.
The FDP has disappeared completely from the Bundestag as it did not gain the minimum threshold of 5% of the vote to qualify for any seats.
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Source: https://x.com/Martin_Sellner/status/1893942072865890404/photo/1 |
What I find most interesting in looking at the German voting results is how the vote broke down by regions within the country.
This is a map that shows which party received the highest vote total in each region/political subdivision in the county.
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Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx29wlje6dno |
Compare this map to that of the division between the former West and East Germany in map below.
Red is the former East Germany. Blue is West Germany.
Why would people who lived for several generations under communist and authoritarian rule be so much more likely to vote for the AfD than those from the West?
Do they know something that those in the West do not?
How the people of the former East and West Germany vote is not the only thing that differentiates these people 35 years after the Wall came down and the country was "reunified".
The map below is one that I have referenced before in these pages.
The faith divide in Germany decades after reunification is astounding.
Of course, the Communists of East Germany subverted any religion for almost four decades after World War II before the country was reunified in 1990.
You do not even need to draw a line on the map to show where East and West Germany were situated before reunification.
Decades after the country was reunited there is very little religion practiced in East Germany.
It really is true that religion is usually no more than one generation away from extinction.
A few other factual comparisons about Germany.
In almost all cases there is no need to have a line to show where the demarcation was between East and West Germany.
Average salaries are much higher in the West.
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Source: https://x.com/tomaspueyo/status/1757777722024075750 |
There are many more private firms based in the West.
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Source: https://x.com/tomaspueyo/status/1757777722024075750 |
As a result, there are also a lot more millionaires in the West.
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Source: https://x.com/tomaspueyo/status/1757777722024075750 |
The wealth of the West also seems to have been a magnet for migrant immigration.
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Source: https://x.com/tomaspueyo/status/1757777722024075750 |
A lot of that migration has been Muslims from Turkey, the Middle East and Africa.
For example, compare Turkish migration West vs. East.
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Source: https://x.com/tomaspueyo/status/1757777722024075750 |
Or the number of mosques that are now in Germany.
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Source: https://x.com/tomaspueyo/status/1757777722024075750 |
For context, according to the Los Angeles Times, there were only 77 mosques in Germany in 2002.
Today there are over 2,500.
The one thing that the East has been better at over the years is producing Olympic medalists.
Of course, this problem is heavily influenced by East Germany's past obsession with producing world-class athletes in an attempt to prove the superiority of the communist system.
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Source: https://x.com/tomaspueyo/status/1757777722024075750 |
All of this shows that it easy to say that Germany has been reunified.
However, it shows that real reunification is much more difficult when each society was the product of differing political, economic and social systems for several generations.
The path forward for Germany will not get any easier now that it has also allowed millions and millions of Muslim migrants into the country with totally different cultural, social and religious norms.
This is further compounded by voting results in 2025 that show a huge divide between young and old voters in the German elections.
Younger voters were generally attracted to the parties on the political extremes on both the left and right in 2025.
45% of 18-24 year voters cast ballots for The Left Party (25%) or AfD (20%) in the recent election.
Just as in the United States, young women are the core constituency of the Left Party. Young men are more likely to favor the conservative AfD.
Only 25% of the young voters voted for the traditional major parties SPD and CDU/CSU.
Older voters vastly favored the traditional parties.
67% of those age 70+ voted for either the SPD or CDU/CSU.
Only 14% of these older Germans favored the Left Party or AfD.
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Source: https://x.com/dwnews/status/1893773047896629330 |
Here is a more complete age breakdown of the German vote.
You can see in this data that AfD was particularly strong in the age 25-44 age group.
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Source: https://www.statista.com/statistics/1559505/german-election-vote-share-by-age/ |
Despite the vote totals the more likely outcome for the new coalition government is to see the CDU/CSU and SPD join together to insure that the AfD does not get anywhere close to the levers of power in Germany.
All of this says to me that Germany is facing a future that is sure to have a good share of political discord and turmoil.
On paper, West and East Germany underwent reunification 35 years ago.
However, Germany today is anything but unified.